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Posted: 2023-07-12 22:35:24

A midnight deadline is looming for a second Hollywood labour strike as major studios and the industry's largest union engage in last-ditch talks.

SAG-AFTRA, which represents 160,000 actors, is demanding higher compensation in the streaming TV era plus safeguards around the use of artificial intelligence (AI).

Members have authorised a strike if negotiators cannot reach a deal, and A-list stars including Jennifer Lawrence and Meryl Streep have said they are ready to walk off the job.

They would join about 11,500 members of the Writers Guild of America (WGA), who went on strike in early May.

That walkout sent late-night television talk shows into endless re-runs and disrupted most production for the autumn TV season and the filming of some big-budget movies.

A strike by SAG-AFTRA would force more sets to shut down and pile pressure on studios to find a resolution.

"Everybody's feeling tense and hoping that the answer is the right one," said actor Florence Pugh, speaking in London at a promotional event for the upcoming film Oppenheimer.

florence pugh takes a photo with a fan during a red carpet

Florence Pugh is among the actors pushing for a strike if no deal is reached.  (Reuters: Maja Smiejkowska )

Late on Tuesday local time, SAG-AFTRA negotiators agreed to a studio request to call in a federal mediator.

But the union said studio representatives had "abused our trust" with leaks to the media and it would not budge from the Wednesday night deadline, late Thursday afternoon AEST. 

Hollywood has not faced a double strike since 1960, when members of the WGA and the Screen Actors Guild called work stoppages in a fight over residuals from films sold to TV networks.

"You have to make $26,000 a year to qualify for your health insurance and there are a lot of people who get across that threshold through their residual payments," said actor Matt Damon at the Oppenheimer event.

"There's money being made and it needs to be allocated in a way that takes care of people who are on the margins."

Industry is facing AI, base pay concerns

Today, the unions are battling Netflix, Walt Disney and other companies over base pay and residuals from streaming services and other issues including the use of generative AI.

Actors want assurances that their digital images will not be used without their permission.

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