Current:Home > reviewsSAG-AFTRA announces video game performers' strike over AI, pay -Summit Capital Strategies
SAG-AFTRA announces video game performers' strike over AI, pay
Charles H. Sloan View
Date:2025-04-10 20:56:39
Video game voice actors and motion-capture performers have called a strike over failed labor contract negotiations focused around artificial intelligence-related protections for workers, bringing about another work stoppage in Hollywood.
SAG-AFTRA announced Thursday that union members called a strike of the Interactive Media Agreement that covers video game performers, effective July 26 at 12:01 a.m. Negotiations began in October 2022, the union says, and members authorized a strike in a 98.32% yes vote in September.
The decision follows months of negotiations with major video game companies, including Activision Productions, Electronic Arts, Epic Games, Take-Two Interactive, Disney Character Voices and Warner Bros Discovery's WB Games.
The Interactive Media Agreement expired in November 2022 and was being extended on a monthly basis during the talks.
"Although agreements have been reached on many issues important to SAG-AFTRA members, the employers refuse to plainly affirm, in clear and enforceable language, that they will protect all performers covered by this contract in their AI language," SAG-AFTRA said in a statement.
Need a break? Play the USA TODAY Daily Crossword Puzzle.
SAG-AFTRA's membership also includes the film and television actors who went on strike in July last year over concerns of inadequate safeguards against AI, which brought Hollywood to a halt for half the year amid a simultaneous strike by the Writers Guild of America.
While movie and TV studios negotiated from a unified position and had the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers (AMPTP) negotiating on their behalf, there is no such analogous group in the games industry, so it is highly likely that one or more game developers will accept the union's demands, said Wedbush managing director Michael Pachter.
"Once one (developer) does it, all will do it," Pachter said.
SAG-AFTRA expresses concerns about AI, pay for video game performers
Apart from AI protections, SAG-AFTRA's most pressing issues in the contract negotiations for video game performers are higher pay, medical treatment and breaks for motion capture performers.
SAG-AFTRA says pay for video game performers has not kept pace with inflation. It is also pursuing more protections for the motion-capture performers who wear markers or sensors on the skin or a body suit to help game makers create character movements.
"We are disappointed the union has chosen to walk away when we are so close to a deal, and we remain prepared to resume negotiations. We have already found common ground on 24 out of 25 proposals, including historic wage increases and additional safety provisions," said Audrey Cooling, a spokesperson for the video game producers party to the Interactive Media Agreement.
The offer presented to SAG-AFTRA features AI protections that include requiring consent and fair compensation to all performers working under the IMA, Cooling said.
Still, Wedbush's Pachter said voice actors constitute a very small portion of game development costs that average over $80 million, and voice acting makes up only about $500,000 of that.
"It just isn't worth holding up a game's release to save a few hundred thousand dollars," said Pachter.
Which games are on SAG-AFTRA's video game strike list?
Not all "interactive programs" are being struck.
The find out the status of a game, use the search function at sagaftra.org/videogamestrike.
Contributing: Arsheeya Bajwa and Dawn Chmielewski, Reuters; KiMi Robinson, USA TODAY
veryGood! (5159)
Related
- The Best Stocking Stuffers Under $25
- Coyotes’ Travis Dermott on using Pride tape, forcing NHL’s hand: ‘Had to be done’
- Retired Colombian army officer gets life sentence in 2021 assassination of Haiti’s president
- Disney says DeSantis-appointed district is dragging feet in providing documents for lawsuit
- A South Texas lawmaker’s 15
- Salman Rushdie could confront man charged with stabbing him when trial begins in January
- Novelist John Le Carré reflects on his own 'Legacy' of spying
- Europe vs. US economies... and a dime heist
- Intel's stock did something it hasn't done since 2022
- Maine’s close-knit deaf community is grieving in the wake of shootings that killed 4 beloved members
Ranking
- Former Danish minister for Greenland discusses Trump's push to acquire island
- Taylor Swift is a billionaire: How Eras tour, concert film helped make her first billion
- Diamondbacks manager Torey Lovullo on Chris 'Mad Dog' Russo retiring: 'A deal's a deal'
- Pete Davidson, John Mulaney postpone comedy shows in Maine after mass killing: 'Devastated'
- Head of the Federal Aviation Administration to resign, allowing Trump to pick his successor
- Taylor Swift is a billionaire: How Eras tour, concert film helped make her first billion
- Robert E. Lee statue that prompted deadly protest in Virginia melted down
- Texas man identified as pilot killed when a small plane crashed in eastern Wisconsin
Recommendation
Retirement planning: 3 crucial moves everyone should make before 2025
UN General Assembly set to vote on nonbinding resolution calling for a `humanitarian truce’ in Gaza
Taylor Swift's 1989 (Taylor's Version) Vault Tracks Decoded: All the Hidden Easter Eggs
Most New Mexico families with infants exposed to drugs skip subsidized treatment, study says
Could your smelly farts help science?
Rush hour earthquake jolts San Francisco, second in region in 10 days
Probe finds ‘serious failings’ in way British politician Nigel Farage had his bank account closed
Rep. George Santos pleads not guilty to latest federal charges