After over 100 days of withholding work, SAG-AFTRA is working on a counteroffer to the proposal from four CEOs who met with them on Tuesday. The CEOs are represented by the AMPTP, but Variety reports that their personal involvement was to “impress on SAG-AFTRA leadership the economic stakes as the stalemate drags on.”
One of the economic stakes they mentioned: cancelled TV shows and a total rewrite of the upcoming scripted TV schedule for 2024. While the CEOs meant to merely lay out “the basic realities” of the strike, SAG-AFTRA interpreted this as a threat.
Negotiations scheduled Wednesday between SAG-AFTRA and the studios didn’t happen after all — and everyone’s good with that.
“It’s a step in the right direction and the negotiating committee is taking the time to do a deep review,” a guild source tight to the talks told Deadline this evening, noting it is just a pause of one day.
Although the actors guild said Tuesday night it was “scheduled to continue talks with them tomorrow,” that shifted this morning when SAG-AFTRA leadership reached out to the AMPTP to ask to modify those plans. As conveyed to the studio side, guild brass felt they needed more time to look over the latest proposals the CEO Gang of Four and AMPTP president Carol Lombardini presented Tuesday to guild boss Fran Drescher, chief negotiator Duncan Crabtree-Ireland and their team.
Somewhat surprised at first by the guild’s ask, the studio chiefs apparently appreciated the consideration and responded favorably to the brief downtime.
“There is no drama about this,” one individual close to the talks told Deadline this afternoon. “Don’t read anything more into this than what it is — time to review, look at the numbers, consider the counter,” another well-positioned source said. “This happens all the time in these kinds of negotiations. Shows people are serious, and that’s a good thing,”
Back Tuesday for a second round of renewed deliberations in the now 104-day-long strike, the CEOs put an offer on the table they hoped would break the stalemate over the guild’s demand for revenue sharing. Centering on increased bonuses based on the success of streaming shows and movies and a bump up in minimum rates, Disney’s Bob Iger, NBCUniversal’s Donna Langley Warner Bros Discovery’s David Zaslav and Netflix’s , plus Lombardini, saw their proposal as a pathway to sealing a new three-year deal with the guild.
SAG-AFTRA negotiators didn’t quite welcome the new proposals as warmly as the studio bosses thought they would, with more than one insider saying it “flopped” in the room.
At the same time, others caution this is part of the process and the nature of mature negotiations
As it stands, SAG-AFTRA’s negotiating committee and the AMPTP, joined again by Iger, Sarandos, Langley and Zaslav, will meet Thursday at the guild’s Wilshire Boulevard offices.
After the tough talk around the bargaining table in the last round of bargaining that started October 2 and some of the public remarks each side had made about the other after the studios suddenly suspended talks October 11, there were some raw egos in the room Tuesday. In that context, the talks were deemed per studio sources as “not great” and “contentious,” leaving many cynical that talks may fall apart again.
Said one insider about heat in the room, it’s the first time in decades they saw the composed Iger “lose his sh*t.” Said another, “it’s like both sides are speaking two completely different languages.”
While negotiations were rough at points, there were also a number of light-hearted moments, we hear, with Drescher specifically making the much welcomed point of raising the tenor of the talks and breaking some of the tension, sources on both sides say. “Everyone wants to get to an agreement, that’s clear,” a person with knowledge of negotiations noted. “No one thinks we’re just going to clap our hands and get it done. It takes work, time.”
Over the previous round of talks earlier this month, SAG-AFTRA revamped its notion of compensation based on the success of streaming shows and films from 2% of revenue to 1%, then suggested a percentage payout based on subscribers. On October 12, Sarandos called the latest guild plan, which worked out to around 57¢ a subscriber, a “levy” on subscribers, calling it “a bridge too far.”
Yet it wasn’t so far a bridge, to use the streaming co-CEO’s terms, that Iger didn’t call Crabtree-Ireland up on Saturday, the 100th day of the strike, and ask for talks to resume.
The not-so-secret fear on both sides is that if a deal isn’t reached in the next few weeks there would be continued damage to an already hobbled California economy, which has seen $6.5 billion in losses. Including the setback from the WGA strike, that economic hit has seen 45,000 industry jobs lost as production has shut down.
“If a deal isn’t reached in the near future, it will mean a complete wipeout of the new 2024 TV season and all the first- and second-quarter movies moving to the second half of the year,” said one industry source.
The box office since the end of the pandemic has benefited by a consistent stream of product; any gaps left in the schedule will certainly impact already debt-laden exhibitors. The fall box office currently has seen about $440 million in losses compared to the same period in 2019 with actors unable to promote films and big pics like Challengers and Dune: Part Two leaving the schedule.
“We all know what the stakes are,” a guild source said. “Everyone does.”