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Jul. 31st, 2008

VDO Vault VDOVault Vincent D'Onofrio

[info]vdovault

This morning's update

News report & analysis for my fellow Law & Order: Criminal Intent fans is here:

http://forums.usanetwork.com/index.php?showtopic=399351&st=324&gopid=924333&#entry924333

Jul. 29th, 2008

VDO Vault VDOVault Vincent D'Onofrio

[info]vdovault

More math problems

Was looking at this article in Variety this morning:

http://www.variety.com/article/VR1117989646.html?categoryid=18&cs=1

and noted the following:

"The AMPTP touted its offer as bringing more than $250 million in salary gains to actors and said it represents more than a 25% gain over the 2005 contract."

Hmmm this means that the contract for all actors that ran from 2005-June 30, 2008 was worth at most a billion dollars (well actually less than a billion dollars because the gain in the AMPTP's 'final offer' is "more than a 25% gain"

So it's time for some quick arithmetic again

Note I am going to give the AMPTP the benefit of the doubt and call their last deal worth $1 billion. Sounds generous, right?

$1 billion /122,000 actors /3 years = $2732.24 per actor per year

If you add on the final offer's gains of $683.06 per actor per year to the $2732.24 per actor per year, then all actors would be making on average $3415.30 per year

If I recall correctly the poverty line for a single person in the United States is an annual salary of less than $10,000
VDO Vault VDOVault Vincent D'Onofrio

[info]vdovault

Video: What Is Force Majeure

yours truly deciphering legalese especially as it relates to SAG


Jul. 28th, 2008

VDO Vault VDOVault Vincent D'Onofrio

[info]vdovault

SAG.org: A Message From Alan Rosenberg

Dear Screen Actors Guild Member,

The Screen Actors Guild National Board of Directors met Saturday [July 26th 2008] and passed a resolution reaffirming its support for the National Negotiating Committee.

The resolution passed unanimously with a vote of 68 – 0 and states:
It is a core principle of Screen Actors Guild --

That no non-union work shall be authorized to be done under any Screen Actors Guild agreement and;

That all work under a Screen Actors Guild contract, regardless of budget level, shall receive fair compensation when reused.

This resolution represents guidance from the National Board of Directors to the National Negotiating Committee. It reaffirms the importance of these issues in our current TV/Theatrical Negotiations.

The Board's reaffirmation of these principles reinforces what we have been telling the industry for some time: Screen Actors Guild members and leadership understand how important it is that new media productions under our contract be done union and that there be fair residuals for all programming run or re-run on new media.

This does not mean that new media is our only focus. We know that you are also concerned about such bargaining priorities as product integration, force majeure, background actors’ issues and mileage. We will be communicating with you in more depth on these and other bargaining priorities in the coming days.

As we continue to work toward a successful conclusion to these important TV/Theatrical contract negotiations, we remain committed to securing a fair contract that serves actors’ needs.

Thank you to the thousands of Screen Actors Guild members (more than 5,100) who have signed the Solidarity Statement in support of our National Negotiating Committee and to the thousands of you who have sent us your comments and suggestions. We appreciate your dedication to your union and to your fellow actors.

For those who want to sign on and haven’t yet done so, you can send an email with your name and member ID number to SAG. Feel free to include your comments and suggestions. Your input is welcome and valuable. You can also visit us at http://www.sag.org and click on the Solidarity Statement box to see the thousands of actors who have signed the statement.

As many of you know, this year marks our 75th Anniversary. It is a good time to remember our founders and to consider what Screen Actors Guild stands for: We stand for actors -- always. It is more important than ever that we stand together in support of our union, each other and for all of the actors to come.

Thank you once again for your solidarity and commitment.

In unity,

Alan Rosenberg
VDO Vault VDOVault Vincent D'Onofrio

[info]vdovault

A little math...

The AMPTP claims that their 'sweetner' for taking their last deal offer by August 15th 2008 is worth $10 million
There are 122,000 members of SAG
The pay period mentioned is July 1st - August 15th 2008 i.e. 46 days

$10 million / 46 days = $217,391.30 per day

$217,391.30 / 122,000 = $1.78 per actor per day

This is the per capita 'loss' to actors if the AMPTP's deal is not taken by August 15th 2008.

But for the sake of argument let's go ahead and take into account the fact that many SAG members are not working primarily as an actor to make their living. In fact as a ballpark assumption, let's make that figure be 85% of the membership that are not primarily working as actors.

85% of 122,000 is 103,700
15% of 122,000 is 18,300

$217,391.30 / 18,300 = $ 11.88 per 'working' actor per day

This of course is assuming that every working actor gets the same per capita pay (while all the 103,700 'non-working' actors get the same pay too: zero). This is of course probably not how distribution of the sweetner would work because rates of pay for actors vary, and frankly even more actors could find themselves getting no share of the sweetner. But it is a useful exercise in analyzing how good the deal is overall to *all* of the union membership.

