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Lights, camera, strike: Hollywood’s labour battle

LOS ANGELES (AP) – It’s a ‘Strike Girl Summer.’ So read a picket sign as the sidewalks of Hollywood and midtown Manhattan teemed with actors on Day 1 of their strike, protesting alongside the writers who have been at it since May.

Together, the two guilds have ground the entertainment industry to a halt.

On both coasts, though, there was a buoyant mood in the air as picket lines were reinvigorated by the support of some of the 65,000 actors who comprise Screen Actors Guild – American Federation of Television and Radio Artists (SAG-AFTRA), where 98 per cent of members voted to approve a strike back in June.

This is Hollywood’s biggest labour fight in six decades, and the first dual strike since 1960, reigniting the fervour against the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers (AMTPT) just as a historic heat wave hits Southern California.

Outside the Warner Bros studios in Burbank, California, throngs of protesters chanted, “Fists up, curtains down, LA is a union town.”

Striking writers and actors picket outside Paramount studios. PHOTO: AP

Food trucks flanking organisers’ tents served churros, boba tea and cold lemonade to protesters baking in the midday heat that reached 36.7 degree Celsius. But the oppressive sun didn’t dampen the mood.

Demonstrators spritzed each other with water and danced to reggae ton music as passers-by in cars honked in support of signs like: “Honk if your boss is overpaid”.

Parents on the picket line hoisted their children over their shoulders and pushed toddlers in strollers, high-fiving one another with signs that reflected defiant lyrics from Olivia Rodrigo’s new single, Vampire, and were packing ‘Big Strike Energy’.

“The jig is up,” said President of SAG-AFTRA, Fran Drescher and once the titular star of The Nanny at SAG’s press conference on Thursday.

“The entire business model has been changed by streaming, digital, artificial intelligence (AI). If we don’t stand tall right now, we’re all going to be in trouble.”

The infusion of SAG members’ support was noted by comedian and writer Adam Conover, a member of SAG and Writers Guild of America (WGA) who serves on the latter’s negotiating committee.

“If you are gaining momentum like we are 70-odd days into a strike, you are going to win,” Conover said. “You know, the companies’ strategy with the writers guild when we go on strike is to starve us out and wait, not even talk to us for months because they expect us to bleed support.”

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