My Fellow Screen Actors Guild Members,
Yesterday, on January 26th, a slim majority of our National Board voted to fire our National Executive Director and Chief Negotiator, Doug Allen. This was not accomplished in a face-to-face Board meeting, where the significant minority would have had an opportunity to voice its opinion and where Mr. Allen would have had a chance to face his accusers and address their concerns. Instead, this drastic action was accomplished by “written assent”, the most undemocratic provision allowed by our Constitution.
As your twice-elected National President, I feel that it is my responsibility to give you my perspective on yesterday’s events, although my ability to do so is somewhat limited. The same majority, 52.52%, that fired Mr. Allen also voted to change our Board policy that designated the National President to be one of the official spokespeople for the Guild. As of yesterday, the only two people who are permitted to officially speak for Screen Actors Guild are our newly appointed interim NED, David White, and John McGuire, our Senior Advisor from New York. The members now have no official voice. I appreciate the fact that Mr. White thinks it is preposterous to silence a duly elected national officer, and so has permitted me this forum, provided I inform you that what I am about to write represents my opinion. However, although I am not writing on behalf of the Guild, I believe I do speak for the nearly 48% percent of the Board who are deeply concerned about what was done yesterday and about how these changes were accomplished.
Many of us believe that Doug Allen was fired because he was simply too good, too strong, and too much a unionist. His greatest sin was in challenging the idea that we be bound by the concept of “pattern bargaining”, under which actors have been disadvantaged for decades. Doug gave us the courage to accept the fact that we had a legal right to pursue an agreement that addressed the specific needs of actors; that it is unreasonable to think that the DGA or WGA, without asking any questions pertaining to actors’ participation in “new media”, could strike a deal that would adequately address the concerns of our 120,000 members and the diverse nature and needs of a membership that includes middle class actors, background actors, stunt performers, singers, dancers and our biggest stars. I, and the majority of our negotiating committee, were amazed by Doug’s skill as a negotiator and team leader, and by his diigence and breadth of knowledge. We were profoundly moved by his love for and dedication to actors.
I have no doubt that, if our Board had demonstrated any solidarity whatsoever, Doug and our committee would have arrived at an acceptable deal some time ago. Instead, members of that Board engaged in a systematic effort to sabotage these negotiations by passing motions that prescribed courses of action, and then repudiating those motions, thereby throwing our leadership into a state of chaos and our membership into a state of confusion. This was done consistently and, I believe, intentionally, so that our progressive leadership would be made to appear inept, which would pave the way towards a return to the go-along-to-get-along days of yore.
Now there is a new lead negotiator in the person of John T. McGuire. Our Negotiating Committee has been replaced by a new, more moderate Task Force. You can expect that not long after this new team enters the Bargaining Room, they will be offered some “plum”, some concession from the AMPTP that was said, heretofore, to be unattainable. This will be given by our employers, not as an act of good will, but as a demonstration of the fact that “reasonableness” will be rewarded, while “militancy” will be punished. Make no mistake, if this should occur, if there is any gain made, or if we are ultimately able to resist one of the massive roll backs that has been demanded, it will not be due to the skill of this new “negotiating team”. Anything that is won from this point forward will still be the result of the enormously hard work put in by Doug Allen and the majority of the negotiating team that has been in place since our W and W caucuses began a year ago this February. I am enormously proud of that team, led by Doug , of which I was a member.
We were able to change the discussion about these existing deals from the obfuscatory claims that they were somehow “groundbreaking” to a sobering dialogue, illuminating just how damaging these new media deals might be to the prospects of a middle class actor’s ability to make a living.
