Making Sense of SAG

Making Sense of SAG

Published: May 28, 2009 @ 12:23 pm
Print this page
By Mark Lynch

Actors, though intermittently celebrated, have only recently shed a scurrilous and shady reputation.

With industrialisation and mass leisure time came the opportunity for them to make money and gain some respectability. The talkies, firmly established not long before World War II, gave actors, through inspirational films, propaganda and service entertainment, the chance to reach a stature anomalous to their history.

Actors had gone from notoriety to an elite discussed in cosmic allusion in barely more than a generation.

And now that golden age has certainly peaked. Like the car business and the airlines, celebrityland is suffering from acute overcapacity. The cocooned untouchables are now trapped in the media equivalent of the stocks of medieval Europe.

Sometimes the actors make it worse. From a multitude of rehabs to Whitney Houston’s constipation and Farrah Fawcett’s terminal illness, nothing is private and everything is game.

In many ways SAG is an anomaly, too. The majority of other artists have to fend for themselves, and the disparity of wealth in SAG is something that sits jarringly with the excesses of the superstars, which in normal circumstances would be a union to eradicate.

In my native Scotland one of the most famous theater companies, now defunct, was 7:84, meaning 7 percent of the population controls 84 percent of the wealth -- possibly a good description of SAG.

The new SAG contract threatens to widen the divide, though in the long run I think it will do the opposite.

New media has proved to be the most debated part of the proposed contract. Many actors, possibly most, are confused by the financials stipulated in the contract and the dramatic capability of cheap technology. The majority of stuff on YouTube and the like is not optimised for new media.

Whenever I encounter someone hesitant about shooing on a digital camcorder and posting online I refer them to Norway in HD, which is filmed with a Sony Handycam HDR-UX20. Although these episodes are landscapes rather than dramatic or comedic material, they quickly convince what can be done on a shoestring.

The $15K a minute this contract allows for non-union new media could go very far in the right hands.

On the Yes side, Kate Walsh describes the deal such: “… looking to the future, breaks unprecedented ground in new media." Literally, there is truth there because the current agreements on new media are quite scanty but she uses the word it imply a bonanza in the contract.

The most contentious issue is the proposal that pre-1971 movies and pre-1974 television would be shown online without a residual obligation. Now that’s what I would describe as unprecedented -- and a very dangerous precedent it is, too. Considering that many people rely on residuals, especially after markets have been so battered, the measure will have disproportion impact on older actors.

Among those supporting this is former SAG president Melissa Gilbert, still most famous for “Little House in the Prairie,” which began in1974, an unfortunate coincidence.

Tags: SAG, Screen Actors Guild
Ear on the Oscars

Get Our Daily Email, and Receive Invitations to Our Screenings Series

Start your day with all of the news worth knowing

What's First Take?

Ear on the Oscars
Transformer Sound
Most Popular
Wrap Tweets