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SAG-AFTRA to announce national board vote and details of the labor deal Friday afternoon

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The SAG-AFTRA actors union's national board of directors Friday will review a proposed labor contract with Hollywood studios and decide whether to send it to union members for ratification. Union leaders will announce the board's final vote and details of the contract around 3 p.m. 

The tentative deal was announced late Wednesday afternoon, and the union's 118-day strike officially ended at 12:01 a.m. Thursday.

No specific details of the tentative agreement with the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers, which represents the studios, were announced, but union negotiators called it a historic pact valued at more than $1 billion.

"This revolutionary agreement achieves major breakthroughs in addressing compensation via residuals and protections from generative artificial intelligence technology, while reaffirming the role human performers play in the production of film, television and streaming entertainment," SAG- AFTRA officials said in a statement Thursday.

Union officials said the proposed contract includes a streaming participation bonus, "minimum compensation increases that break the so-called `industry pattern,"' consent and compensation guidelines on the use of AI, and increases in pension and health caps.

"Effective immediately, all SAG-AFTRA members should fulfill their contractual obligations and return to work," the union told its members. "Members and influencers may resume services relating to publicity and the promotion of motion pictures produced under the CBA and Television Agreement, without consequence or conflict with the union."

Hollywood production had essentially been at a standstill since May 2, when the Writers Guild of America union went on strike, and SAG-AFTRA performers mostly honored the picket lines. The WGA ended its strike in late September, when negotiators reached a labor agreement with the studios. WGA members ratified the deal in early October.

The shutdown has been estimated by some experts to have cost the local economy billions of dollars, affecting not only actors and writers, but all other aspects of the production industry and even small businesses that rely on entertainment workers, such as restaurants and caterers.

"I am grateful that a fair agreement has been reached between SAG- AFTRA and AMPTP after a more than 100-dy strike that impacted millions in Los Angeles and throughout the country," Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass said in a statement Wednesday afternoon after the tentative deal was announced. "Those on the line have been the hardest hit during this period and there have been ripple effects throughout our entire city.

"Today's tentative agreement is going to impact nearly every part of our economy. Now, we must lean in on local production to ensure that our entertainment industry rebounds stronger than ever and our economy is able to get back on its feet."

Hopes of a break in the negotiating deadlock began arising Tuesday, when Deadline reported that negotiators for the union and AMPTP met via Zoom late Monday night and reached a possible agreement regarding protections and compensation for performers in the use of their images via artificial intelligence.

That meeting reportedly included Disney CEO Bob Iger, Warner Bros Discovery CEO David Zaslav, Netflix's Ted Sarandos and NBCUniversal's Donna Langley, who are believed to have been directly involved in many of the recent negotiating sessions with the union.

AI was a major hurdle in the drawn-out labor negotiations. The union was insistent on securing robust protections regarding AI, while the studios were reportedly reluctant to restrict their use of the rapidly emerging technology.

Deadline, an online entertainment trade publication, reported that SAG- AFTRA and the studios had already reached agreement in principle on wages, settling on a roughly 8% increase in minimum rates, along with other long-rate wage hikes and a 100% raise in compensation bonuses for high-performing streaming content.

The two sides met for roughly two hours Saturday and for each of the previous 12 days, according to multiple media reports. The so-called Gang of Four studio CEOs -- Iger, Sarandos, Zaslav and Langley -- are believed to have taken part in those discussions.

On Saturday, they were joined by an expanded team of studio executives that also included Paramount's Brian Robbins; Disney's Dana Walden and co- chairman Alan Bergman; Amazon Studios' Mike Hopkins and Jen Salke; Sony Pictures chairperson Tony Vinciquerra; and Apple Studios' Jamie Erlicht and Zack Van Amburg, Variety reported.

On Monday, SAG-AFTRA announced that it had delivered its response to the Hollywood studios' "last, best & final" contract offer, noting at the time that the two sides were still lacking an agreement on "several essential items," including the use of AI.

The studios had warned that unless a deal is reached within the week it will be impossible for broadcasters to salvage half a season of scripted television.

The 2024 summer movie season was also increasingly in peril, as more and more films have been delayed to 2025.

The Producers Guild of America issued a statement congratulating SAG- AFTRA "for their unwavering dedication in reaching an agreement with the studios. We eagerly look forward to collaborating with our fellow writers, actors and director as we collectively work towards revitalizing our industry and returning to work."

The WGA also congratulated the actors' union for reaching a deal to address "the challenges the actors were facing."

"We're thrilled to see SAG-AFTRA members win a contract that creates new protections for performers and gives them a greater share of the immense value they create," WGA officials said in a statement.

The Directors Guild of America, which reached a contract deal with the AMPTP earlier this year without striking, issued a statement saying, "Congratulations to SAG-AFTRA on successfully reaching a tentative agreement that addresses the unique needs of their members.

"Directors and their teams look forward to our industry getting back to work and collaborating with actors, writers, craftspeople and crews to create film and television that entertains billions around the world."

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