Wednesday, November 10, 2021

Anonymous Animation Production Staff Story #3 - Animation Production Union NOW

 Text translation of an anonymous animation production staff story, received by AnimationProdUnionNow (@prod_animation)

 "I've had my fair share of run of the mill work place harassment and sexual harassment, which I feel a fair amount of could've been remedied with union protection and standards. Over the years, PA's and PC's I've known have been turned and burned much like our live action counterparts.

In my case, it's a little different since I'm a mixed POC trans person. Being trans in any industry is *hard*, and animation is no different. But being in an industry that tries to pride itself on progressiveness when in reality its just a lot of NIMBY bullshit is exhausting. 

I'd say my worst experience was at -------, a studio notorious for squashing unions and worker rights. I had just come off of a different job being physically and verbally abused by an alcoholic boss, so I was *very* careful to be closeted at ------ because I was paranoid.

Regardless of this, my associate producer and producer figured out that I was trans and proceeded to talk about me to other people on the crew and make fun of me, create impossible tasks for me, and ignore any complaints I had. Once a crewmember stood over me as I was sitting at my desk and screamed at me for 10 minutes over an email memo I had distributed telling everyone to remember to put their design on model sheets/paste ups--the producers did nothing and eventually the art director took this person on a walk so he would stop.

It came to a head when these producers, both white women, were laughing during a design/SB breakdown meeting and one of them had to step out due to a pet emergency. She shoved her laptop at me and told me to use it to take notes. It was open on her Gmail on a chat window to the other producer in the room, they had been laughing and gossiping about my face and how "stupid" and "ugly" it looked. I was in such shock...she knew what she was handing me and had wanted me to see. I went in the bathroom and cried after work and on the way home.

I confronted one of them during a "check-in", gently. Saying "T know what you said about my appearance". I was met with great hostility, being told I was going to be fired if I said anything and that I needed to "get my shit together" because I once did not include a cover sheet on a pile of storyboard panels.

To that point and my entirety of employment there, I worked OT and was never paid; was the only person who had "talkings to", the other coordinator never had meetings like I did; had crew members insult me/yell at me. With no upper management support.

I was let go with no provocation, no incident. And HR told me "well they told you that we had talked previously, didn't they?" I informed the woman talking to me, that in fact no. No one had told me it had gone to HR. That they simply told me to work harder (because of that coversheet on a packet) and that I'd been "doing well" (given all that unpaid OT). I informed HR about the harassment I'd endured and that I was convinced that they were letting me go because I was trans, and that they certainly didn't hold the cis woman who was my coworker to the same standards--and the response was "oh. well maybe we should check both sides of the story...in the future. they say it's because you're not a good fit."

I had to sit next to the woman who had called me ugly, and get asked "is there anything you want to say to her?" Of course said no. And HR told me "if you could not tell people about this... and maybe try coming back here to work another time??"

I was gobsmacked. And of course, I was escorted by security. Me. 5'4, 100ish pounds. As if I was going to do something over this awful job. My one friend on the crew and my faithful PA helped me pack my desk. In the meantime, the producers had taken the rest of the crew to a nearby bar to celebrate the fact that I had been let go/fired.

Sorry this was long. There were even more details around this hell hole, but I'm sure I rambled long enough. This was ONE job back in 2016.

Oh jesus. How could I forget. I ran into my PA at a --- function after all was said and done, and she told me that to twist the knife further, they refused to pay her OT as well and tried giving her AMAZON giftcards instead."

Anonymous Animation Production Staff Story #2 - Animation Production Union NOW

 Text translation of an anonymous animation production staff story, received by AnimationProdUnionNow (@prod_animation)

"I work on a big show and make less than I did at a smaller studio.

  I also work free OT all the time. Not because the studio insists, but because my coworkers do. They do so much of their work on free OT that the only way | can keep up is to do it too. They work hours before the day starts and hours after. I've talked to them multiple times about how harmful it is, but they just keep telling me that's how they work best. The one time I asked for OT from the studio, I got in trouble for not finishing my work in a "reasonable" amount of time. No, I just can't keep up with people who work after and before the shift."

Anonymous Animation Production Staff Story #1 - Animation Production Union NOW

Text translation of an anonymous animation production staff story, received by AnimationProdUnionNow (@prod_animation)

 "At almost every gig I had when I was a PA I had producers & managers who were VERY against giving anybody on the production crew OT. Instead they’d tell us to just work late whenever they needed us to, told us to not report it on our time sheets but to leave early or come in an hour late the next few days depending on how much we worked after. They would always shoot me down if I even thought about OT. Considering I was only making $16/hr at the time I could’ve REALLY used that extra money. There have been nights on productions l've worked on, where I stayed in the office until 10pm sometimes even midnight on rare occasions to send a delivery or waiting for a freelancer to turn in their assignment and of course I couldn’t leave cause the schedule was so demanding and it needed to go out that night. One night I was terribly sick and I was so worried about falling behind with my work I came in at 4 in the morning before anybody else in the office so I wouldn't get them sick, scrunched all my work for the day in 2 hours and wrote a huge super detailed email explaining where everything was in the pipeline, apologizing profusely and that I'd be back the next day. I wasn't making much at the time and I didn't have a lot of sick days so I was extremely worried I wasn't gonna have enough to cover my sick days and make rent. I also didn't log those hours I was in the office in fear of my producer/manager seeing it on my time sheet and reprimanding me.

Also, after my first gig making $16/hr, I was able to find another PA job at a big film studio but I had to take a paycut to $14/hr cause they couldn't match even though we had a huge feature budget. Multiple times I'd be sent to buy the executives these extravagant expensive lunches. Some of them wouldn't even come into the office most days and they'd "work from home." But myself I ate alot of ramen that year since I had to save all my money for rent. Since working in production for the last 5 years I've had night terrors thinking I forgot to log a shot, publish an assignment, email a person, etc. At one point in my career I developed a drinking problem to deal with the stress. I would drink an insane amount at the studio parties cause the booze was free, even sneak alcohol home if I could."

Sunday, November 7, 2021

The Peg-Board (February 1996), Animation Guild Newsletter archive

Original publication:  https://web.archive.org/web/20100627220540fw_/http://www.animationguild.org/_Pegboard/Pegboard_h/_PB_1996/PBDG9602.HTM

https://web.archive.org/web/20100627195717/http://www.animationguild.org/_Pegboard/_pegbrd_PDF/1996_PB_pdf/PBDG9602.pdf

Artist: Barry Caldwell

Thanks to Barry Caldwell of Warner Bros. Animation for the 1996 Peg-Board logo. What we can't quite figure out, though, is: are the cat and mouse pushing to keep the gears moving, or are they using the pencil and brush to try to get the gears to stop? Questions, questions ...