You should know that the ability to get things accomplished by “written assent” was also available to the progressive leadership that held the majority in the Boardroom prior to the most recent election. That Draconian option was never employed, however. Despite what has been said about that majority, they always made democracy their highest priority. They understood that a slim majority of 52% or 53 % gave no one the right to ride roughshod over a significant minority; they understood what the use of such a tactic would do to democracy in our union; they never desired to open that Pandora’s Box. Unfortunately, now it has been opened and precedent has been set. I, and the previous Board majority, have always been willing to compromise on any issue. Compromise is the way things get accomplished in a contentious democracy such as ours. To date, I have not been approached by a single Board member from New York, the RBD, or from the ironically named slate “Unite for Strength”, to try and find common ground on any issue. If these elected officials desire to move forward in any significant way in the name of the members, this behavior must change.
In unity,
Alan Rosenberg
Editor-in-Chief Nikki Finke - tip her here.
Yesterday, on January 26th, a slim majority of our National Board voted to fire our National Executive Director and Chief Negotiator, Doug Allen. This was not accomplished in a face-to-face Board meeting, where the significant minority would have had an opportunity to voice its opinion and where Mr. Allen would have had a chance to face his accusers and address their concerns. Instead, this drastic action was accomplished by “written assent”, the most undemocratic provision allowed by our Constitution.
Many of us believe that Doug Allen was fired because he was simply too good, too strong, and too much a unionist. His greatest sin was in challenging the idea that we be bound by the concept of “pattern bargaining”, under which actors have been disadvantaged for decades. Doug gave us the courage to accept the fact that we had a legal right to pursue an agreement that addressed the specific needs of actors; that it is unreasonable to think that the DGA or WGA, without asking any questions pertaining to actors’ participation in “new media”, could strike a deal that would adequately address the concerns of our 120,000 members and the diverse nature and needs of a membership that includes middle class actors, background actors, stunt performers, singers, dancers and our biggest stars. I, and the majority of our negotiating committee, were amazed by Doug’s skill as a negotiator and team leader, and by his diigence and breadth of knowledge. We were profoundly moved by his love for and dedication to actors.

The producers had the upper hand all the way. Why? Usually in a union, it’s US against THEM, not US against US and them.
the most undemocratic provision allowed by our Constitution.
How does one read this statement without laughing?
This is exactly what I have been talking about. The 53/47 split is the National Board (math clearly rounds 52.52 to 53 and 47.48 to 47). We can assume that the voting membership stands that divided or close to it.
As long as we fight each other we can’t win.
MF used parlimentary procedure to keep the vote from happening. U4S used a Written Assent to get their way. Now Alan Rosenberg, rather than listening to the majority of the board is going to sow seeds of dissent. It’s INSANE!!!!
MF and U4S have BOTH isolated each other. I don’t give a rat’s ass why!!!
Can we just stop calling names and yelling at each other long enough to open a debate and actually find common ground? We are all actors for crying out loud. We all WANT THE SAME THINGS.
IT’S TIME TO STOP THE SPITEFUL ATTACKS ON EACH OTHER!! Can we at least try to be civil here?
Next, if U4S can make any gains in the theatrical contract, it WON’T BE ENOUGH for MF and they will work to shoot it down! And the biggest problem is the AMPTP KNOWS WE WILL NEVER BE ABLE TO GARNER A STRIKE AUTHORIZATION!!!
If MF and U4S keep fighting, NOTHING will get done. Not a damn thing and 6 months from now we will STILL be nowhere.
This back and forth MUST STOP. Both sides have done their damage but the time for taking sides has passed.
I URGE ALL SAG MEMBERS TO WRITE THEIR BOARD MEMBERS AND ASK FOR THEM TO MAKE PEACE WITH EACH OTHER SO WE CAN ACTUALLY DO SOMETHING!!!!
As long as President Rosenberg and Hollywood are fighting with the NED and the rest of the board, we are done. I’ve watched this drag on for almost 2 years now and it’s not going anywhere. Unbelieveable.
Alan Rosenberg wrote “To date, I have not been approached by a single Board member from New York, the RBD, or from the ironically named slate “Unite for Strength”, to try and find common ground on any issue. If these elected officials desire to move forward in any significant way in the name of the members, this behavior must change.”
