Hollywood studios, actors agree to mediation as strike deadline looms

File Picture

Negotiators for the SAG-AFTRA actors union have agreed to call in a federal mediator to try to forge a last-minute agreement with Hollywood studios and avoid a second simultaneous strike in the entertainment business.

The 160,000 members of SAG-AFTRA, Hollywood's largest union, have authorised a strike if a new labour deal cannot be reached before midnight on Wednesday.

The Writers Guild of America has been on strike since early May.

In a statement late on Tuesday, SAG-AFTRA said it was sticking with the Wednesday deadline and would "exhaust every possible opportunity to make a deal.

"However, we are not confident that the employers have any intention of bargaining toward an agreement," the statement said.

SAG-AFTRA is demanding higher compensation in the streaming TV era plus safeguards around the use of artificial intelligence (AI). A-list stars including Jennifer Lawrence and Meryl Streep have said they are ready to walk off the job if union leaders cannot reach a "transformative deal".

On Tuesday, SAG-AFTRA said the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers (AMPTP), the group that negotiates on behalf of studios, "has abused our trust and damaged the respect we have for them in this process."

The union said studio sources had leaked the request for a mediator to the press before SAG-AFTRA negotiators were informed.

"We will not be manipulated by this cynical ploy to engineer an extension when the companies have had more than enough time to make a fair deal," the union said.

A spokesman for the AMPTP, which represents Walt Disney Co, Netflix Inc and other major studios, did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Negotiations were taking place at a difficult time for media companies that are under pressure from Wall Street to make their streaming businesses profitable.

Disney, Comcast Corp's NBCUniversal and Paramount Global each lost hundreds of millions of dollars from streaming in the most recent quarter. The rise of streaming has also eroded television ad revenue as traditional TV audiences shrink.

More from Entertainment News

On Virgin Radio today

Trending on Virgin Radio

  • Pick the Hits

    We have money can't buy passes to premiere of Bad Boys: Ride Or Die and see Will Smith and Martin Lawrence in person at the event! Just Pick The Hits!

  • Regional Artist Spotlight Podcast

    Hear Maz & James chatting to the featured artists every month with Flash Entertainment.

  • Untold Dubai

    It arrived: The UAE's First Mega Music Festival at Expo City Dubai!

  • ARN News Centre

    Get the latest UAE and world news from our award winning team of journalists. The ARN News Centre is the country's most trusted source of information.