THE PEG-BOARD

los angeles, california, february 1996           vol. 25, no. 2

IA Basic Agreement settled in record time

After a marathon session that concluded at 4 am, agreement was reached February 1 on a new four-year agreement between the IATSE and the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers. The new IATSE Basic Agreement, which will be in effect August 4, 1996 through July 31, 2000, will contain changes in health and pension that affect Local 839 members.

As we go to press, the exact terms of the new agreement have not yet been released. The negotiations were the fastest and least rancorous Basic Agreement negotiations in years, thanks in large part to the success of the IATSE's national organizing efforts under the presidency of Thomas Short. The February 16 Daily Variety reports that President Short is in negotiations with producer Lawrence Bender, in pursuit of an industry-wide agreement for low-budget theatrical features.

Local 839's contract is set to expire on October 31; talks are expected to begin in late summer or early fall.

Union says "BOO" to new signator

The Screen Cartoonists signed yet another new animation studio at the end of December -- Box Office Original Productions, formerly known as Invisible Crew, Inc. The company is producing a new animated series for HBO, and planning to produce more.

For more information, contact: Sheri Stringfellow, Box
Office Original Productions, 2049 Century Park East,
42nd floor, Los Angeles, CA 90067; (310) 229-1107.

From the Business Representative
Signing contracts, negotiating contracts

Elsewhere in this journal of fact and opinion, you'll read that the Screen Cartoonists have signed yet another contract with yet another animation studio. I would dearly like to tell you that it's entirely due to my inspired, energetic leadership, to my vigilant, steely-eyed gaze constantly scanning the animation horizon, constantly searching for new opportunities. I'd like to tell you that, but if I did, I would be lying through my teeth.

The reason that BOO Productions is now signed to an 839 contract is because the company's executives approached animation artists about coming to work on their new cartoon series for HBO, and most (if not all) of the artists they contacted said "Wonderful. Just as soon as you sign a contract with the Screen Cartoonists, I'll come running." The next thing the artists did was to call me, and I sprang into action. I called Box Office Originals, told them they were talking to a lot of our members and therefore we wanted a contract. After a short pause, the company told me they'd get back to me, and a day later they did. A week after that, we had a brief negotiation, and a contract was in force.

The moral of the story is that none of the above could have happened without union artists demanding it. If nobody had made an issue of the company signing a Screen Cartoonists contract, the company would have gone on its merry way without one. The company would have been foolish to do otherwise, for signing a contract with us puts more money in employees' pockets ... which puts less in the employers'. As a lawyer for Leon Schlesinger told union activist Chuck Jones long, long ago: companies are not charitable organizations.

The one thing I find out over and over again, Spring or Summer, rain or shine, is the artists are the ones that employers listen to. When storyboarders, animators, background artists and affiliated technicians care less about the benefits our contract provides, when medical coverage or pensions bore them, then the Duck Soups, Cartoon Capers and Film Romans are delighted to save money by sidestepping a union contract. Pay the key people better if the market demands it, pay the beginners less. Scrimp on pension and health. Companies are not charitable organizations. But when the employees make it an issue, especially in the movie industry, contracts soon result.

And good contracts go on resulting. A case in point is the recent IA/AMPTP negotiations. The IA, for the first time in a decade, was bargaining from a position of strength. Angry film crews, tired of low wages and no medical benefits, were organizing their companies, and IA president Tom Short made it clear that he had the power and will to make a nationwide shutdown stick if the AMPTP demanded concessions. The result, after days of hard bargaining, was a contract -- for the first time in a decade -- without major rollbacks.

The same dynamic going on in live-action is present in spades in the world of animation. Over the past two months, the office has gotten dozens of calls from artists bailing out of non-union shops and hiring on with union ones. Eight weeks ago, a production manager at a hard-core non-union facility called me to inquire about getting a contract. He told me that the company was offering exorbitant wages to hang on to key personnel, but the key personnel weren't biting. They kept talking about keeping their health and pension intact, and Disney was calling with multi-year contracts, so thanks but sayonara.

I suggested to the production manager (who I know) that maybe the non-union fortress for which he works might be better off with a Screen Cartoonists contract. He mulled over what I said, and promised to get back to me. He hasn't gotten back to me yet, but I'm thinking, the way things are going, maybe it's only a matter of time.

-- Steve Hulett

From the President
401(k) blues

Three years ago you told us you needed a 401(k) plan to supplement your pension and provide a tax sheltered investment. Financial experts from William S. Rukeyser to my Aunt Wanda trumpet the praises of belonging to a 401(k); they say in this age of financial uncertainly and dropping monetary value you gotta be nuts not to be in one. Most companies automatically enroll you in one to bind your loyalty to the firm.

So with the best of intentions we laid a multi-employer plan before our employers' negotiators at the 1993 contract talks. We got totally stonewalled. Giving up on that route, we worked internally and got a sympathetic hearing at Disney. They joined the plan and today 50% of their artists are covered, and the Walt Disney Company doesn't seem to be going to hell in a handbasket as a result.

We've done handstands adding amendments to make all the lawyers happy. And yet after three years, major players like Warner Bros., Turner and Dreamworks continue to say it's not in their interest. Turner was all gung-ho, then they changed their minds. Warner Bros. acts like we want a cut of the Tweety Bird t-shirt sales or something. After a year of negotiating amendments, Dreamworks was supposed to start enrolling the week of January 19. Suddenly their lawyer asked a colleague in New York if he could find anything and he came up with some more issues.

We're asking for the minimum of plans, no employer matching, They put no money in, we set up the plan with 839 funds, all they have to do is add a few more columns on their payroll tapes. We're using the most reputable maintenance company in the United States. It's not costing them a nickel.

What's the big damn deal? I just don't get it.

When the army of Alexander the Great was marching through the Gedrosian desert of Persia, the men were dropping of thirst. Alexander, their leader, poured his ration of water from his helmet out onto the sand, saying he would share the hardships of his men. When your execs at Warners and Turner babble about how dangerous and risky a 401(k) is for you, just remember they all have one. Fat, executive 401(k) plans, bulging with matching funds. Think of these last three years you lost to their artful dodging. Think of how much they must have made from theirs while saying you don't need one. They explain that their executive plan is in lieu of overtime, but come on ... They get nicely compensated with bonuses. When the production starts, they get a check. When an interim deadline is met, they get another check. If the production is on budget, another check. Is it a mystery that every new baby producer is driving a custom BMW or Lexus in six months, even when the film has barely started? And do they get carpal tunnel syndrome? Glaucoma? Is their marriage in danger because they have to work seven-day weeks? In fact, how many of them do you even see after seven p.m.?