I can only say that as the President of our Guild, the onus of reaching out is on your shoulders. YOU need to reach out and find common ground or at least START THE CONVERSATION. These people are the majority of the Board, no matter what standards you may count by.
It’s time to LEAD Mr. President! Reach out! Work to find that common ground that will move our guild FORWARD. I had hopes when you were elected that you would do just that. It’s not too late.
Please. Take the high road here and let’s get something done that we can ALL be proud of.
To Embarrassed-
“If Rosenberg can’t get beyond the in-fighting and bickering, he should step down. This is truly embarrassing and entirely unacceptable. Lead the entire membership and stop with the petty politics already.”? The U4S bobo’s heckled their way to the top of the heap and now, you and they have got the nerve to say stop the infighting?
No Wonder-
First of all Wonder bobo, FYI the letter is from Alan Rosenberg not Doug Allen- “They believe that 53% is not a majority. They believe that 53% is undemocratic. He believes that 48% of the membership supports him although he as never taken that vote-how would he know? It’s just his guess.”- News Flash, 100%-52%=48%, not a guess and the Majority of the Hollywood board, where the majority of work is done and the majority of money is made, was against this move.- “He has never given the membership the CHANCE to even vote on the presented contract”. Are you kidding me? The U4S’s just tanked the SAV that they voted for 98% (now there is a majority for you.) and now they’ve pulled the plug on sending the contract out for an up or down vote. You ask- “Is there anything undemocratic here? -NO the majority has cast its vote. Is there anything “unrepresentative” about this”- Actually there is, I and a majority of members voted Allen Rosenberg in as President to speak for us. Can you imagine if the Republicans held the majority in congress and voted that even though Obama was elected President, the President would no longer be allowed to speak for the American people?
399-
“self serving”?- SAG serving sucker.
Anonymous-
That isn’t the way it went down at that meeting and if you had been there you’d know that. You’re just repeating the revisionist bullshit you read in Variety and the HWR.
Fielding Mellish-
Come back to earth. You’re getting laughably small.
And as an aside, everyone does understand that the majority of the new majority is made up of NY and regional branch members, they’re the same ones doing everything they can to get production to their states. You do know that means out of California right?
Peace? Peace? who gives a shit about Peace? I want to vote on my contract and the ones keeping me from doing that are the U4F’s.
So, he appears to be taking credit for anything good that he clearly expects to come out of the new task force’s negotiation and is preparing to blame them for everything else. But he is unwittingly admitting that getting rid of Allen and replacing the negotiating committee was the exact right thing to do because he obviously believes that there is a deal to be made. Wow…
It’s very clear from most of the Doug and Allen bashing posts that most of you haters are upset that the Allen’s weren’t representing your interests. Well, that’s because most of you AREN’T ACTORS! They don’t represent you. I think Allen is spot on with everything he says in his letter. And as for Democracy, the MF crowd are the ones that opened up the Hollywood board meetings to try to bring some transparency and honesty to the process. Every other SAG board does their buisness behind closed doors. Maybe if MF had quashed the freedom of speech U4S used to publicly bash the SAG leadership over and over and over until you were all brain washed, they never would have gained the “strength” to pull this stunt.
What a blowhard ! He complains about this action being unfair after he stalled the meeting on jan.12-13, he is dreaming ! Wake up and smell the Green Circle, as president Obama said to the republicans ” you lost, I won! Disscusion over”. NEXT !!!
