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Video game strike action rally planned for Thursday

31 January, 2017 by PashaO
Video-game addiction

Video games strike actionA rally to be held on Thursday 2 February, in support of US Screen Actors Guild SAG-AFTRA’s 102-day-old strike against selected video game companies promises to be the union’s biggest to date, with actors being joined by members of the Writers Guild, Teamsters Local 399, the American Federation of Musicians, and representatives from the LA County Federation of Labor, Deadline reports.

SAG-AFTRA chose to go on strike over 100 days ago in an effort to secure better working conditions and fairer compensation for its video game voice actors. The union has already picketed Activision, Warner Bros. and Insomniac Games.

Strike action is being taken against video game employers who continue to operate under the terms of an agreement structured more than twenty years ago for an Industry that was only beginning to utilise professional performances.




Video games have grown into a multibillion-dollar industry where the top titles earn more than the highest grossing blockbuster movies in many cases, yet the Interactive Media Agreement does not provide for a residual or any other form of backend compensation. Amongst a list of demands, the union are demanding a simple backend payment that would be capped and apply only to successful games.

The following is a list of SAG-AFTRA’s key issues taken from their strike notice:

Contingent Compensation

Games have evolved to provide increasingly immersive and cinematic experiences that compete with television and theatrical motion pictures for consumer dollars. It is time for this now mature industry to pay and treat professional performers according to the standards and precedents that the union has established and defended for generations.




Vocal Stress

Videogame voice actors are routinely required to simulate painful deaths, creature voices, grunts, barks and other stressful vocalisations that can strain and damage their voices, sometimes permanently. To minimise the risk and strain on performers’ voices, they are demanding that vocally stressful sessions be limited to two hours but paid at the four-hour session rate.

Transparency

Videogame employers routinely engage performers without identifying the role or even the game that the performer is being engaged to work on and refuse to provide basic information about the nature of the performance that will be expected of them. This deprives the performer of the ability to make a meaningful decision about whether to accept a role or to negotiate appropriate compensation if they do. SAG-AFTRA are demanding that employers provide performers or their agents with basic information at the time of engagement, including the game, the role and essential information about the nature of the performance.

Stunt Coordinators

Videogame employers frequently fail to have a stunt coordinator present when stunt work or other dangerous activity takes place. SAG-AFTRA want to clarify that the Interactive Media Agreement requires that stunt coordinators be present whenever stunt or other dangerous work is performed.

Strike, strike, strike

The strike is the first since SAG and AFTRA merged in 2012, and it’s now the fifth longest in SAG history. It is the fourth longest of SAG’s nine strikes in the guild’s 83-year history.

SAG’s 2000 commercials strike lasted 183 days; its 1980 strike against the film and TV industry to establish contract terms for pay-TV and video cassettes lasted 95 days; its first strike, the commercials strike of 1952-1953 lasted 80 days and the commercials strike of 1978-1979 lasted 51 days.

The ongoing video games strike is already longer than the 43-day strike of 1960 to establish residuals for films licensed to television; the 40-day SAG animation strike of 1987; the 26-day SAG-AFTRA commercials strike of 1988; and the 11-day strike of 1955 over TV residuals.

 

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