Yet the clock keeps ticking, and they keep stalling. Maybe their scheme is to stall until the new contract negotiations and then offer a 401(k) as a big golden plum, to exchange for your overtime or putting you on a computer and then saying you aren't in our jurisdiction anymore. Because in their version of reality, if you make an image with a computer instead of a pencil, you are no longer an artist but a TV repairman.

I dunno. There are lotsa good apples in the bunch, who are trying to pull a 401(k) off. But a corporation is a many-headed hydra. Disney understands the special relationship between artist and company. Maybe the others don't. Maybe they think we are all just key flicks on their laptops.

Should you be mad? Sure.

But we re not giving up and neither should you. We don't want to negotiate what we negotiated for three years ago. We deserve it and we re not going to trade for it or waste another year. Keep phoning, keep complaining. Let's do more petitions. The one thing they hope for is for you to forget about it. If ever you do, just think of their management 401(k)s, and stay mad!

-- Tom Sito

At the water-cooler

Congratulations to DON JUDGE and wife Ricki on the birth of Kylie Noelle Judge on December 14 ...

Over a hundred artists at Turner Feature Animation have signed a petition asking the U.S. Post Office to issue stamps honoring Boris Karloff, Bela Lugosi and Lon Chaney for their contributions to film. The signers are asking the Post Office to use the actors' likenesses as well as their pictures in their signature roles. If you're interested in seeing the Post Office Do The Right Thing, write: Terry McCaffery, Art Director/Stamp Development, 475 L'Enfant Plaza SW, Washington, DC 20260-2435.

Help wanted: Edinboro University of Pennsylvania
invites applications for a full-time tenure-track position
in the School of Liberal Arts, beginning fall semester
1996. Responsibilities: Teach all levels and areas of
production with particular emphasis on character
animation. Share responsibilities for course development
and the operation of the Cinema program including, but
not limited to, providing services for students and the
maintenance of equipment. Qualifications: MFA or
equivalent degree. Demonstrated expertise to teach
studio classes is also required. Preference will be given to
candidates with character animation experience.
The application letter should indicate the position number
[0700616]; a detailed résumé; a sample reel (NTSC/
VHS format) of your animation work; thirty slides of your
figure drawings, quick-gesture drawings and cartoon
drawings; a sample reel (NTSC/VHS format) of your
student work if available; a brief statement of your
philosophy of teaching; and a SASE for the return of
application materials. Contact Dr. Philip Ketstetter,
Acting Dean of Liberal Arts, Edinboro University of
Pennsylvania, Edinboro, PA 16444; phone (814) 732-
2477 or 2719; fax (814) 732-2629.

On March 12, CAPS (THE CARTOON ARTISTS
PROFESSIONAL SOCIETY), will be offering an evening
with renowned author, director and screenwriter Nicholas
Meyer. Mr. Meyer’s talents are responsible for such films
as Time After Time, Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan,
Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country, and the
controversial TV-movie The Day After. The talk will be
held at CAPS’s monthly meeting at the Burbank Board
of Realtors building, 2006 West Magnolia Blvd. in
Burbank; doors open at 7:30 pm. CAPS members
admitted free; non-members $2.00 admission. For further
details, contact Steve Sakai at (818) 449-2445 or Hanna
Strauss at (818) 352-1032.

Animation in the news

ABC, newly acquired by Disney, will be revamping its Saturday morning line-up. Gone will be What A Mess, Free Willy, Madeline, Bump In the Night, Reboot, Dumb and Dumber, and Fudge. New to the ABC Saturday A.M. lineup will be The Jungle Book's Jungle Cubs, The Mighty Ducks, and Gargoyles: The Goliath Chronicles. All these shows come from Disney TV. Other new shows will include All New Doug from the Nickelodeon series, Bone Chillers, and the sci-fi entry Hypernauts ... In its limited release, The Lion King became the biggest-selling video in Australian history, with 550,000 units sold ...

Paramount has asked NELVANA to stop development on three features for producers Frank Marshall and Kathleen Kennedy. The plug has been pulled on Sign of the Seahorse, The Trumpet and the Swan, and Clive Barker's The Thief of Always ...

EURO DISNEY fired eighteen employees after a violent protest calling for better pay and working conditions ... Among the twenty-five films to be added to the LIBRARY OF CONGRESS' National Film Registry is the classic 1951 UPA short, Gerald McBoing-Boing ...

As related in recent trade papers, the Los Angeles Times and "The Kitty Letter," the speech-challenged cartoon character named DONALD DUCK found his classic cartoon "Clock Cleaners" pulled from the shelves of Wal-Mart because the Don was accused of muttering a word Grannie would not like to hear while going about his duties of brushing and scrubbing ...

Another Donald, the good reverend Donald Wildmon of the American Family Association, has accused the Duckster of muttering the "F-word" (which is actually a vulgarism, not a profanity) and is asking the Disney company to pull the cartoon from circulation. At last report, Disney was still weighing its options. We wish Mr. Wildmon would stop looking for filth where there isn't any, but that is probably as fruitless an activity as asking him to stop searching for dirty words in cartoon dust clouds. In today's media-mad world, it's anything and everything for a snappy press release ...

As we go to press, salaries in animation continue to trend upward. Not only are animators, assistant animators, layout and background artists receiving higher salary offers, but sheet timers have now found their wages going higher. We attribute this phenomena to Adam Smith's Invisible Hand, wherein a limited number of qualified employees are confronted with a larger number of jobs.

Animation makes waves at the Oscars

A record number of Academy Award nominations have gone to animated films, including the first such nominations ever in screenwriting categories.

Babe, the talking-pig feature that combined live-action and computer-generated animation, won six nominations including best picture. Despite the Academy's questionable decision to exempt Toy Story from nomination in the visual effects category, the feature garnered three nominations plus a special Oscar for director John Lasseter. Both Toy Story and Pocahontas were nominated for Best Original Song and in the new category of Best Original Musical Or Comedy Score. For the first time since Mickey's Christmas Carol in 1983, a film produced under IATSE jurisdiction -- Disney's Runaway Brain -- was nominated for Best Animated Short.

Two animation pioneers will receive special Academy Awards at the Oscar ceremony on March 25. CHUCK JONES, the creator or animation director of classic cartoon characters Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck, Wile E. Coyote, Pepe LePew, the Road Runner, Elmer Fudd, Porky Pig and Michigan J. Frog, has been voted an Honorary Award. The Oscar will be presented to the eighty-three-year-old animator for "the creation of classic cartoons and cartoon characters whose animated lives have brought joy to our real ones for more than half a century."

JOHN LASSETER, director and co-writer of Toy Story, has been voted a Special Achievement Award. Lasseter will receive the Oscar "for the development and inspired application of techniques that have made possible the first feature-length computer-animated film".

