After spending over a year in negotiations, unionized postproduction coordinators in the New York area have unanimously ratified their first labor contract with the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers.
The ratification vote took place Dec. 19, with 67 percent of the bargaining unit turning out to vote and all participating union members voting to support the agreement. Around 60 postproduction coordinators who work in scripted film and TV (members have been credited on titles including the 2024 Mean Girls and Severance) currently belong to the group, a subsidiary of the Communications Workers of America union. The contract went into effect on Dec. 31, with signatories including Apple Studios LLC, HBO Entertainment Inc., HBO Films Inc., Netflix Productions LLC, Universal Television LLC, Universal Content Productions LLC and Paramount Pictures Corporation, among others.
“Post coordinators have a professional, career-track position and up until now we haven’t had any protections in place for our job and for our wellbeing,...
The ratification vote took place Dec. 19, with 67 percent of the bargaining unit turning out to vote and all participating union members voting to support the agreement. Around 60 postproduction coordinators who work in scripted film and TV (members have been credited on titles including the 2024 Mean Girls and Severance) currently belong to the group, a subsidiary of the Communications Workers of America union. The contract went into effect on Dec. 31, with signatories including Apple Studios LLC, HBO Entertainment Inc., HBO Films Inc., Netflix Productions LLC, Universal Television LLC, Universal Content Productions LLC and Paramount Pictures Corporation, among others.
“Post coordinators have a professional, career-track position and up until now we haven’t had any protections in place for our job and for our wellbeing,...
- 1/17/2024
- by Katie Kilkenny
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
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New York-based freelance postproduction coordinators unanimously voted to unionize with the Communications Workers of America in eight separate union representation elections that took place Thursday.
The coordinators, part of the organizing group calling itself the Post Production Guild, won all eight National Labor Relations Board union representation elections, according to the Cwa. (The Hollywood Reporter has reached out to the Nlrb for confirmation.) The elections took place at Apple Studios; Netflix Productions; CBS Studios and Eye Productions; Universal Television and Universal Content Productions; Possible Productions; Hostage Productions, Tcs US Productions 9, Inc., Omega Rising Productions, Inc., and Newsub 120 Productions, Inc.; North Center Productions; and Random Productions, Heyday Productions, Sourdough Productions.
The Post Production Guild, composed of more than 150 freelance workers who have worked on shows like American Rust, A Quiet Place 2 and Modern Love, initially sought to represent post producers, postproduction supervisors and...
New York-based freelance postproduction coordinators unanimously voted to unionize with the Communications Workers of America in eight separate union representation elections that took place Thursday.
The coordinators, part of the organizing group calling itself the Post Production Guild, won all eight National Labor Relations Board union representation elections, according to the Cwa. (The Hollywood Reporter has reached out to the Nlrb for confirmation.) The elections took place at Apple Studios; Netflix Productions; CBS Studios and Eye Productions; Universal Television and Universal Content Productions; Possible Productions; Hostage Productions, Tcs US Productions 9, Inc., Omega Rising Productions, Inc., and Newsub 120 Productions, Inc.; North Center Productions; and Random Productions, Heyday Productions, Sourdough Productions.
The Post Production Guild, composed of more than 150 freelance workers who have worked on shows like American Rust, A Quiet Place 2 and Modern Love, initially sought to represent post producers, postproduction supervisors and...
- 6/9/2022
- by Katie Kilkenny
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
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