Actors delay potential strike against studios and streaming services, extending contract negotiations

CNN Business · Chris Delmas/AFP/Getty Images/FILE

A union representing about 160,000 actors has put plans to go on strike against major studios and streaming services on hold.

The contract between the actors and an alliance of studios had been due to expire at midnight Friday. But late Friday the Screen Actors Guild-American Federation of Television and Radio Artists (SAG-AFTRA) announced it would push back the expiration until 11:59 p.m. PDT on July 12 as it continues negotiations.

“In order to exhaust every opportunity to achieve the righteous contract we all demand and deserve, after thorough deliberation it was unanimously decided to allow additional time to negotiate by extending the contract,” said Fran Drescher, the star of the 1990s sitcom “The Nanny” and the current president of SAG-AFTRA, in email to members Friday night.

Drescher appeared to be addressing some leading actors who have been publicly pushing the union to take a hard line in negotiations by ending her email: “No one should mistake this extension for weakness. We see you. We hear you. We are you.”

The decision to delay the start of a strike was not a surprise, as a number of industry experts had been predicting just that. But that doesn’t mean that a strike will now be avoided, said Jonathan Handel, an entertainment lawyer and writer and author of a book on the 2007-08 writers strike, “Hollywood on Strike!: An Industry at War in the Internet Age.”

“There will probably be a strike,” he said earlier in the week, before the delay was announced. “While discussions have been productive, it does not necessarily mean they’re close to a deal.”

Film, TV production already disrupted by writers strike

If the actors do go on strike, they would join 11,000 members of the Writers Guild of America, who have already been on strike for two months. If a strike is avoided, it would put pressure on the WGA to settle, since the studios have already reached a deal with a third major Hollywood union, the Directors Guild of America.

Production of many movies and television shows have already been shut down by the current writers strike. An actors strike would bring most remaining productions to a halt, other than on some independent films not associated with studios. There has been no visible progress in ending the writers strike since it started. Now, there are concerns that if the actors join the writers on strike, the shutdowns could stretch through the summer, maybe even through the end of the year.

The actors union has not been on strike against television shows and movie productions since 1980. The industry has obviously changed radically since then, when most shows were on just three broadcast networks and movies were only shown first in theaters. Video rental giant Blockbuster hadn’t started yet, let alone been forced out of business by streaming.