Here is a complete list of 1995 Academy Award nominations for films featuring animation:

Best picture of the year:
Babe (Universal), A Kennedy Miller Pictures Production -- George Miller, Doug Mitchell and Bill Miller, Producers

Best achievement in directing:
Chris Noonan, Babe (Universal)

Best achievement in art direction:
Babe (Universal) -- Art direction, Roger Ford; Set decoration, Kerrie Brown

Best achievement in film editing:
Marcus D'Arcy, Babe (Universal)

Best achievement in music (original musical or comedy score):
Pocahontas (Buena Vista) -- Music by Alan Menken; Lyrics by Stephen Schwartz; Orchestral Score by Alan Menken
Toy Story (Buena Vista), Randy Newman

Best achievement in music (original song):
"Colors of the Wind" from Pocahontas (Buena Vista) -- Music by Alan Menken; Lyric by Stephen Schwartz
"You've Got a Friend" from Toy Story (Buena Vista) -- Music and Lyric by Randy Newman

Best achievement in animated short films:
The Chicken from Outerspace, A Stretch Films, Inc. Production -- John R. Dilworth
A Close Shave, An Aardman Animations Production -- Nick Park
The End, An Alias/Wavefront Production -- Chris Landreth and Robin Bargar
Gagarin, A Second Frog Animation Group Production -- Alexij Kharitidi
Runaway Brain, A Walt Disney Pictures Production -- Chris Bailey

Best screenplay written directly for the screen:
Toy Story (Buena Vista) Screenplay by Joss Whedon, Andrew Stanton, Joel Cohen and Alec Sokolow; Story by John Lasseter, Peter Docter, Andrew Stanton, Joe Ranft
Best screenplay based on material previously produced or published:
Babe (Universal) Screenplay by George Miller & Chris Noonan

Honorary Academy Award:
Chuck Jones

Special Achievement Award:
John Lasseter

In memoriam

Animation pioneer, producer and author SHAMUS (JIMMY) CULHANE died on February 2 after a long battle with diabetes and circulatory problems. He was eighty-eight.

Starting in 1924 as an errand boy at J.R. Bray's studio, becoming an animator with the advent of sound (he could read music), his career spanned sixty years. Fleischer, Iwerks, Van Beuren, Disney, Warner Bros., Walter Lantz, Shamus Culhane Productions, Hal Seegar, Storyboard, Famous, Steve Krantz, Gamma, M.G. Films and Westfall. He taught animation and his two books, Talking Animals and Other Funny People and Animation From Script to Screen are two of the more popular volumes on animation around today.

Shamus was one of animation's great personalities. He lived life in broad strokes with a gusto worthy of Rabelais or Falstaff. Inspiring, maddening, irreverent, tender, he never failed to elicit opinions wherever he went, and never paid them notice.

In 1977, I was his assistant on one of his final films, a nuclear civil-defense film (Mea culpa! a non-union project). Shamus taught me X-sheets, assist and production techniques; using the old fashioned way of instruction: regularly delivered butt-kicking .When he saw I would not whither under his tough tutelage, we became fast friends.

Marc Davis said Grim Natwick didn't just teach him about animation, he taught him about life. Shamus had the same effect on me. He taught me that you could love the art of animation and not have to be a cartoon geek, you could parallel your tastes towards fine art and music (During an argument with Max Fleischer, Max growled at him: "You know what's your problem, Culhane? You are an artist!")

As an employer he had locked horns with unions in the past, yet he was proud of my union leadership, calling me "El Presidente!" and predicting to me that the future of the animation employer-employee relationship will evolve eventually into employee-owned studios.

Farewell, my teacher and friend. My second father. I think his epitaph can be found in his reminiscence on the Gala Premiere night of Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs. He recalled as he was walking the red carpet towards the theater he heard two onlookers say: "Who's that? Nahh, that's nobody!", and that after the triumph of the film he thought to himself: "Screw you s.o.b.'s. I've worked on a picture that will be around long after you're dead. I am somebody!"

-- Tom Sito

Cartoonist and teacher BURNE HOGARTH died on January 28 at the age of eighty-five. Hogarth was the author of the famous Dynamic Anatomy books, did the Tarzan comic strip and co-founded the School of Visual Arts in New York. He was a longtime president of the National Cartoonists Society.


Sound editor SAM HORTA died on January 8. He started at Disney as an inbetweener in 1952, then transferred to the editorial department. He worked for UPA and Filmation before starting Horta Editorial and Sound in 1977. In addition to his Emmy-award winning work on Hill Street Blues, Horta edited the soundtracks for innumerable TV series, both animated and live-action. (A trivia note: as sound editor for the original Star Trek series, Horta's last name was used for the rock creatures in the "Devil In The Dark" episode.)


Animation checker GRACE McCURDY died on December 12, 1995. From 1932 until her retirement in 1979, she worked for Disney, Sketchbook Films, Mary Cain, UPA and Hanna-Barbera.


An afternoon of remembrance

Observe how transient and trivial is all mortal life; yesterday a drop of semen, tomorrow a handful of ashes. Spend, therefore, these fleeting moments on earth as Nature would have you spend them, and then go to your rest with a good grace, as an olive falls in its season, with a blessing for the earth that bore it and a thanksgiving to the tree that bore it life...
-- Marcus Aurelius, quoted in the program for "An Afternoon of Remembrance"

The Hollywood United Methodist Church, drawing by Dave Zaboski

Over two hundred people gathered at the Hollywood United Methodist Church on the afternoon of February 3, to honor the memory of twenty-three members of the animation community who passed away in 1995. The event, cosponsored by Local 839, ASIFA/Hollywood and Women In Animation, turned out to be both moving and affirmative, in its celebration of the lives of our friends and fellow employees and employers.

The Memorial Committee, consisting of Bronwen Barry, Joe Campana, Kellie-Bea Rainey, Tom Sito, George Sukara and Dave Zaboski, outdid themselves in their preparation of the service and the reception that followed. We hope to make this an annual event; if you're interested in being involved in future celebrations, contact the Local 839 office at (818) 766-7151.

