The latest plot twist in Hollywood’s labor drama - podcast episode cover

The latest plot twist in Hollywood’s labor drama

Jun 06, 202310 min
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Episode description

Ukraine blames Russia for destroying a critical dam near Kherson, forcing evacuations. CNN has more.

The Hollywood Reporter details how a vote by the actors union to authorize a strike is raising the stakes in Hollywood’s season of labor unrest.

NPR examines how the far right tore apart one of the best tools to fight voter fraud.

Why do Golden Knights fans throw flamingos on the ice? The Sporting News explains Las Vegas’s unusual hockey tradition.

Transcript

[MUSIC FADES IN]

Shumita Basu, Narrating

Good morning! It's Tuesday, June 6th. I'm Shumita Basu. This is "Apple News Today." On today's show, a big, new plot twist in Hollywood's season of labor unrest, Republican states turn against a tool that tracks voter fraud, and why pink flamingos are on the ice in the NHL's Stanley Cup Finals.

[MUSIC FADES OUT]

Shumita Basu, Narrating

But first, a look at some big, new developments in the war between Russia and Ukraine. A major dam in Russian-occupied southern Ukraine was destroyed early this morning. That sent a deluge of water into the region, forced mass evacuations, and raised new concerns about the security of a giant nuclear plant. Ukraine says Russia blew up the dam. Russia blames Ukraine. "CNN's" Clare Sebastian talked about the significance of the dam.

[START CNN ARCHIVAL CLIP]

Clare Sebastian

It supplies water to the Kherson region and to Russian-occupied Crimea in the south, as well as, of course, power from the hydroelectric power plant. It is also south of the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant, which relies on water from its reservoir for cooling, even though, of course, the power plant is right now in various stages of shutdown. So, a really critical piece of infrastructure.

[END CNN ARCHIVAL CLIP]

Clare Sebastian

This comes at the same time as Ukraine is starting to take the fight to Russia. A counteroffensive has been expected for a long time. Yesterday, the deputy defense minister said moves are starting to take place in several directions. Now, a top Ukrainian official says the Russians destroyed the dam to make it harder for Ukraine's forces to advance.

It's hard to know exactly what's happening on the battlefield. For obvious reasons, Ukraine isn't revealing its plans. And some of the public statements could be attempts to mislead Russian forces. But allies point to signs that Ukraine is stepping up. Yesterday, General Mark Milley, the U.S. Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, spoke to "CNN" about the war.

[START CNN ARCHIVAL CLIP]

Mark Milley

I think the Ukrainians are very well prepared. As you know very well, the United States and other allied countries in Europe, and really around the world, have provided training and ammunition and advice, intelligence, etcetera to the Ukrainians. We're supporting them. They're in a war that's an existential threat for the very survival of Ukraine.

[END CNN ARCHIVAL CLIP]

Mark Milley

Ukraine said, earlier this week, that it has enough weapons to strike back at Russia, but it will need continued support from Western allies for a fight that could take some time.

[DRAMATIC MUSIC]

[MUSIC FADES OUT]

Mark Milley

Tensions are higher in Hollywood now that the largest union in the business has voted to authorize a strike. Members of SAG-AFTRA, which represents actors, voted 98% in favor of a strike if there isn't a new deal with studios. This comes as writers are already striking, threatening to further slowdown the pipeline of new shows and movies.

The actors' new vote doesn't mean that a strike will happen, but it raises the stakes of negotiations over a new contract, which expires at the end of this month. The union's president is actor Fran Drescher. Yes, from the '90s sitcom "The Nanny." In a video before the latest vote, she encouraged members to put the idea of a strike on the table.

[START SAG-AFTRA ARCHIVAL CLIP]

Fran Drescher

We can leverage it as we go into the TV-theatrical streaming negotiations with those who have spent the last decade making immense profits off of your labor while eroding your protection and compensation.

[END SAG-AFTRA ARCHIVAL CLIP]

Fran Drescher

Like the writers, actors have some of the usual issues with pay and benefits, plus some high-tech twists. The union wants protection so that studios can't use artificial intelligence to clone their voices and images without permission and payment. And now that people are watching so much content via streaming, they wanna be paid better for work that runs on digital platforms.

SAG-AFTRA talks with studios start tomorrow. The Writers Guild of America has now been on strike for a month, with no talks scheduled and little sign of progress. One major union has announced a tentative deal with studios, though. If ratified, the agreement with the Directors Guild of America will raise pay, give better residual payments for global streaming, and make clear that AI cannot replace the work done by directors' union members.

