• @merc
    link
    79 months ago

    That black pie chart is really confusing. The main part of the chart is labelled “Studio Revenues”, but the small slice is various costs? Why would you have revenues and costs in the same pie chart? I understand comparing revenues vs. costs, but that’s not how you use pie charts. Pie charts ad up to 100% and describe how each section contributes to the total. So, what’s the overall thing being measured here, “money that exists in Hollywood?” Because, if it’s revenues, of course SAG-AFTRA contracts aren’t revenues for the studios. If it’s costs, then why is the big section labelled “Studio Revenues”?

    Also, what are the “estimated totals of each major union and guild contract”? SAG-AFTRA is listed there, but surely that can’t include all the amount they pay actors. Is that just the contractual minimums? Is it money that SAG-AFTRA and the other unions receive, but not the money that the members of those unions receive?

    I get the concept they’re trying to convey. Compared to the money the studios rake in, the amount that the unions are asking for is minimal. But, this is not how you use a pie chart.

    • Schadrach
      link
      fedilink
      29 months ago

      Is it money that SAG-AFTRA and the other unions receive, but not the money that the members of those unions receive?

      Given how much studios pay for big name actors, I would guess the reason they listed those slices by the name of the union is because that’s what the unions themselves get, not what gets paid to union members. That’s the only way it makes any sense at all, unless they’re limiting the chart to only the most absurdly successful movies rather than what’s more typical.

      • @merc
        link
        19 months ago

        The most absurdly successful movies still have big-name actors making tens of millions.

        My guess is that the labels are for the minimums that SAG-AFTRA and the other unions negotiated. So when Tom Cruise is paid $100m in a movie that costs $500m to make, but earns $600m in revenue, they list it as “SAG-AFTRA: $10k” or whatever, because that’s the minimum they could have paid Cruise based on the SAG-AFTRA deal.

        In a sense, that’s fair enough. My understanding of the way the Hollywood pay scales work is that the unions set minimums, but the actors (and screen writers, and directors, etc.) are free to negotiate for more. The reality is that the deals that the Hollywood unions are negotiating are really pretty minimal for most projects there. I’d assume that the main reason that the entertainment companies are pushing back is that they know that people are willing to do almost anything to work in Hollywood, and they’d do it for free if they could. So, it galls the entertainment companies that they’re losing profits by having to agree to treat their employees as valuable humans and pay them living wages instead of just treating them as unpaid interns and pocketing those minor profits.