Thanks to the following, whose reminiscences of departed members were the highlight of the Memorial Service:

Jackie Banks
reminiscences by Vicki Casper, read by Pat Sito

Preston Blair
reminiscences by Jeff Massie

Bob Brown
reminiscences by Pat Duran

Jack Buckley
reminiscences by Dorse Lanpher, read by Steve Hulett

Lars Calonius
reminiscences by Erik Calonius and Jack Zander, read by Carla Fallberg

Chris Chu
reminiscences by Curtis Cim

Margaret Cook
reminiscences by Keith Baldwin, read by Kellie-Bea Rainey

Bud Crabe
reminiscences by Herb Klynn, read by Tom Sito

Jim Davis
reminiscences by Clair Weeks

Friz Freleng
reminiscences by Chuck Jones

John Halas
reminiscences by June Foray

Alex Ignatiev
reminiscences by Norm McCabe, read by Tom Ray

Leonard Johnson
reminiscences by Joanna Romersa, read by Bronwen Barry

Paul Julian
reminiscences by Eric Semones

Hal Kramer
reminiscences by Bill Stout

Michael Lah
reminiscences by Paul Carlson

Bob McCrea
reminiscences by Kelly Asbury

Doris Pollack
reminiscences by Alison Leopold, read by Tracy Wells

Nestor Redondo
reminiscences by Jan Nagel

Larry Silverman
reminiscences by Rich Trueblood, read by George Sukara

Irv Spence
reminiscences by Bill Hanna, read by Bronwen Barry

John Whitney, Sr.
reminiscences by Michael Whitney and Ellen Wolff, read by George Sukara

Gina Wootten
reminiscences by Tammy Terusa

We're pleased to report that FEODOR KHITRUK, longtime head of the Russian animators' union, is still alive, contrary to reports that had led us to include him in our January Peg-Board listing of memorial honorees.

Q&A

Q: I've applied for dismissal pay from my former employer, but they said I have to use the form provided by the union. Is this true?

A: No. As a reminder and courtesy, once a month we mail a form to members who appear on our records as eligible for dismissal pay. However, you don't need to wait to get this form from us -- you can apply for it in writing as soon as your ninety days' layoff is up.

Working TV writer developing comic panel/strip for
potential newspaper syndication. I’m looking for a
collaborator who’s as funny/hip visually as I am verbally.
Terry Ross, 6361 W. 6th St., Los Angeles 90048; call/fax
(213) 934-1223.

Upcoming contract holidays:
Good Friday (April 5)
Memorial Day (May 27)

Studio newsletters

In 1940 and 1941, during the First Golden Age of Animation, a few stalwarts of the Disney animation crew -- freshly settled in their new digs in Burbank -- published a small, gag-filled publication called Under the Gold Rotunda. The paper was four pages long, filled with inside jokes, and named after the gold-leafed dome in the middle of the Animation Building's first-floor hallway. It lasted about a year.

Today, of course, we are in the midst of animation's new Golden Age (should we call it the "Platinum Age?") and animation department newsletters have proliferated. With one notable exception, none are in the smart-aleck, employee generated mode of Under the Gold Rotunda. Most are sponsored by the companies running the animation divisions.
©1996 Walt Disney Pictures

The longest-lived Department newsletter that we know about is Disney Feature Animation's Twilight Bark, which began life in the summer of 1989 as a four-page informational sheet. Since original editor and Local 839 member Mike Palumbo, a succession of p.a.s and administrators have found that it's "a lot of work" to assemble the text, graphics and photographs into a weekly publication that has grown steadily over the years. (Prior to Bark, the old employee publication The Disney Newsreel, now in its twenty-fifth volume, was where animation employees got their information.)

Since 1992, when Disney's Orlando, Florida studio found itself expanding from a small animation outpost entertaining Disney World visitors with animation artists working behind glass while Walter Cronkite (on film) explained the animation process to tourists, Bark's sister publication Rabbit Rabbit has been publishing. Today the small satellite studio has grown to a full-blown production facility employing over two hundred artists and technicians. And Rabbit has grown along with it.

Like the other company newsletters, Rabbit relies on computer desktop publishing programs. It offers cartoons, general information, and production updates. Rabbit's centerpiece is its weekly interview with an animation artist, generally someone who is relatively new to the Orlando facility.
Warner Bros. Features' The Animated Times started in February of 1995, shortly after the studios began. The Animated Times began life as a monthly, and initially was shunted around to several different editors. Tim Jones, a p.a. in special effects, was one of the early editors, and says he "had a good time with it," adding more graphics and more pages. Today The Animated Times is a ten-page newsletter with photos, cartoons and a column entitled "Questy's Update" by Questy the Wonder Puppet as told to Sue Kroyer.

DreamWorks, the newest animation studio, has just launched its own in-house newsletter called In The Works. To date, they have published two four-page compendiums, and hope to get Works out on a monthly basis. As one of DreamWorks production execs related, "it's kind of tough getting out a newsletter when you're still working to get a studio off the ground."
Over at Turner Feature Animation, there is no company animation newsletter. What they do have, however, is a cheeky underground newsletter called The Kitty Letter. The Letter was started by JOHN EDDINGS. "I started it due to popular demand ... well, actually due to a woman I had worked with at Bluth, who remembered the paper I put out there, and thought we should have another."

John has a long history of "underground" publishing. While at Bluth in Ireland, he published what was mostly a graphics publication called The Fourth Floor Funnies which ran the visual scribbling of various artists in the company. Some, John says, were not overly flattering, and Don Bluth called him in to tell him to get permission from the various victims before running their caricatures. Don also told him that no permission was needed for cartoons featuring Don, Gary Goldman or John Pomeroy.

When John returned to the states, he continued publishing a paper at Bluth's Burbank facility. John tells us that these earlier papers were heavy on graphics and light on written material, but that The Kitty Letter evolved into a paper that was just the reverse -- more writing and fewer visuals.

Apparently artists like to take an occasional break from drawing and belly up to their word processors to turn out pieces on everything from the evils of Richard Nixon to the joys of jury duty. And every once in a while, something is run that ticks off management -- but this is the risk of publishing an elbows-out, no-holds-off-limits underground newsletter.

All of these "in-house" newsletters offer cartoons, articles and information of varying quality and usefulness to their respective readers. Which makes them nearer or more distant cousins of The Peg-Board. As it enters its twenty-fifth year of continuous publication, and the thirty-fifth anniversary of its first issue, The Peg-Board may well lay claim to being the longest-running animation newsletter.

For sale

Animation light board, 14" by 16" by 5" high, with
pegs and light source. Portable, made of heavy
translucent plastic. $50.00. Call Ken Southworth, (714)
533-1958.

Animation company selling specialized furniture and
equipment. For further details, please contact Bekah at
Hearst Animated Productions, 1640 S. Sepulveda Blvd.,
Los Angeles, CA 90025; (310) 475-1700 ext. 170.

Help wanted

HANNA-BARBERA CARTOONS is looking for artists to
join the crew of our “What A Cartoon!” miniseries,
Dexter’s Laboratory. We need BG layout artists with
strong draftsmanship and design abilities. We’re also
looking for background artists that are able to adapt to
the show’s color style. Start dates mid- to late February.
Please contact Debby Hindman at (213) 969-4117 or
Donna Castricone at (213) 969-4168.

