Current:Home > ScamsCustomers want instant gratification. Workers say it’s pushing them to the brink -MoneyStream
Customers want instant gratification. Workers say it’s pushing them to the brink
Poinbank View
Date:2025-04-10 13:40:03
NEW YORK (AP) — Six straight days of 12-hour driving. Single digit paychecks. The complaints come from workers in vastly different industries: UPS delivery drivers and Hollywood actors and writers.
But they point to an underlying factor driving a surge of labor unrest: The cost to workers whose jobs have changed drastically as companies scramble to meet customer expectations for speed and convenience in industries transformed by technology.
The COVID-19 pandemic accelerated those changes, pushing retailers to shift online and intensifying the streaming competition among entertainment companies. Now, from the picket lines, workers are trying to give consumers a behind-the-scenes look at what it takes to produce a show that can be binged any time or get dog food delivered to their doorstep with a phone swipe.
Overworked and underpaid employees is an enduring complaint across industries — from delivery drivers to Starbucks baristas and airline pilots — where surges in consumer demand have collided with persistent labor shortages. Workers are pushing back against forced overtime, punishing schedules or company reliance on lower-paid, part-time or contract forces.
At issue for Hollywood screenwriters and actors staging their first simultaneous strikes in 40 years is the way streaming has upended entertainment economics, slashing pay and forcing showrunners to produce content faster with smaller teams.
“This seems to happen to many places when the tech companies come in. Who are we crushing? It doesn’t matter,” said Danielle Sanchez-Witzel, a screenwriter and showrunner on the negotiating team for the Writers Guild of America, whose members have been on strike since May. Earlier this month, the Screen Actors Guild–American Federation of Television and Radio Artists joined the writers’ union on the picket line.
Actors and writers have long relied on residuals, or long-term payments, for reruns and other airings of films and televisions shows. But reruns aren’t a thing on streaming services, where series and films simply land and stay with no easy way, such as box office returns or ratings, to determine their popularity.
Consequently, whatever residuals streaming companies do pay often amount to a pittance, and screenwriters have been sharing tales of receiving single digit checks.
Adam Shapiro, an actor known for the Netflix hit “Never Have I Ever,” said many actors were initially content to accept lower pay for the plethora of roles that streaming suddenly offered. But the need for a more sustainable compensation model gained urgency when it became clear streaming is not a sideshow, but rather the future of the business, he said.
“Over the past 10 years, we realized: ‘Oh, that’s now how Hollywood works. Everything is streaming,’” Shapiro said during a recent union event.
Shapiro, who has been acting for 25 years, said he agreed to a contract offering 20% of his normal rate for “Never Have I Ever” because it seemed like “a great opportunity, and it’s going to be all over the world. And it was. It really was. Unfortunately, we’re all starting to realize that if we keep doing this we’re not going to be able to pay our bills.”
Then there’s the rising use of “mini rooms,” in which a handful of writers are hired to work only during pre-production, sometimes for a series that may take a year to be greenlit, or never get picked up at all.
Sanchez-Witzel, co-creator of the recently released Netflix series “Survival of the Thickest,” said television shows traditionally hire robust writing teams for the duration of production. But Netflix refused to allow her to keep her team of five writers past pre-production, forcing round-the-clock work on rewrites with just one other writer.
“It’s not sustainable and I’ll never do that again,” she said.
Sanchez-Witzel said she was struck by the similarities between her experience and those of UPS drivers, some of whom joined the WGA for protests as they threatened their own potentially crippling strike. UPS and the Teamsters last week reached a tentative contract staving off the strike.
Jeffrey Palmerino, a full-time UPS driver near Albany, New York, said forced overtime emerged as a top issue during the pandemic as drivers coped with a crush of orders on par with the holiday season. Drivers never knew what time they would get home or if they could count on two days off each week, while 14-hour days in trucks without air conditioning became the norm.
“It was basically like Christmas on steroids for two straight years. A lot of us were forced to work six days a week, and that is not any way to live your life,” said Palmerino, a Teamsters shop steward.
Along with pay raises and air conditioning, the Teamsters won concessions that Palmerino hopes will ease overwork. UPS agreed to end forced overtime on days off and eliminate a lower-paid category of drivers who work shifts that include weekends, converting them to full-time drivers. Union members have yet to ratify the deal.
The Teamsters and labor activists hailed the tentative deal as a game-changer that would pressure other companies facing labor unrest to raise their standards. But similar outcomes are far from certain in industries lacking the sheer economic indispensability of UPS or the clout of its 340,000-member union.
Efforts to organize at Starbucks and Amazon stalled as both companies aggressively fought against unionization.
Still, labor protests will likely gain momentum following the UPS contract, said Patricia Campos-Medina, executive director of the Worker Institute at the School of Industrial and Labor Relations at Cornell University, which released a report this year that found the number of labor strikes rose 52% in 2022.
“The whole idea that consumer convenience is above everything broke down during the pandemic. We started to think, ‘I’m at home ordering, but there is actually a worker who has to go the grocery store, who has to cook this for me so that I can be comfortable,’” Campos-Medina said.
___
Associated Press video journalist Leslie Ambriz contributed from Los Angeles.
veryGood! (78177)
Related
- McConnell absent from Senate on Thursday as he recovers from fall in Capitol
- Why we don't trust the 'vanilla girl'
- MRI on Commanders receiver Terry McLaurin’s toe injury showed no major damage, an AP source says
- SEC conference preview: Georgia has company with Alabama, LSU Tennessee in chase
- Sam Taylor
- Ecuador hit by earthquake and cyberattacks amid presidential election
- 1 student killed, 23 injured after school bus flips in Ohio to avoid striking minivan
- Books We Love: Book Club Ideas
- Charges tied to China weigh on GM in Q4, but profit and revenue top expectations
- Chicago woman arrested for threatening to kill Trump and his son
Ranking
- Meta releases AI model to enhance Metaverse experience
- See the Moment Serena Williams and Alexis Ohanian’s Daughter Olympia Met Her Baby Sister
- Dentist convicted of killing wife on African safari gets life sentence, $15M in penalties
- Bachelorette's Charity Lawson Joining Dancing With the Stars Season 32
- What do we know about the mysterious drones reported flying over New Jersey?
- Kerry Washington, Martin Sheen shout for solidarity between Hollywood strikers and other workers
- Royals unveil proposed ballpark and entertainment district plans for 2 locations
- Camila Alves Dispels Getting High, Laid Back Image of Husband Matthew McConaughey
Recommendation
Finally, good retirement news! Southwest pilots' plan is a bright spot, experts say
Can South Carolina’s Haley and Scott woo the GOP’s white evangelical base away from Trump?
Serena Williams Gives Birth, Welcomes Baby No. 2 With Alexis Ohanian
Man stranded on uninhabited island for 3 days off Florida coast rescued after shooting flares
John Galliano out at Maison Margiela, capping year of fashion designer musical chairs
Serena Williams welcomes second daughter, Adira River, with husband Alexis Ohanian
Fantasy football rankings for 2023: Vikings' Justin Jefferson grabs No. 1 overall spot
Pets not welcome? Publix posts signs prohibiting pets and emotional support animals