Yes “Over 2150 working actors signed a petition against what has been going on, many of them well known performers who love this union.” BUT YOU DO NOT MENTION that YES and over 4000 working actors signed a petition IN FAVOR OF what has been going on, IN FAVOR OF Membership Firsts position and Doug Allen’s position, many of them well known performers who love this union. SO a MAJORITY, 66% signed a petition FOR and a MINORITY 33% were against. The majority voice should have been heard, the Strike vote should have been sent out. So I hear a lot of UNF supports blogging that a 52ish% new majority national boards recent decision needs to be respected. But you UNF supports would not respect the 66% who supported sending out a strike authorization vote and did everything you could to stop the MAJORITY SAG member voices from being heard and a MASSIVE 66% is significant enough to justify sending out the vote. You say respect the MAJORITY numbers of the new National Board but you would not respect the MAJORITY numbers when the MAJORITY wanted a strike vote to be sent out. So, please, respond to that . . . go ahead. UFS and their supports are hypocrites. (Examples: You can’t say drinking and driving is bad, I would never go out and drink and drive and THEN go out and drink and drive.) You can’t go out and say we need new leadership, MAJORITY voice rules and needs to be respected AND THEN go out as a MINORITY and try to not allow the MAJORITY voice to be heard. This is what happened with the strike vote. So again, please respond.
representing 48% is still losing. too bad Mr Unity doesn’t honor his the “bylaws” he refers too and remain silent since a majority voted he no longer speak for the union and even he admits he is crossing that line be it with or without the new guys blessing (does said new guy even have that right? )
I see the rules only apply when they serve him and god forbid this thing be over without one more blowhard calling from this bumbling mess. What is wrong with these people? they are imploding from within instead of getting on with life so the rest of us can count on movies getting made. Talk about how to lose friends and alienate people.
“It’s very clear from most of the Doug and Allen bashing posts that most of you haters are upset that the Allen’s weren’t representing your interests. Well, that’s because most of you AREN’T ACTORS!”
HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAAAAAA! Man, thank you! It’s laughfest posts like this that make refreshing the board every half hour totally worth it.
Dear Penny: I refer to you the following website…www.nosagstrike.com. There you will find the signatures of over 2150 actors…ACTORS, Penny…many of them names you will readily recognize. These are UNION PERFORMERS, Penny, who also love their union, but who are NOT in favor of what has been going on. PLEASE…stop looking for scapegoats. MF has not exactly welcomed dissenting opinions (in the name of democracy or otherwise) so to say they opened up the boardrooms to transparency is really absurd. I’m sorry but it is. That is the EXACT reason that gave rise to U4S to begin with, not to mention all the others that share a similar view on MF’s lack of tolerance or compromise. With all respect, Penny…seriously…give us a break and join the discussion to eliminate dissent and find common ground.
Nothing left but to turn out the lights…
Rosenberg and Allen are hyper-partisan and that just doesn’t fly in the current economic and financial climes. Perhaps the cooler, more rational heads of U4S will actually be able to negotiate a deal instead of all the chest-thumping and heated rhetoric of the MFers.
Listen – it’s important to understand a couple things. First, this “they filibustered!” taking point needs to bow to the reality of what actually happened. At the meeting of the Hollywood division the 11th, the agenda for the first day of the national meeting, the 12th, was discussed. An agenda was set and agreed upon: doing guild business, discussing the contracts and allowing the NED – Doug Allen – to perform his role as intended. MF, knowing what was coming – an attempt to fire Doug, specifically asked if there would be anything else added to the first day’s agenda. Gabrielle Carteris, of UFS, looked the Vice President of the union in the eye and lied – “no.”
MF knew the jig was up. They were anticipating a day of guild business, a chance for Doug to make his case for why we were where we were and what to do next. But, shortly into the first day, the agenda was interrupted by a call for “executive session!”
This is sort of the equivalent of a guy being told he has 2 days to at least attempt to explain himself – or be shot, and that being agreed to as the right thing to do, then, shortly into the first day, someone stands up and says “let’s take him out back and shoot him now.”
It was a gutless, horseshit move.
THAT’S why all hell broke lose. THAT’S why Alan Rosenberg was livid – he felt, it was the highest form of disrespectful, out of order, behavior possible, and he was right. Had they followed procedure that they had AGREED to going in, Doug’s removal could have been accomplished by them Day 2 with some regard for his service to the guild, and he could have been at least given the courtesy of being treated in a professional manner.
Instead – UFS jumped the gun, and OF COURSE, Doug’s supporters – apparently about 48 percent of the national board, were really, really fucking pissed, and went into immediate “rally round our leader” mode to fight of this half-assed, stab in the back, bullshit rookie move by UFS and their supporters on the board.