I now challenge you to go out and see what $11.88 or $1.78 a day for 46 days does to improve your personal bottom lines. What gains come of an additional $546.48 or an additional $81.88 in total?

I also note that just one executive, Les Moonves of CBS made $36.8 million dollars last year which works out to $100,821.92 a day.

PS A bonus math problem

$250 million (the purported total benefits of the current AMPTP deal) divided over 122,000 SAG members over 3 years equals an increase of $683.06 per SAG member per year.

I finally note that if you saved up 2 of your 3 years of 'groundbreaking' increases from the AMPTP's deal, you could pay the current AFTRA initiation fee free & clear and have a little left over.
VDO Vault VDOVault Vincent D'Onofrio

[info]vdovault

Audio: 89.3 KPCC Radio: Patt Morrison: SAG Membership Challenges Leadership while Talks Slow

From KPCC 89.3 in Southern California:

A move by 31 SAG actors to organize and challenge existing leadership may or may not have influence on contract talks. The group, called Unite for Strength, is dissatisfied with SAG president Alan Rosenberg and the progress of the current negotiations. Election results could be announced on September 18, and with the slow pace of negotiations this summer, new leadership might be in place before a contract decision is made.

Ned Vaughn, spokesman for Unite for Strength. He has been acting for over 20 years in TV and film. He will appear in Ron Howard's upcoming film "Frost/Nixon."
Alan Rosenberg, president of SAG
Alex Ben Block, senior columnist for Hollywood Today, on the web at hollywoodtoday.net

You will need Real Audio Player to listen to this:
http://www.publicradio.org/tools/media/player/kpcc/news/shows/pattmorrison/2008/07/20080725_pattmorrison1?start=00:00:01&end=00:27:20

Jul. 25th, 2008

VDO Vault VDOVault Vincent D'Onofrio

[info]vdovault

Variety: WGAW in third stage of Truth Tour (Glendale, AZ)

"The WGA West is launching the third stage of its Truth Tour campaign aimed at gaining jurisdiction over FremantleMedia by pointing to allegedly unfair working conditions on such shows as "American Idol."

The WGA and the Intl. Brotherhood of Teamsters will hold a demonstration Friday outside Jobing.com Arena in Glendale, Ariz., in conjunction with "American Idol" auditions.

The unions have already held demonstrations against Fremantle in Hollywood and San Francisco. Speakers at today's event will include Fremantle's "Temptation" writer Michael Prescott, reality/game show writer Hannah Buchdahl, former "Resurrection Blvd." writer Maria Elena Rodriguez, and former "American Idol" employee Patricia Clark.

The WGA plans to hold other "Idol" events at other audition cities and has set a Truth Tour Finale Event on Aug. 19 hosted by the WGA East outside the Meadowlands in East Rutherford, N.J.

FremantleMedia execs have said the allegations, which include denial of overtime pay and meal breaks, are without merit. Its execs have also said the WGA's jurisdiction demand is unreasonable because it doesn't use writers on all shows – an assertion disputed by the guild."

source: http://www.variety.com/article/VR1117989468.html?categoryid=1043&cs=1

Jul. 23rd, 2008

VDO Vault VDOVault Vincent D'Onofrio

[info]vdovault

Going to ComicCon on Friday July 25th? Be sure to hook up with SAG

From SAG:

Here's our logistical plan: SAG volunteers who will all be wearing blue SAG T-shirts will be located on the Southeast corner of 5th and L Streets (outside the San Diego Convention Center) with SAG flyers and T-shirts from 9-11 AM on Friday July 25th 2008 to hand out to ComicCon attendees and fans and bloggers. The SAG volunteers have a limited number of T-shirts to give out, so they'll be giving them out on a first-come, first-served basis.

So if you have questions on what SAG is up to or want to get on their email list to keep informed, be sure to do so at ComicCon.
VDO Vault VDOVault Vincent D'Onofrio

[info]vdovault

NY Times: A Product’s Place Is on the Set

...product integration on newscasts?!?!


The story is here: http://www.nytimes.com/2008/07/22/business/media/22adco.html?_r=1&ref=business&oref=slogin

The meaty part is here:

"In 2005, the F.C.C. issued a reminder to broadcasters that they must disclose when they use certain video news releases provided by corporations. The inquiry that the agency opened in June is focused on entertainment shows rather than news, but could easily be broadened.

In June, the Writers Guild of America West sent a letter to the F.C.C. supporting real-time disclosure of product placement and asking for a ban on video news releases on local broadcast television.

