HomeNewsOpinionHow to end the Hollywood actors and writers strikes

How to end the Hollywood actors and writers strikes

With actor control of AI likenesses and project-by-project approvals, we will likely end up with a more exciting, less tired and less overexposed kind of celebrity culture, which leads to broader social benefits. But the problem that could then arise is what would studios do when it becomes difficult to buy actors' likenesses?

July 24, 2023 / 10:35 IST
Story continues below Advertisement
hollywood strike
Harrison Ford attends the “Indiana Jones And The Dial Of Destiny” UK Premiere at Cineworld Leicester Square on June 26, 2023 in London, England. (Photo by Stuart C. Wilson/Getty Images)

The strikes involving Hollywood actors and writers entail many distinct issues, but one of the most controversial concerns the rights to artificial intelligence likenesses by individual human beings. The studios are requesting the right to offer contracts that allow them to scan the bodies, voices and other features of individual actors, including extras, and then hold the rights to the AI likenesses in perpetuity. The actors are upset for good reason.

First, think through how this market will work. Most actors don’t become famous, and so their likenesses end up being worth nothing. That means studios can’t afford to offer any more than a small sum for the likeness rights on such a large number of initial acting contracts. It also means that if the studios get their way, potential stars end up significantly underpaid for selling their likenesses before they have become famous.

Story continues below Advertisement

Imagine being Harrison Ford and working as an extra early in your career. You - if I may time splice just a bit - could have lost the rights to your AI likeness forever. As technology evolves, future AI likenesses could be incorporated into new Raiders of the Lost Ark and Star Wars movies, whether the human Harrison Ford approved or not.

I find this unfair, but what is a better solution? I suggest that the eventual strike settlement forbid studios from buying the rights to AI likenesses for more than a single film or project. Or, as a compromise, the contract could be for some limited number of projects, but not in perpetuity. Actors thus would remain in long-run control of their AI likenesses, yet if they wanted to keep selling those likenesses – project by project – they could do so.