THAT’S what caused a 30 hour filibuster and the REASON it went that way is, Doug’s supporters, rightfully so, said “fuck these people – they HAVE the votes to do this respectfully, and they look us in the face and LIE as to how they will do it, well, we won’t lay down for it.”
THAT’s what happened. All this “subverting democracy with a 30 hour filibuster” stuff is complete and utter bullshit. UFS was inept, did not know what they were doing, jumped the gun in their cockiness and ignorance, and got their ass handed to them.
The snarky assholes who keep portraying what happened the 12th and the 13th as an attempt to “subvert the will of the majority” need to understand it was NOT that. It was Doug’s supporters being lied to by UFS, specifically Gabrielle Carteris, then JUMPED the next morning, and it led to an action that was in fact ENTIRELY democratic – filibuster. You may have heard of it? It’s in the Constitution of the United States and is sometimes used in congress?
The use of “written assent” was a move to cover UFS’s asses after they blew their chance to dismiss Doug with some respect. It is, unless I’m mistaken, an extreme act, never before used for such a decision. As Alan says in his statement, there were many times his administration could have used “written assent” to completely cut off their political opposition, but Alan specifically, always said no because he felt it was extreme and undemocratic, and would be a bullshit move that would not be worthy of them.
Well, we’re two days into a new administration that seized power by use of “written assent” and stopped the SAV that THEY had voted up, from going out, the results of which we would have learned five days ago, OR, the contract from being sent out already so the membership could vote.
This has been a purely political move, pulled by people who have displayed their own lack of character and judgment, and will be remembered for having done so.
People say – “Well, Alan fired Doug Hessinger from the president’s chair cutting off debate.” But those were different circumstances in a time when the president had just been elected by a swelling majority that DEMOCRATICALLY said “we want tougher negotiations, and a tougher NED, we want a raise in the DVD rate, we are tired of the ineffectual moves of the ‘moderates.’ We want results.” Hessinger, a former head of AFTRA, and a go along to get along type NED, was clearly not the guy to carry out that edict from the membership, which had been given a chance to VOTE and make their feelings known.
No such thing here. These people – UFS/USAN/RBD NEVER gave Doug Allen a chance. Had they rallied behind him, as they should have, we would have had a contract months ago, because the AMPTP would have seen the unity and resolve and been forced to make some hard decisions to make a deal or face a strike.
Instead, the “moderates” have, from day one, used everything they could to subvert the process, ALWAYS voting WITH the leadership by huge margins to cover their asses politically, but moving all the while towards their goal: get rid of Doug Allen, get rid of Alan Rosenberg, weaken SAG, and merge with AFTRA. THAT’S what this is all about. Why do you think this comes from NY and the RBD? This was a coup by them. Hollywood – where 75% of the production comes from and 65% of the income comes from, somehow finds itself at the mercy of NY and the RBD, when the rules of proportionality clearly state Hollywood should rightfully have the largest say.
I think Doug Allen came in thinking there was a mandate for change, looked around at some of the intractable problems of the Guild, most pressingly its relationship with AFTRA, did a good deal of research, presented the findings in the fall of ’07 SAG magazine, and then found out how dysfunctional SAG is. The numbers, the facts, the truth about AFTRA’s behavior? Unacceptable! The truth of the situation? Unacceptable! And it was downhill from there. Allen had a bulls-eye on his back from the moment that edition of the SAG Magazine went to press.
“Coming together” can only happen when there is an honest and PUBLIC exchange of views which the membership can see, and hear. That was NOT a part of the recent election. Ned Vaughn refused to discuss or debate UFS’s positions with a representative from MF, saying “the entire slate of UFS candidates should be able to introduce themselves to the membership in an informal setting,” and it was not his prerogative to stand above the rest of them and debate for UFS. Bullshit. It was a move to avoid debate, at all costs, and I guarantee you, had the membership been granted the opportunity to see and hear such an exchange, there never would have been a “razor-thin majority for UFS” result.
