US actors union agrees deal to end longest strike in Hollywood history

Business

US actors union Sag-Aftra has agreed a “tentative deal” with Hollywood studio bosses to end a historic 118-day strike.

In an announcement on Wednesday, the union said the longest walkout in its history will end at 12.01am US Pacific time on Thursday following a “unanimous vote”.

The union, which represents around 160,000 members of the industry, has been on strike since July 14 causing major disruption to Hollywood productions.

The deal comes after the union’s negotiating committee spent days deliberating over several items it deemed “essential” including artificial intelligence, following a “last, best and final” offer from the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers (AMPTP) – the group representing studios, streaming services and producers in negotiations.

The tentative deal will go to the Sag-Aftra national board on Friday “for review and consideration”, it announced.

Articles You May Like

Embattled COP29 climate summit strikes last ditch deal on funding for vulnerable countries
‘IVF can be prohibitively expensive’: Joy star on the story of the first ‘test-tube baby’
Davina McCall makes ‘enormous leap forward’ and is out of ICU after surgery to remove brain tumour
Ford plans to cut 4,000 jobs – including 800 in UK
Super Micro hires new auditor to maintain Nasdaq listing; shares pop 37%