id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt work_cplxk52rcff55inxhpek3p263q Kate Fortmueller Time's Up (Again?): Transforming Hollywood's Industrial Culture 2019 16 .pdf application/pdf 7772 499 53 Hollywood unions organized "women's committees" to counter institutional (AFTRA) women's committee as a case study, this article shows how employment The actors' unions, both AFTRA and SAG, respectively, were unique among the guilds because they represented a wide array of different In 1972, both SAG and AFTRA performers formed National Women's Committees to address The guild material that scholars use to understand labor practices and history are often living documents moving between contemporary union workers to shape decisions. In 1972 (when both SAG and AFTRA formed their women's committees), 90 percent of SAG actors made less than US$10,000 for acting work during the year.10 The two actors' unions, SAG and AFTRA, followed suit with women's committees in 1972. The language employed by the Women's Committee to explain its organizational goals demonstrates a sensitivity to AFTRA's broader unemployment problem and a reluctance to alienating male union members. ./cache/work_cplxk52rcff55inxhpek3p263q.pdf ./txt/work_cplxk52rcff55inxhpek3p263q.txt