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this post was submitted on 05 Sep 2023
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Entertainment
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Give the actors and writers what they want, and the problem goes away. Pretty simple solution.
You guys want to pay 1985 wages and use 1985 payment systems in 2023, when the cost of living has skyrocketed, and methods of content distribution have completely changed. It doesn't work that way, it CAN'T work that way, and you'll have to adapt to 21st century standards if you want to continue to do business.
The reason we're seeing all these worker strikes is that they've been pushed to the brink by starvation wages and unpaid overtime. You've dragged your feet on paying 21st century wages for 21st century work, and the workers literally can't survive on what you're paying them.
I think Netflix is being the biggest stick in the mud here.
Established players like Disney and Warner may not be chomping at the bit to give in to all the union demands, but they know how these things play out. Their businesses are not built to survive protracted disruptions like this quite so easily, with many of them about to run out of content and being forced to conserve what they do have banked through at least mid-2024.
This is why you're not really seeing headlines about the strikes hurting Netflix the way they are hurting everyone else. They were the best prepared and have the most to lose.
Frankly, I'm shocked (shocked!) that Netflix is even still a thing after all the other studios broke away to start their own streaming services. What the hell do you have to offer without them? Shitty live action adaptations of anime, which nobody wants?
I mostly watch documentaries and original animation (Captain Fall, Disenchanted, Castlevania…) on Netflix. But I agree that most of their original content quality has been garbage compared to when it started doing some.