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The tentative deal with the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers (AMPTP) comes after 118 days, the longest strike in Hollywood history.
After 118 days, the SAG-AFTRA and the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers (AMPTP) have reached a tentative deal, ending the longest strike in Hollywood history.
Announcing a deal on Wednesday evening, the union declared the strike would end at 12:01 a.m. on Thursday. According to Variety, the SAG-AFTRA negotiating committee approved the deal on a unanimous vote. Now, the deal will go to the SAG-AFTRA national board on Friday for approval.
Per SAG-AFTRA’s official statement to its members, it seems the union negotiated a deal that hit all of the issues actors (and writers earlier this year) fought for in this historic strike, including fair compensation and protections from AI.
“In a contract valued at over one billion dollars, we have achieved a deal of extraordinary scope that includes ‘above-pattern’ minimum compensation increases, unprecedented provisions for consent and compensation that will protect members from the threat of AI, and for the first time establishes a streaming participation bonus,” the statement reads.
The statement also cites pension and health cap raises, compensation increases for background performers and more, in a contract that the union says enables its members “from every category to build sustainable careers.”
As theGrio previously reported, the SAG-AFTRA strike began in July 2023 amid the WGA’s strike against the AMPTP, marking a historic double strike in Hollywood. Since then, all struck workers refrained from AMPTP work as well as any promotion for their studio work, including their on-camera work, including attending red carpets and junkets (unless they received a SAG-AFTRA strike waiver).
The WGA also landed a historic deal this September, which stood as the first step to Hollywood ramping back up again after a shut-down summer. According to Variety, SAG-AFTRA is set to hold celebration gatherings around the country to honor the new deal.
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