Gene Roddenberry’s “Star Trek” could happen in a post-capitalist utopia whereby no character longs for wealth, however right here in our society, its actors can’t stay with that luxurious.
Trekkies will have the ability to inform you that “Star Trek” wasn’t an enormous hit when it first aired from 1966 to 1969. It undoubtedly had a small and passionate cluster of followers, and the present was saved from cancelation not less than as soon as because of a concerted letter-writing marketing campaign, however it was by no means a top-10 sort of present within the scores. “Star Trek” would not turn out to be a cultural phenomenon till it started airing in reruns within the mid-Seventies. By then, it was extra extensively accessible, new superfans emerged, and “Star Trek” conventions turned a factor. Gene Roddenberry appeared at these conventions, and he started to relitigate his personal present, with fan encouragement, realizing that he had certainly created a utopian textual content.
The celebs of “Star Trek,” in the meantime, have been capable of leverage their restricted earnings from the present into conference appearances, as they weren’t getting any cash in residuals. As unfair as it might appear, the unique forged members of the sequence — William Shatner, Leonard Nimoy, Nichelle Nichols, DeForest Kelley, George Takei, Walter Keonig, and James Doohan — did not get any royalty funds for these Seventies reruns. Doohan, in a 1979 interview with the Fort Price Star-Telegram (quoted by the Heroes & Icons web site), admitted that neither he nor his co-stars bought a dime from “Star Trek” reruns after the yr 1971. In 2020, William Shatner mentioned on Twitter that he receives no royalties for something “Star Trek”-related earlier than 1973.
Those that assume all TV stars have been capable of stay excessive on the hog based mostly solely on residuals for limitless reruns must keep in mind that lots of them have been stiffed out of mentioned residuals due to unfair contracts.
No actors bought a dime in residuals after the early Seventies
Shatner’s above-mentioned Twitter beef noticed him arguing with a bitter fan about his private wealth. Shatner recalled that the late-Nineteen Sixties weren’t a rosy time for working actors, because the assumed sample of royalty funds hadn’t turn out to be an business commonplace. He wrote:
“Something earlier than 1973 (that features ‘Star Trek’ Unique Sequence) does not pay a cent in royalties. So please do not suppose you personal me or I owe you one thing for watching. It does not work like that.”
Shatner additionally talked about his lack of royalty funds on the Transporter Room 3 podcast, hosted by IGN (and reported on by The Hollywood Reporter), clarifying that in these days, no actor on any TV sequence bought residuals for reruns after a couple of years. In spite of everything, it was thought of most individuals assumed no TV present would proceed to air in reruns for various years anyway. As such, no studios bothered to put in writing any royalty-based contracts for any actors. Nobody might have predicted that “Star Trek” would strike a decades-long syndication deal that may preserve it on the air for actually many years.
Again within the Fort Price Star Telegram interview, Doohan famous that the unfair funds for the “Star Trek” forged was a motivating think about a widespread contract restructuring all through Hollywood. He mentioned that “Our state of affairs was what prompted the Display Actors Guild to vary the principles. […] Now, you receives a commission for all reruns.” That, after solely three years on the air.
On SAG’s personal web site, it’s written that royalties did not exist earlier than 1960. A profitable strike finally put royalties contracts into play, however sadly, retroactive funds weren’t a part of the negotiations, and studios didn’t must pay royalties to actors in motion pictures launched earlier than 1960. Something made in 1960 and past, nevertheless, concerned residual funds.
A short historical past of residuals
It was in 1960 that SAG additionally lastly arrange a pension fund. For the following 14 years, nevertheless, TV stars have been nonetheless getting stiffed. “Reruns” have been nonetheless, it appears, a novel idea, or not less than an idea that studios have been prepared to disregard when it got here to paying royalties to their actors. Falling consistent with Doohan’s and Shatner’s feedback, SAG “collectively negotiated the contract overlaying primetime dramatic programming on the key tv networks for the primary time” in 1974.
In 1980, leisure unions needed to go on strike once more when studios tried to withhold royalties for residence video gross sales and for pay TV like cable. Certainly, one would possibly discover that almost all SAG or WGA strikes have been, all through its historical past, in regards to the withholding of residuals. The union’s longest strike got here in 1988, and that was largely about how residuals for TV broadcasts in worldwide markets weren’t being paid. In 2007 and 2008, the unions went on strike once more after studios didn’t pay them residuals for on-line broadcasts. Each new expertise, it appears, is seen as a brand new means by studios to aim to stiff SAG members.
This was definitely true of the 2023 strikes, which have been about attempting to get residuals from the infamous Streaming Wars. Streaming companies, because of a precedent set by Netflix, by no means launched their viewership numbers, and did not really feel any urge to pay royalties to actors in consequence. The unions have been capable of negotiate a cost system, and likewise demanded that studios cease utilizing A.I. tech to scan their faces and use their photographs free of charge. The 2023 strikes have been the second-longest within the group’s historical past … by at some point.
Fortunately, the “Star Trek: The Subsequent Technology” forged benefitted from these earlier strikes, and have been capable of stay off residuals. Within the case of actor Wil Wheaton, who performed Wesley Crusher, it was all he had for years.