Both the writers' and actors' unions say the new deal directors struck with studios won't stop them from bargaining hard for their own interests.

[INTRIGUING MUSIC]

[MUSIC FADES OUT]

Fran Drescher

Republican states claiming to prioritize voter integrity have started to turn against one of the best tools that the government has to track voter fraud. "NPR" spent months investigating why states are abandoning a national program called the Electronic Registration Information Center, or ERIC. The reporting revealed an extensive right-wing influence campaign packed with election deniers and Trump allies.

Dozens of states, red and blue, use ERIC to keep their voter rolls up to date and share data with other states. It's the only system in place to track and catch people who vote in two different states in the same election, which is illegal. Up until recently, ERIC had broad bipartisan support. But that's changed since 2020, as more and more so-called "election integrity" groups emerged, born out of Donald Trump's lies about the 2020 election.

Miles Parks

Our investigation found that these sorts of local election integrity groups really effectively put pressure on election officials across the country. That's Miles Parks, who covers voting and election security, explaining his reporting on "NPR."

Parks

They have done trainings on how to be poll watchers, a number of them have done door-to-door canvassing to try to find voter fraud, and then last year, we found a number of callouts where these groups mobilized their members and said, "Send emails, make phone calls to your state lawmakers to get them out of ERIC."

He found one of Trump's allies at the center of these efforts. Cleta Mitchell, a Republican attorney, helped Trump try to overturn the 2020 election. She's been a leading campaigner against ERIC.

[START WHO'S COUNTING WITH CLETA MITCHELL ARCHIVAL CLIP]

Cleta Mitchell

ERIC is a very insidious organization, and we want more citizens to say to their legislators, "Do not continue your membership."

[END WHO'S COUNTING WITH CLETA MITCHELL ARCHIVAL CLIP]

Cleta Mitchell

A popular right-wing website was also influential. It spread disinformation that ERIC was helping Democrats win elections. Louisiana pulled out of the program shortly after the website put out a series of inaccurate articles. Eight states and counting have now left ERIC. Many cite privacy concerns about voter data being shared across state lines and say they have their own programs to stop voter fraud.

Parks says, the effects of this for most voters might feel small. Perhaps more election mail being sent to the wrong address, things like that. But as the presidential campaign heats up, election watchers around the country worry that this weakening of ERIC will make it easier for bad actors to commit voter fraud.

[PLAYFUL MUSIC]

[MUSIC FADES OUT]

Cleta Mitchell

Finally, we're in the middle of hockey's Stanley Cup Finals. Last night, the Las Vegas Golden Knights beat the Florida Panthers 7-2. That gives them a 2-0 lead in the series.

[CROWD CHEERS, COMMENTATOR SPEAKS INDISTINCTLY, HORN BLARES]

Cleta Mitchell

As the final horn blared, the hometown crowd did what they usually do when they're excited. They tossed plastic pink flamingos onto the ice. "The Sporting News" looks at how this unusual tradition began.

It goes back to 2018, the Golden Knight's first year in the NHL. After the team scored a goal, a fan tossed a plastic flamingo onto the ice. He later said he thought it would motivate the team. [CHUCKLES] And maybe it did. The Golden Knights went on to a huge win. Athletes and sports fans tend to be superstitious, and soon, lots of fans were carrying plastic flamingos and tossing them onto the ice to celebrate wins.

Now, why flamingos? The fan who brought the first one said it was a reference to Vegas's Flamingo Road and to the iconic Flamingo Casino on the Strip. And also, just because it was kitschy and fun. It's a Vegas twist on a longtime hockey tradition of tossing something onto the ice to celebrate. Fans of other NHL teams throw catfish and octopuses. Not plastic ones, but real dead ones. And fans of the Florida Panthers, the other team in the finals, they toss plastic rats. Game three is on their home ice Thursday night.

[MUSIC FADES IN]

Cleta Mitchell

You can find all these stories and more in the Apple News app. And if you're already listening in the News app right now, stick around. We've got a narrated article coming up next from "The New Yorker." It's a profile of controversial rocker Matty Healy, frontman of The 1975. He's gotten extra attention recently for his relationship with Taylor Swift, but things are now reportedly over between them. That story's cued up for you next, and I'll be back with the news tomorrow.

[MUSIC FADES OUT]

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