Ron Perlman Threatens Hollywood Executive Amid Strike
By: Phillip Nieto (Mediaite)


Actor Ron Perlman appeared to threaten a Hollywood studio executive in a now-deleted Instagram rant over alleged comments about hoping the actors and writer strike drags on.
According to Deadline, anonymous studio executives revealed to the outlet it hopes the strike drags on, putting writers in dire economic straits and therefore forcing them back to the negotiating table.
For months, the writers union has been on strike but earlier this week the actor's union, SAG-AFTRA, joined the writers on the picket line, setting up one of the biggest union boycotts in Hollywood history.
In a since-deleted rant posted to his Instagram on Friday, Perlman directed his anger at the Hollywood executive who said they are going to keep the strike going until people "start losing their apartments and losing their houses."
"Listen to me, motherfuckers, there's a lot of ways to lose your house," The Hellboy actor told his followers. "Some of it is financial, some of it is karma, and some of it is just figuring out who the fuck said that. And we know who said that and where he fucking lives."
He added, "There's a lot of ways to lose your house. You wish that on people, you wish that families starve, while you're making $27 fucking million a year for creating nothing? Be careful, motherfucker. Be really careful, 'cause that's the kind of shit that stirs shit up."
The video was downloaded and shared by various Twitter users before it was deleted, including a tweet from Hear in LA that went viral.
Shit's getting real in the WGA + SAG strike.
"There's a lot of ways to lose your house." pic.twitter.com/XqiSZF2lbr
— Hear in LA (@hearinladotcom) July 14, 2023
Watch the clip above.
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The SAG strike is shaping up as one of the most important strikes in modern times.
Money is at stake of course, but also is the studio and producers desire to incorporate more and more artificial intelligence into the making of movie and television entertainment. The implications of this sort of thing will effect every profession and millions of jobs in the future.
The Black Mirror plot about AI that worries actors
As actors strike in Hollywood, unions say they want more protection from artificial intelligence.
By By Shiona McCallum
Jul 14, 2023 04:06 PM
Salma Hayek discovers she signed away the rights to her AI likeness in a recent episode of Black Mirror
By Shiona McCallum
Technology reporter
Hollywood actors are striking for the first time in 43 years, bringing the American movie and television business to a halt, partly over fears about the impact of artificial intelligence (AI).
The Screen Actors Guild (SAG-AFTRA) actors' union failed to reach an agreement in the US for better protections against AI for its members - and warned that "artificial intelligence poses an existential threat to creative professions" as it prepared to dig in over the issue.
Duncan Crabtree-Ireland, the chief negotiator for the SAG-AFTRA union, criticised producers for their proposals over AI so far.
He said studios had asked for the ability to scan the faces of background artists for the payment of one day's work, and then be able to own and use their likeness "for the rest of eternity, in any project they want, with no consent and no compensation".
If that sounds like the plot of an episode of Charlie Brooker's Black Mirror, that's because it is.
US media has been quick to point out that the recent series six episode "Joan Is Awful" sees Hollywood star Salma Hayek grapple with the discovery that her AI likeness can by used by a production company without her knowledge.
And it's not just SAG-AFTRA who are concerned about so-called "performance cloning".
Liam Budd, of UK acting union Equity, said: "We're seeing this technology used in a range of things like automated audiobooks, synthesised voiceover work, digital avatars for corporate videos, or also the role of deepfakes that are being used in films."
Mr Budd said that there was "fear circulating" amongst the Equity members and the union was trying to educate them on understanding their rights in this fast-evolving world.
Film-maker and writer Justine Bateman, speaking to the BBC's Tech Life earlier this year, said that she did not think the entertainment industry needed AI at all.
"Tech should solve a problem and there's no problem that those using AI solves. We don't have a lack of writers, we don't have a lack of actors, we don't have a lack of film-makers - so we don't need AI," she said.
"The problem it solves is for the corporations that feel they don't have wide enough profit margins - because if you can eliminate the overhead of having to pay everyone you can appease Wall Street and have greater earnings reports.
"If AI use proliferates, the entertainment industry it will crater the entire structure of this business."
Perhaps it is only a question of time before ChatGPT or Bard can conjure up an innovative movie script or turn an idea into a blockbuster screenplay.
Watch: Brian Cox: 'I am concerned about artificial intelligence'
Some say AI will always lack the humanity that makes a film script great, but there are legitimate concerns that it will put writers out of a job.
The Writers' Guild of Great Britain (WGGB) - a trade union representing writers for TV, film, theatre, books and video games in the UK - has several concerns, including:
The WGGB has made a number or recommendations to help protect writers, including AI developers only using writers' work if they have been given express permission and AI developers being transparent about what data is being used to train their tools.
WGGB deputy general secretary Lesley Gannon said, "As with any new technology we need to weigh the risks against the benefits and ensure that the speed of development does not outpace or derail the protections that writers and the wider creative workforce rely upon to make a living.
"Regulation is clearly needed to safeguard workers' rights, and protect audiences from fraud and misinformation."
Watch: Susan Sarandon on the dangers of AI in film industry
The rapid development of AI over the past year has led to the concept of ownership becoming convoluted.
When someone inputs their likeness into an AI-generated portrait app such as DrawAnyone, DALL-E or even Snapchat - the resultant images are now in the public domain and free to use by anyone.
The new image is not protected by copyright law.
Dr Mathilde Pavis, a lawyer who specialises in digital cloning technologies, told the BBC that UK copyright laws need to change.
"It's strange to me that your face and your voice is less protected than your car, your laptop, your phone, your house or your books - but that's the state of the law today.
"And that's because we didn't think that we'd be so vulnerable, as vulnerable as we are in terms of being reused and imitated with AI technologies," she said.
That was such a good episode. I love black mirror.
Two things:
1. What about people?! Neoliberals (those who judge life by the money one can achieve through hook or crook want more not less of in their capitalist model of well. . . being ) love to tell us that money is all that matters, or 99.99 percent all that matters. I have been commenting on the humanity-side of our existences since I have been around NT. And, now I think some conservatives will begin to EXPERIENCE that people are not worth a damn. . . if they can't keep up (and they can not) with the technology that plans to 'replace' them.
2. When techs finally create a working : A. presidential 'bot,' B. congressional 'bot,' and C. set of court 'bots, ' may be then those fools in-charge of the country will realize that the threat is not their fellow living humans/citizens who simply are trying, er striving to have a proper existence in this world but truly non-feeling logic programs that could give a piss about people they will get onboard with true liberty and put down their stupid, "f-ed-up" fake culture wars!
Because it's becoming about our own Asses and it's coming to a community near. . . "you."
On the darkside : With AI running and managing our lives, humanity will be free to go unhinged at tearing each other to shreds once and for all (time) !