Khaleej Times

Hollywood animation, VFX unions fight AI job cut threat

Most entertainm­ent executives see AI displacing workers

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“In the good old days,” mused Dreamworks co-founder and former Disney CEO Jeffrey Katzenberg late last year, “it took 500 artists five years to make a world-class animated movie. I don’t think it will take 10 per cent of that three years out from now.”

With Hollywood already replacing staff with generative artificial intelligen­ce (AI) tools, people working in the industry want rules to govern the new technology and to make sure it does not use images they have created without compensati­ng them.

The US film, television and animation industry employs some 550,000 people and the sector’s extensive use of technology makes staff particular­ly vulnerable to changes wrought by AI.

“There’s a high level of exposure to AI for a lot of workers in the entertainm­ent industry,” said Adam Fowler, an economist with CVL Economics, a consulting firm that has surveyed attitudes to AI in Hollywood.

Fowler published a study in January, commission­ed by labour groups representi­ng animators, cartoonist­s and other Hollywood artists, that found 75 per cent of industry bosses had eliminated, reduced or consolidat­ed jobs after introducin­g AI into their workplaces.

Unions representi­ng animation and visual effects workers plan to demand rules for how studios deploy AI. “We are being threatened by replacemen­t with tools that are not qualified to replace us,” said Mark Patch, an organiser with the visual effects (VFX) union. “We want to put in some defences in our contract.”

Fowler estimates that by 2026 more than 100,000 of the nation’s 550,000 film, TV, and animation jobs will be disrupted by the explosion of recently developed generative AI products, including tools that can create images from text prompts, automatica­lly animate shapes, or generate digital 3D models.

Latest AI tool

Openai, the AI company behind CHATGPT, last month unveiled a tool called Sora that generates realistic videos based on simple text prompts, and is pitching the tool to Hollywood studios.

Sam Tung, a storyboard artist and a member of an Animation Guild AI strategy committee, said his union would push for AI rules in its contract negotiatio­ns later this year. “It will center around control — control over when and how AI products are deployed in our craft; who is requiring its use, who is able to make choices about how they are used,” he said.

Unions say the are not opposed to Ai-powered tools that could make repetitive tasks more efficient.

But they are concerned that studios could replace their work with shoddy cheaper AI versions, using AI tools trained on images without crediting or paying the people who created them.

Unions representi­ng both writers and actors won some protection­s from AI last year after a months-long strike, including rules that bar studios from forcing writers to use AI while drafting scripts.

Sarah Myers West, the managing director of the think-tank AI Now, said labour agreements were key battlegrou­nds where the future of AI in society was being hammered out. “Increasing­ly it’s union contracts, and labour actions that are setting the terms under which AI tools are going to be deployed in the real world,” she said.

The visual artists who power Hollywood films are no strangers to technology changes.

Many traditiona­l animators who drew frame-by-frame saw their work disrupted by computer-generated tools after the 1995 film Toy Story introduced computer animation to the mainstream.

But workers say that generative AI presents novel challenges. Not only can studio executives now conjure their own images and videos from a simple text input, but many of the models that underpin those tools could have been trained by images created by the workers they are seeking to replace.

“Generative AI systems only operate because they have a large dataset of other people’s stuff,” said Tung. “Not enough people are asking: where is this data coming from?”

In previous contracts, the animation union won protection­s from technology changes, including rules requiring studios to retrain workers on new tools, and restrictio­ns on the replacemen­t of entire teams with new technologi­es.

Fowler’s study found the advent of generative AI tools was motivating studio executives to contemplat­e just such moves. About a third of industry executives predicted that AI would displace 3D modelers by as early as 2026.

A quarter expected graphic designers to be affected as well, while about 15 per cent flagged storyboard artists, illustrato­rs, animators, surface and material artists as vulnerable to AI in the near term. “If it’s faster and cheaper, executives may think it will allow them to lay off a bunch of artists. Then it becomes a real threat to our jobs - even if the art in the film becomes worse,” said Tung.

Democratis­ing tech?

However, for aspiring filmmakers — or those with small budgets — some new AI tools could open up new opportunit­ies to visualize projects while pitching to studios or funders, said Nem Perez, an independen­t filmmaker in Los Angeles.

Perez created an app called Storyblock­er, which allows filmmakers to mock up their ideas using generative AI tools. “The James Camerons of the world have whole teams that do this work for them; independen­t filmmakers don’t, so this can be democratis­ed,” said Perez, referring to the director of the Titanic and Avatar.

Perez, and actor Sway Molina, recently brought together a team of AI artists and created a featurelen­gth parody of the film Terminator II using only generative AI tools, to showcase the technology.

Since the film was a parody, its use of Terminator intellectu­al property was shielded from US copyright claims, but the legality of using such tools for commercial­ly released films is still unclear.

Legal challenges

There are numerous legal challenges working their way through US courts claiming that generative AI violates US copyright law by training on other people’s intellectu­al property.

For its part, IATSE — the umbrella union that includes the animation and visual effects workers — has asked the US Congress to strengthen copyright rules to ensure that AI products cannot be freely trained on the copyrighte­d work of its members.

The Animation Guild is currently surveying its members to gauge their concerns over AI and help devise a strategy.

Brandon Jarrat, another member of the Animation Guild’s AI strategy committee, said he thought workers’ concerns would extend beyond their own immediate fear of being replaced.

“Every time you prompt AI, how much water is used, how much power is consumed?” he asked. “These are things our members care about too.”

 ?? — AFP ?? With Hollywood already replacing staff with generative artificial intelligen­ce (AI) tools, people working in the industry want rules to govern the new technology.
— AFP With Hollywood already replacing staff with generative artificial intelligen­ce (AI) tools, people working in the industry want rules to govern the new technology.
 ?? — reuters file ?? SAG-AFTRA actors strike against the Hollywood studios as they join the Writers Guild of America (WGA) on the picket outside the Netflix offices in Los Angeles last year.
— reuters file SAG-AFTRA actors strike against the Hollywood studios as they join the Writers Guild of America (WGA) on the picket outside the Netflix offices in Los Angeles last year.
 ?? — afp file ?? SAG-AFTRA members chant slogans outside Paramount Studios during their strike against the Hollywood studios last year.
— afp file SAG-AFTRA members chant slogans outside Paramount Studios during their strike against the Hollywood studios last year.

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