“This practice is unbelievably deceptive and is an attempt to trick the viewer to think that a paid advertisement is actually news,” the group’s president, Patric M. Verrone, wrote.

Herbert Jack Rotfeld, a professor of marketing at Auburn University, said that product placement deals on news shows could backfire for both sides. “In the end, they just make the audiences even more skeptical of everything.” he said."

Jul. 21st, 2008

VDO Vault VDOVault Vincent D'Onofrio

[info]vdovault

Letter From Peter Coyote

...originally posted on Nikki Finke's Deadline Hollywood Daily, this letter from the actor and man of many talents (see here: http://www.petercoyote.com/) deserves to be reposted here in its entirety.

Dear Colleagues,
A small minority of actors are internationally known, iconic figures, whom audiences flock to see in films and on television. Producers know these actors as the best means to insure return on their investments and reward them appropriately for that security. In addition to talent, these actors have had that extra measure of good fortune, and have been propelled to the very top of our profession. It is to these actors that this letter is addressed, because your good fortune may have insulated you from issues currently afflicting the majority of actors who support you as the ‘friends’, ‘lovers’, ‘cops’, ‘lawyers’, ‘judges’, ‘villains’, and ‘side-kicks in films, and who are also hard-working, talented and skilled professionals.

Since 1990 the earnings of the top leading actors have increased exponentially while the salaries of nearly all other actors have been systematically driven down. In many cases, the earnings of established character actors have been rolled back by 60-70 percent. This occurs, in large part, because the working professional (as opposed to the star) is at a disadvantage when negotiating in the new corporatized production environment. We do not possess a unique, marketable (and often media exploited) brand, and consequently lack the power to make or break the existence or profitability of a film. Consequently, respected, veteran actors with numerous credits and hard-earned “quotes” now routinely receive "take-it-or-leave it" offers, often at “scale”---a beginners wage.

Our actor’s Guild has two weapons to employ in protecting its members: the threat or fact of strike, and the power of its “star” members. The power to strike is the union's ultimate weapon, but it is a crude and draconian one and wounds everyone in our industry. Consequently, like nuclear weapons, it is rarely used. The industry is currently facing its second strike this year because the majority of its membership is suffering and feel they have no other recourse. If you possess only one weapon, it’s the one you use. Given the radical depression in earnings there’s little wonder that a strike is on the table again.

There is a simple way leading actors might bring a second, more flexible and targeted weapon into the fray on behalf of your colleagues which incidentally, would provide the ancillary benefit of insuring that you consistently play opposite actors of the highest caliber. If you were to include language in your contracts specifying that, in your films, the "quotes" of your peers must be recognized as a negotiating floor for their compensation, if you publicized that fact, and, if you kicked back a modest amount, say on salaries over six million dollars a film to make that money available, each and every actor negotiating to play opposite you would be empowered to demand the fair compensation that he or she has won for their work.

Why should you be asked to kick back, you might well ask? (and even wonder at the nerve of the suggestion? ) There are a few reasons that make sense to me. 1) You are the engines of the industry, and consequently immune to pressure and intimidation. 2) You are the wealthiest sub-community of the actors, and, possessing the awareness and sensibilities of artists, understand the mutuality of our work in a way that producers never will. 3) Such a gesture would buttress your peers who cannot win such gains for themselves except by sabotaging the entire industry with a strike, which prevents much work in which you have points from getting made.

Also, let’s relate to the non-celluloid world for a moment. Once an actor reaches the six or ten million dollar mark for several months work, they are financially secure for life unless they are morons or have extremely bad habits. By the time they’re earning 15-20 million, some measurable percentage of those earnings is meaningless. A major star on a film we were doing together, once told me, (We were discussing this issue) “Hey there’s no difference between 17 and 18 million to me! My agent tells me so-and-so gets it and so should I.”

That “no difference money” is the difference between earning a living or not for most of the rest of us. A modest return to insure the health of the entire community (the principle behind income taxes) hardly seems excessive. While this would not solve all the problems of our community, it would certainly remove much of the desperation and rancor from negotiations and make earning a living once again possible for far more of the membership. It cannot be legislated by law, only by custom, but as a custom it would lend a definite grace to our industry, and perhaps set a model that might inspire others. (Why do the words “Corporate executives” leap to mind?)

You cannot grow roses without mulch. While stars represent the beautiful blooms of the industry, the soil of the industry, the medium of growth supplied by all those who surround you, is being starved for nourishment. Eventually, this lack of payback to the medium supporting all the growth will kill, if not the plant itself, at least its quality and vitality. Our industry is not secure while the majority of its players are not. To change the situation requires consciousness, solidarity, and power. We have the consciousness and solidarity. We appeal to you for help with the power.

Sincerely,
Peter Coyote

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