They wouldn’t debate in recent weeks either, knowing they had the votes for a coup, if it came to that, and they had no intention of letting the membership decide what IT wanted if they could do anything to stop it.
And here we are. The membership STILL hasn’t voted on the SAV or the contract, UFS, NY and the RBD has just seized power and unceremoniously dumped a good man who was working his ass off to get a good contract – and would have, if he’d ever been given any support, and, as occurred to me BEFORE I read Alan’s letter, let’s see now if there was some sort of backroom understanding, whereby UFS gets some sort of true breakthrough, because the AMPTP figured it would be worth it to get a more compliant, weaker leadership in power, that would hopefully merge with AFTRA, creating a de-clawed union, unable to control it’s own destiny because of having to merge with broadcasters and recording artists, that would never again be in the position of strength it formally had, and negotiate from a position of that strength – the strength that got SAG members EVERY SINGLE BENEFIT and advance in wages, working conditions, health and pension and RESIDUALS we have today. Every advance took courage and the will to fight, and to strike if necessary. Every single one.
Tomorrow? Who knows. Whatever happens, it looks like Hollywood, where the Screen Actors guild was formed, in the depths of the Depression when executives wanted to cut salaries by 50%, won’t have much say.
Let’s hope this can be thwarted and overturned as quickly as possible, and that the next time Hollywood has the chance to consolidate power and control, to negotiate the best contracts benefiting ALL SAG members, wherever they are, that they do what’s necessary to never have to be subject to the whim of NY the RBD or a small, dissident faction in Hollywood ever again.
Does this union do anything other than argue and bicker with its own members? How about negotiate a new contract, ehh? 7 fucking months, hello?!
The whole idea that the democratically-elected president of the Screen Actors’ Guild cannot officially speak for the guild is very anti-democratic and entirely ludicrous.
Not only are we facing a significant buyout for our now-former NED – who did nothing to deserve this kind of treatment – but we have the distinct possibility of legal action within the guild itself between the president and the putative majority of the national board over what is essentially a gag order.
I would pose two questions – I don’t have the answers, I’m just asking the questions. First, is the gag order legal? If it isn’t, my second question would be, does this call the legality of the entire assent letter into question???
If the decisions stand, President Rosenberg has already found his voice as an individual actor whose First Amendment rights are not in any way, shape, or form compromised by his position as president of the Screen Actors’ Guild. I would urge him to hold the board’s feet to the fire. Remind them of the promises they made about New Media and qualified voting while campaigning. Remind them of the decisions they’ve already made – don’t let them backtrack an inch without calling them out for their Janusian tactics.
Alan, the whole thing sucks, and I know it’s discouraging, but take heart. I would venture that the vast majority of the actors who voted for U4S had no anti-democratic sentiments in mind when they cast their ballots, and many must be horrified at what they’re seeing right now. Keep fighting the good fight. If the new negotiator and the task force recommend a heinous contract, be forthright in your dissenting opinion. As for the future of the guild, the worm will turn again.
Matt Mulhern – thank you very much for that outstanding piece of history and analysis. If any of the UFS and RDB or other non-actor people can refute that, please try to do so with civility, truth and intelligence.
I want to get beyond this, but it has turned into a pissing contest of such ridiculous proportions, with, in my opinion, one side acting like whiney little kids, and one side trying to do the right thing for the union and the future of us as actors. We are fighting the producers/studios who have historically given away as little as they think they can so as to keep their greedy hands on as much revenue as possible while marginalizing the working people.
If this were the national business/economic stage, wouldn’t we all be rallying together against the corporate bosses who weren’t doing the right thing by holding onto all the profits while tossing us crumbs to fight over?
Thank you Matt Mulhern,you speak the truth.
HHHMMMM….mheister, I voted for UFS and I am thrilled at what they did. But thank you once again for telling me how I should feel I so appreciate that. You are so kind and giving. I cant wait to work with you on the set. You are so out of touch it is astounding.