Sample reels and the “catch-22”

Last year, President Sito appointed a committee to look into the problems faced by members needing to compile
“sample reels” of animation for their portfolios. Here’s a report from committee member Ray Pointer.

As I enter my fifth year in the Hollywood animation
arena, I continue to be overwhelmed at the rate that
the industry has grown. The demand for animation
artists is apparent. Along with this demand comes
certain requirements for applying for these jobs —
particularly for animators.
In addition to the standard portfolio requirements,
some employers require a “professionally edited”
sample reel of scenes animated by the applicant.
This presents an interesting and challenging
situation for a number of reasons. Many studios are
protective of scenes in their films, and do not, as a
rule, make them available to the artists that worked
on them. The studios are particularly protective of
scenes in their films and do no, as a rule, make them
available to the artists who worked on them. The
studios are particularly protective if the film has not
yet been released.
The recourse would be to wait for the home video
release, and copy the scene onto a “sample reel”.
This presents many problems, beginning with copy
protection and copyright infringement, to the
possibility misrepresentation on a number of levels.
Did the applicant actually animate the scene? And
the appearance of finished scenes in a sample reel
opens another Pandora’s box. In representing not
only the animator’s initial statement, but also the
work of the assistants whose interpretation gave
definition and style to the animation. Finished
scenes also represent the work of art directors, color
stylists, background painters, effects animators,
cameramen … and so on …
As other studios follow Disney’s lead, its should be
noted that their requirements for an animator’s
application call for “pencil test” scenes. Since every
studio has pencil test equipment, the solution seems
to lie within reach. Almost ever animator I know
makes his or her own VHS pencil test for portfolio
presentations. But after a while, these favorite scenes
become spread out over several tapes, or scattered
among other choice scenes on the same tape.
Rough attempts at edit assemblies made with home
VCRs usually result in tape roll glitches and image
degradation. Many portfolio reviewers are inclined
to view such tapes with suspicion, and may pass on
a qualified applicant due to poor reel presentation.
Professional edit jobs would make a more effective
impression. But the question is — “Where do you go
for the best deal?

Unfortunately, all of the IA editorial houses we
contacted, such as Editel and Deluxe Video, are
large-volume post-production houses, for whom
individual customized jobs can be complicated and
expensive. This lead us to investigate small
independent editing houses, such as:

Canyon Video Productions
13733 Ventura Blvd.
Sherman Oaks 91403
Contact: Michael

Copy Right Video Duplicating
6666 Santa Monica Blvd.
Los Angeles 90028
(213) 461-4151
Contact: Paul

Film & Video Transfers
8519 Reseda Blvd.
Northridge 91324
(818) 885-6501
Contact: Joe

Moonlight Bay
4400 Coldwater Canyon, Suite 201
Studio City 91604
(818) 506-1505
Contact: Samantha

Costs run roughly from $70 to $155, depending on
quality and extras. Some facilities can character-generate ID boards at the head of the tape, or CG
your name and initials over scenes. Some, such as
Moonlight Bay, offer price reductions at night. They
can all handle VHS format, and most recommend
assembly on U-Matic (3/4") for a master tape with
VHS copies. The master provides a backup in case
the VHS copies are lost or damaged. Multiple copies
are recommended for application to more than one
studio, and for your own reference shelf.
These facilities are listed for general information
and are not recommended by myself or Local 839.
As in hiring any service, the best advice is to shop
around, since you are the best judge of your particular
needs. Professionally edited and duplicated sample
reels are definitely worth the time, effort and expense
when you consider the final result — a job!

Ray Pointer

Save your pay stubs!

M.P.S.C. Local 839 presents …
A PEOPLE’S HISTORY OF
HOLLYWOOD ANIMATION
A series of FREE lectures for Local 839 members only

Four lectures consisting of hearsay, legends, good stories, and thoroughly biased opinions about the
men and women who shaped “the biz”. Given by Tom Sito, Local 839 president and all-around windbag, and Mark Kausler, the Brother William Of Baskerville of the animation world. The lecture will
feature rare film treasures.

LECTURE II — March 20 ........................... “What does all this laughter hafta do with
makin’ cartoons?”: The studio golden age,
1932-1955
The great studios and the great crews. The status of women and minorities. The forming of
unions; Fleischer, Schlesinger and Disney strikes. WW II and the Signal Corps units. The War of
Hollywood: CSU vs. IATSE, 1941-1951. Animation and the anti-Communist blacklist.
Films may include a Milt Gross cartoon, Coal Black and de Sebbben Dwarves, Hell Bent for Election,
and strike footage taken by Art Babbitt and John Hubley.

All lectures will be held at at the
ASIFA/Hollywood Center, 725 S. Victory Blvd., Burbank
Lectures are limited to Local 839 active members only
SPACE LIMITED —
ADVANCED RESERVATIONS NECESSARY
call (818) 766-7151 for reservations

m.p.s.c. local 839 iatse
4729 lankershim boulevard
north hollywood, ca 91602-1864

First Class Mail
U.S. Postage Paid
Permit 25
North Hollywood, CA




The Peg-Board (February 1995), Animation Guild Newsletter archive

 Original link: https://groups.google.com/g/comp.graphics.animation/c/-Yk-ZB2f-uo/m/GTjnpCLDwUwJ


THE PEG-BOARD -- Information Superhighway Edition -- February, 1995

This is a monthly posting of excerpts from THE PEG-BOARD, the newsletter

of the Motion Picture Screen Cartoonists and Affiliated Optical

Electronic and Graphic Arts, Local 839 IATSE. THE PEG-BOARD is also

published in printed format.


This file is available by anonymous ftp, along with a number of other

files about Local 839. The address is:


ftp.netcom.com:/pub/mp/mpsc839


Local 839 IATSE is the largest local union of motion picture graphic

artists in the world. We have over 1,800 active members employed in

animation and CGI in Southern California.


In this month's issue:


* Membership approves strike fund

* 401(k) enrollment begins

* From the President, by Tom Sito

* From the Business Representative, by Steve Hulett

* How the union collects residuals

* MGM, CFI, Turner sign with 839

* Animation in the news

* At the water cooler

* Correspondence

* Help wanted

* In memoriam

* Masthead


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MEMBERSHIP APPROVES STRIKE FUND

Unanimously accepted plan will not raise dues


Last year, the Motion Picture Screen Cartoonists polled the membership

to find out if they were in favor of setting up a Strike Fund, and if

so, would they be in favor of paying an additional fee. The poll came

back 53% in favor, 47% opposed. Almost all of the "no" votes were

opposed to the raise in dues rather than to the idea of a fund to help

members in the event of a job action.


Over the past several months the Screen Cartoonists have received

impassioned communications -- both pro and con -- regarding a Strike

Fund. In early January, the Executive Board voted to recommend to the

membership the set-up of a Strike Fund of $250,000 with an infusion of

cash from the General Fund. This solution would not involve any raise in

dues.


