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Film and television workers expose oppressive conditions in entertainment industry

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Film and television workers expose oppressive conditions in entertainment industry

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Mass opposition and anger continue to mount amongst film and television workers as more details emerge about the Tentative Agreement (TA) between the International Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees (IATSE) and the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers (AMPTP), which was reached on October 16.

North Shore Music Theatre stagehands and theatre techs on the picket line, Beverly, MA.(Source: Twitter/@IATSE)

The TA was reached hours before IATSE was to begin its first nationwide strike in its 128-year history. The scheduled strike by 60,000 film and television production workers had been massively supported by the rank and file who had voted by 98 percent to authorize the strike. IATSE President Matthew Loeb preserved the union’s unblemished no-strike record by announcing a last-minute deal, which he declared was “a Hollywood ending.”

IATSE has not yet set a date for a ratification vote and instead hopes that by delaying a vote the widespread opposition will dissipate. The tragic shooting death of cinematographer Halyna Hutchins and the wounding of director Joel Souza during Thursday’s filming of the movie Rust in New Mexico—which would never have happened if the strike had been launched—will bring greater attention to intolerable working conditions and fuel further opposition to the sellout agreement.

The World Socialist Web Site spoke to Cory and Norma, who have worked in the film industry for decades.

Cory has worked as a key grip for over twenty years. Grips run and maintain all the equipment on the set that has to do with cameras, having to be proficient at utilizing tripods, dollies, tracks, jibs and cranes. Because of the pandemic, Cory stopped working as a grip and has pursued work in another field. Because of this, he felt he could express the views of many workers who might otherwise fear being blacklisted for speaking out.

“I’m a fourth generation, so I’ve seen what this industry can provide for families but I also see what we’ve lost since 1996 and how our leadership and our negotiators have failed us every single time, time and time again. “We haven’t struck in a hundred years, and they squandered that opportunity to finally tell the producers, ‘No, we are one, we are united.’ Because now what they get to do is un-unite us. Each one of the locals is now going to have to vote on the contract, so all they have to do, just like the presidential election, is just get key, high-populated unions to majority vote ‘yes,’ and more than likely they have enough delegates to get the agreement passed.

“They divided all the unions across—in Georgia, they have [IATSE Local] 479, they have one local and represent a lot of different technicians and mechanics, and different trades. In California, we have Local 80, Local 728, Local 444, Local 700, Local 600—there’s, I don’t know, let’s say 14-15 different locals in California, so now we’re all divided, so now we’re all fighting amongst each other, not rooting for each other.

And then if we have more members than they do, all we’ve got to do is vote 52 percent and our delegates all vote ‘yes,’ there’s no way that three of our unions could even compete with us because we have more delegates than them.

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