Its funny to me that Matt wants a contract for all SAG members, unless you live in NY or anywhere else….lets see the small disident faction actually has the majority Matt, and it is growing.
You cant exchange points of view with people like you. Because if we dare to disagree, we are anti union shills who bow to the AMPTP. God, you are an idiot. The membership did decide on this. They voted for it. They voted in UFS….does that get to you at all?
This is the greatest day ever, because the entire MF crew can be seen for the liars they were. They wanted to strike, they say they represent the majority of the membership, they dont. How far up Alan Rosenbergs butt is your nose?
Can you possibly post at all without putting people down? Using foul language? Is it at all possible.
YOU DONT HAVE TO ACCEPT ANY CONTRACT!! No one does. One of the best things about living in america is you can choose any job you want to. I will ask the question again….have you stopped auditioning matt? Have you called your agent and said until a proper contract is in place I will not work for the AMPTP? I know the answer, you havent. You would sacrifice everyone elses livelihoods for your own personal gain.
IT IS OVER! Doug is gone, thank god! You and your ilk have never been able to negotiate a single contract without maximum amount of damage. You can blame everyone including the easter bunny for your inabilities, but the truth is out there.
Hey, send out the SAV right now. I am sure when less than 50% of the vote came back in your favor, probably less than 40% it will be someone elses fault as well. Probably the counters!
2.5 Year SAG Member illustrates my frustration with this debate. In one comment, 2.5 Year writes “if any of the UFS…people can refute that, please do so with civility.” And then in the next sentence, he or she accuses those people of being “whiny little kids.”
Not very civil.
You all keep saying how important it is to come together, and yet you continue to knock each other down. This is why SAG is on its last legs and will get an awful contract. Not just because of Alan Rosenberg, Doug Allen or UFS. But because many of the members argue without, as 2.5 Year requests (then immediately backtracks on) respecting each other and working together to achieve some sort of compromise.
No, Matt Mulhern does NOT speak the truth. He was not present nor as a matter of fact in any way involved with the events of 2005 when Rosenberg fired Hessinger by fiat. His description of Greg Hessinger is laughably inaccurate. Greg is an honest stand-up guy who was more than prepared to take the guild forward regardless of which faction ruled the roost. Greg as NED was everything that Doug Allen wasn’t.
The recent board meeting – the terms of which were forced upon the NY and RBD directors – is way beyond Mulhern’s capacity to understand. The meeting was a ploy by Membership First – an attempt to lessen their oppositions’ numbers so that MF could force their agenda. It did not work out that way for MF. When they realized that they did not have the numbers in the room they threw all of the agenda, Roberts Rules, civility, all right out the window. Rosenberg demonstrated that if he could not get his way, nobody could get anything at all.
Membership First has had SAG in a death grip for nearly four years. Paralysis set in through intimidation of staff and the bullying of members and the utterly dimwitted strategy of alienating AFTRA as our most important negotiations approached. I’m not going over that ground again, because now we are on a new course and what’s done is done.
There are elections coming. All SAG members have to make informed decisions about whom to vote for. Read what is said on the internet and in the campaign materials. It is time for the guild to return to doing the utmost for actors who cannot hoe the row by themselves, and it’s time for the demagogues like Alan Rosenberg and his flunkies to exit.
Thank you Matt for laying out the truth. We need more people like you — honest Actors who speak the truth and are man enough to SIGN their names. Unlike “weasel” — will somebody please put him back in his GAGE.
Just Another “Weasel” SAG Member, in another lame attempt to refute the logic of M. Heister and Matt Mulhern, reflects poorly on those arguing in defense of U4S’s actions.
I’m a WGA member with no dog in this fight, but I have to say that, in toto, the posts arguing in support of Alan Rosenberg and Doug Allen have shown a lot more reason, intelligence, savvy, and grit than the ones spewing against them.
I hope I’m wrong, but it looks to me like the wrong side won.