At the January 31 general membership meeting, President Sito outlined

the board's recommendation, stressing that there would be no change in

dues or fees, that this money would come exclusively from the General

Fund. The membership approved the board's recommendation unanimously.


What a strike fund means


Does this mean we'll be having a strike next time negotiations roll

around? No. It means we'll have money to assist us in organizing non-

union shops. It means we'll have money available if a job action is ever

contemplated in the future.


Are we going to have to pay more dues or some kind of "strike fund fee"?

No. The union's General Fund is healthy, even though the local's dues

and initiation fees are the lowest of any union in Hollywood. The board,

after long and thoughtful deliberation (and a few raised voices)

determined that we could easily afford to start a strike fund out of

current cash flow.


With the establishment of a strike fund, Local 839 takes an important

step toward protecting its members interests and strengthening its hand

in negotiations and organizing.


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401(k) ENROLLEMNT BEGINS


The week of February 6-10, over three hundred animation employees at

Disney Feature and Television Animation attended informational meetings

about MPSC's new 401(k) savings plan. The plan, administered by the

Principal Financial Group -- one of the nation's largest -- includes

twelve fund account options, teletouch investing, and loan-back

provisions after the plan runs for eighteen months.


The Screen Cartoonists' goal is to have all of our signatory studios

participate in the plan. As we go to press, Disney, Hanna-Barbera and

Turner Feature Animation have agreed to participate. If you are employed

at a signator studio that has shown no interest in being part of our

401(k) family, stop by your supervisor's office and respectfully ask if

your current employer would like to reassess its position.


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FROM THE PRESIDENT

In the time of the gypsies


In the 'seventies we all worried about all our jobs going overseas,

lately it seems that the trend is now runaway in reverse. The

uncontested success of our homemade films like Lion King and the

burgeoning concentration of the new CGI houses is drawing to L.A. the

animation talent of the world and the entrepreneurs who crave that

talent. That curious race that I once belonged to, the International

Animation gypsies, trained and seasoned in studios from Barcelona to

Berlin to Seoul, are now flocking into Tinseltown the way London was the

place in the 'eighties and Taipei or Sydney in the 'seventies.


When I came to work in L.A. in 1977,my pure Brooklynese was the most

exotic accent anyone had ever heard. Tran Vu would ask me: "Tom, How is

Noo Yawk?" And remember in 1980 when Disney wanted to hire Andreas Deja

from Germany how they jumped through hoops to get his visa? That funny

ad in the Los Angeles Times:


Wanted: Disney-style directing animator, must draw like Milt

Kahl, have a mustache, good biceps, speak German, etc. Apply

WDP.


Now our Hollywood roster rings with names like Kupzcyk and Bao Wan,

Siobhan and Raul, Hans and Ivan.


Our pride and thanks go out to the new artists in our midst and an

invitiation not to drift away when the animation teats dry but stay and

put down roots. You, our colleagues, become our neighbors and friends.


Don't think that our union is an "Americans Only" club bent on keeping

you out. Historically new immigrants were a driving force behind social

justice in America. The first abolitionists fighting in Missouri were

German immigrants who couldn't appreciate the invisible double standard

in "All Men are Created Equal" that Americans had taken for granted. The

eight-hour workday first demanded in 1886 was denounced as a foreign

idea brought from England to ruin American prosperity.


Haymarket union martyr Albert Parsons was an Austrian immigrant, our

patriot philosopher Thomas Paine was from Lincolnshire, England and the

great poet-minstrel of organised labor, Joe Hill was born Josef

Hillstrom in Sweden. And the Irish, God love them, were everywhere in

the fight wherever the average guy was getting a bum deal. It's safe to

say the union movement in the U.S. never would have gotten anywhere

without foreign workers in the forefront. And encouraging hatred of

foreigners was always a tactic of big business.


If you came here out of love of the work of the great Hollywood

animators, then help the other institution the great Hollywood animators

loved. This union.


You bring your skills and ideas from abroad, we give you, thanks to our

union, the highest standard of living in the animation world. Don't be

so na•ve as to believe these wage standards were always here like the

palm trees (they were imported too.). Bill Tytla, Art Babbitt, Maurice

Noble, Chuck Jones, all the artists you look up to fought for their

union rights. If you're goal is to step into their shoes, do it all the

way and fight for this union too. It's as much part of their legacy as

Dumbo or Droopy.


Local 839 is only against those artists who come here to punch holes in

our livestyle by helping non-union dumps. Parasites who don't care if

what they do hurts anyone and then dissappear at the end of their

tourist visas. Those artists who come to be part of the real animation

family are always welcome.


Someday some of you may get homesick and go home. Others will get good

offers somewhere else in the world and move on. Wherever you go tell

them of the strength and security you enjoyed from being a union brother

or sister, that artists don't have to take-it and take-it and just

grumble in their beers at night. Tell them our solution can be theirs

also.


For the rest, there is room at our table among the hot dogs and chili

for kielbasa and kim chee. In the 'nineties boom Local 839 welcomes the

best animation artists the World has to offer. They reinforce our

ability to say that the finest animation work in the world today is done

here and that the finest work is done Union!


Today the proudest boast a top animation artist can say is: "Dude, Ich

Bin Ein Angeleno!"


-- Tom Sito


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FROM THE BUSINESS REPRESENTATIVE


Another busy month, and I could sit here and whine about how tired and

overworked I am, but I don't think the staff working seven days a week

on Pocahontas would be too sympathetic ...


Enrollments have begun at Disney Feature Animation for the 401(k) plan.

I spent two frantic weeks over there in meetings and preparations for

meetings, and the interest seemed to build day by day [see above].

Hanna-Barbera has indicated that they will be coming into the 401(k)

plan when they have finished reviewing documents. I have high hopes that

by the end of the year, most of the others studios -- including our

friends in Warners management who thus far stoutly resist -- will climb

on board the plan.


What else? Every week we get inquiries from CD-ROM companies looking to

hire artists for games, information disks, and general entertainment.

Some of these companies are in Vancouver, some in Little Rock, some in

northern California. I got a call today from one in exotic Beverly

Hills. The upshot is that they need your talents and we want to

negotiate a contract with them.


How will it happen? When will it happen? At that happy moment when they

realize they are better off securing your artistic abilities by means of

a cartoonists' contract, than by pleading with you to come work without

the Motion Picture Industry Health and Pension Plan, without our

emerging 401(k).


In features, work continues to expand. Warner Bros. Feature Animation is

hiring new artists with a view to moving to a larger facility in

Glendale in the spring. Disney Features continues to grow, cranking up

for The Hunchback of Notre Dame after Pocahontas wraps this Spring. The

Screen Cartoonists continue to negotiate with new feature animation

studios as they roll over the horizon (and we hope to have more details

about that next month.)


