Current:Home > ScamsChainkeen|George Clooney, other A-listers offer over $150 million in higher union dues to end actors strike -Achieve Wealth Network
Chainkeen|George Clooney, other A-listers offer over $150 million in higher union dues to end actors strike
Surpassing View
Date:2025-04-10 12:52:06
George Clooney and other stars who are among the top earners in Hollywood have made a groundbreaking proposal to end the actors strike, which has dragged on for nearly 100 days.
Clooney along with Ben Affleck, Emma Stone, Scarlett Johansson and Tyler Perry met with the Screen Actors Guild-American Federation of Television and Radio Artists (SAG-AFTRA) union to suggest eliminating a $1 million cap on union membership dues so that the highest-earners in the business can contribute more, Deadline first reported.
"A lot of the top earners want to be part of the solution," Clooney, a two-time Oscar winner, told Deadline. "We've offered to remove the cap on dues, which would bring over $50 million to the union annually. Well over $150 million over the next three years. We think it's fair for us to pay more into the union."
- SAG-AFTRA asks striking actors to avoid certain popular characters as Halloween costumes
- Talks aimed at ending actors strike break down amid acrimony
- Late-night talk shows coming back after going dark for 5 months due of writers strike
The funds would go toward providing health benefits for members. The stars also proposed reformulating how actors earn streaming residuals.
The offer would prioritize paying the lowest-earners first, Clooney said, according to the Deadline report.
Nice offer, but it wouldn't change anything
SAG-AFTRA president Fran Drescher responded to the unprecedented offer on Instagram, thanking Clooney and the other A-listers for the proposal.
She called the offer "generous" but warned that it "does not impact the contract that we're striking over whatsoever."
"We are a federally regulated labor union and the only contributions that can go into our pension and health plans must be from the employer," Drescher said. "So what we are fighting for in terms of benefits has to remain in this contract."
The union is still waiting for the "CEOs to return to the table so we can continue our talks."
She called out studio heads for avoiding addressing what she called "flaws" in the current residual compensation model.
"Sometimes in life when you introduce an unprecedented business model like they did on all of my members with streaming, an unprecedented compensation structure must also go along with it," Drescher said. "It may not be easy, it may not be what they want, but it is an elegant way to solve the problem so we can all go back to work in what would become the new normal."
Union dues subject to federal and state laws
The SAG-AFTRA television and theatrical negotiating committee also responded to the proposal in a letter to members Thursday.
"We're grateful that a few of our most successful members have engaged to offer ideas and support," the letter read.
The concept of the stars raising their own dues "is worthy of consideration, but it is in no way related to and would have no bearing on this present contract or even as a subject of collective bargaining," it continued. "It is, in fact, prohibited by Federal labor law. For example, our Pension and Health plans are funded exclusively from employer contributions. It also doesn't speak to the scale of the overall package."
veryGood! (56)
Related
- Man can't find second winning lottery ticket, sues over $394 million jackpot, lawsuit says
- Stock market today: Asian shares decline after report shows US manufacturing contracted in May
- Gilgo Beach serial killing suspect returning to court after a renewed search of his home
- How To Prepare Your Skin for Laser Hair Removal
- Global Warming Set the Stage for Los Angeles Fires
- Southwest US to bake in first heat wave of season and records may fall
- Ex-US soldier charged in ‘international crime spree’ extradited from Ukraine, officials say
- Michigan kills 31,000 Atlantic salmon after they catch disease at hatchery
- Trump issues order to ban transgender troops from serving openly in the military
- Mourners can now speak to an AI version of the dead. But will that help with grief?
Ranking
- Bill Belichick's salary at North Carolina: School releases football coach's contract details
- Biden prepares a tough executive order that would shut down asylum after 2,500 migrants arrive a day
- MLB power rankings: Once formidable Houston Astros keep sinking in mild, mild AL West
- Hawaii's Kilauea volcano erupts in remote part of national park with low eruptive volume, officials say
- US wholesale inflation accelerated in November in sign that some price pressures remain elevated
- Map shows states affected by recalled cucumbers potentially contaminated with salmonella
- These 23 Pottery Barn Teen Items Work as Home Decor Gems for Modern Adults: Finds Starting at $4.99
- When will cicadas go away? Depends where you live, but some have already started to die off
Recommendation
Cincinnati Bengals quarterback Joe Burrow owns a $3 million Batmobile Tumbler
What is ‘dry drowning’ and ‘secondary drowning’? Here's everything you need to know.
Wisconsin attorney general files felony charges against attorneys, aide who worked for Trump in 2020
Jack Black responds to students' request to attend 'School of Rock' musical production
Residents worried after ceiling cracks appear following reroofing works at Jalan Tenaga HDB blocks
Rapper Sean Kingston booked into Florida jail, where he and mother are charged with $1M in fraud
Cicadas are back, but climate change is messing with their body clocks
Former U.S. soldier charged with homicide, robbery in plot to fund fighting trip to Venezuela