Television, as it has for the last few years, continues to be a burr

under the union saddle. Film Roman remains a non-signator, as do Klasky-

Csupo and Gunther-Wahl. A couple of years ago, Phil Roman -- one of our

honorably withdrawn members -- informed Tom Sito that it cost him more

to stay non-union than sign a collective bargaining agreement. I didn't

realize that paying below-contract wages was such an expensive

proposition, but I was delighted to learn it was so. I'll rest easier.

(Phil's protests remind me of car dealer Cal Yeakel's TV spots for his

Oldsmobile agency when I was a kid: "We lose money on every new Olds we

sell, but we make up for it in volume!")


As our late President Richard Nixon used to say, let me make one thing

perfectly clear. The reason that a few cartoon studios here in town

cling tenaciously to their non-union status, is because it saves them

money. Which means you are making less money. I don't expect anybody to

weep, wail and rent their garments over that fact, but I want everybody

to be aware of it.


As I have said probably three hundred and eighty-five times before, the

day that the Motion Picture Screen Cartoonists evaporate into thin air,

is the day that you will be making a less livable wage.


-- Steve Hulett


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HOW YOUR UNION COLLECTS RESIDUALS FOR YOU


You may not be aware that Local 839 collects residuals under its

contract with the producers. A recent article in the newsletter of

International Photographers Guild, Local 659 IATSE, by their Executive

Director, Bruce Doering, puts it in perspective:


Many members are unaware that we benefit tremendously from residual

payments under the Hollywood Basic Agreement. Residuals negotiated by

the IATSE and Hollywood local unions are funded by a percentage of

payments derived from the selling of theatrical features to secondary

markets such as free television, cable and videocassettes.


However, unlike residuals negotiated by SAG, WGA and DGA, IATSE

residuals are not paid directly to individual members. Rather, under the

1993-1996 Basic Agreement, residuals are paid into the Motion Picture

Health And Welfare Active Plan (Active Plan), and the Health and Welfare

Retiree Plan (Retiree Plan).


Supplemental markets


Producers who have signed the Basic Agreement pay two kinds of residuals

to the Plans. First, they pay "supplemental market income" which

originates from the sale of motion picture features as videocassettes,

pay television, airlines, etc. For example, when a feature is filmed

under the Basic Agreement and within the thirteen western states, the

producer must pay between 5.4% and 8.1% of the payments derived from

such sales, into the Health and Welfare Active Plans.


Indeed, in 1994, $88 million in supplemental market income was paid into

the Active Plan, versus a total of $61 million in total hourly

contributions. As a result, the Active plan showed a $33.4 million

surplus [see The Peg-Board, January 1995, page 1]


"Post 60's"


"Post 60's" are the second kind or residual payment. Post 60's are due

when a feature film made after February 1, 1960 and shot under the Basic

Agreement is sold into the free television market. In such a case the

producer must pay 5.4% of his total worldwide gross receipts derived

from licensing the right to exhibit his motion picture on free

television.


"Post 60's" income has traditionally gone into the Retiree Plan. In

1993, however, it was agreed that about 50% of the 1994 "post 60's"

income, which amounted to about $22.5 million, would go into the Active

Plan.


Why is this important?


The importance of these residuals cannot be overestimated. Supplemental

market payments are the primary reason that, despite the skyrocketing

costs of medical care, Local 839 and other IATSE members working under

the Basic Agreement enjoy the best benefits of any union in Hollywood.

Similarly, "Post 60's" payments have permitted the Plans to maintain

full health coverage for retirees.


In short, our residuals make our health plan one of the best union plans

in the country. If we wish to keep our plan strong, then we must not

only defend our residual structure in negotiations with the producers,

but we must also organize non-union employers.


-- Bruce Doering


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MGM, CFI, Turner: the signatures just keep on coming ...


Quarterly IA/AMPTP meetings are usually lackluster affairs as far as the

Screen Cartoonists are concerned, but the meeting in Palm Springs the

last two days of January was more productive than most. MGM ANIMATION's

representative was delighted to sign the Local 839's Collective

Bargaining Agreement and bring Leo the Lion into our happy family of

signator studios. (Previously MGM had paid Local 839 members through a

payroll-service agreement, but now they are signed directly with us.)


We can also report that Turner Feature Animation is now a union shop.

Turner, which had payrolled Local 839 employees on The Pagemaster

through Hanna-Barbera, is still preparing its Cats Can't Dance feature

project.


CFI, the largest lab in Hollywood, has also signed on the dotted line,

signifying our move into visual effects and computer graphics. We

welcome MGM, CFI and Turner to the Local 839 club!


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THE FAMILY MEDICAL LEAVE ACT


Although the FMLA was signed into law by President Clinton in 1993,

final regulations were only implemented last month. Here's some details

of the Family and Medical Leave Act of 1993:


Q: Who is covered?


A: Federal and California state laws cover employers with fifty of more

employees for each working day in any twenty calendar weeks in the

current or preceding calendar year. Part-timers on payroll at the

beginning and end of a week are also included, but not those employees

on layoff.


An employer who has more than fifty employees in, say, April of a

calendar year but less than fifty by August would still be covered by

the act until the end of the year (December 31).


You must have worked at least 1,250 hours in the twelve months before

leave is requested.


Q: What triggers mandatory leave?


A: National and state laws provide for leave for mothers and fathers in

the case of:


1) birth of a child of the employee

2) placement of a child with the employee for adoption or foster

care

3) care for a child, parent or a spouse who has a serious health

condition, or

4) the employee's own serious health condition that makes it

impossible to perform essential job functions.


Q: How much leave am I entitled to, and when?


A: Employers must allow employees up to twelve weeks of unpaid leave

over a twelve-month period. Leave cannot be carried over if not used

within the year. Leave for the birth or placement of a child must be

started and concluded within twelve months of that event.


Q: When can leave be denied?


A: The FMLA requires employees to give the employer as much advance

notice as possible (at least thirty days notice of the need for a leave,

if possible and such notice as practical of leave needed more quickly

than that). Notice need not be written and should be given at least two

days after the employee learns of the circumstances requiring leave.


If the employee fails to give thirty days notice for foreseeable leave,

the employer may delay the leave until thirty days after the time notice

was made, but only if the employee had knowledge of the FMLA's notice

requirement (and if you're reading this, then you've got knowledge,

right?)


Q: What are my rights during leave?


A: Federal law requires employers to continue health benefit coverage

for employees on leave. In our case, that won't present a large problem

for employers since health coverage generally continues for many months

after an employee's departure from work. However, there might be some

circumstances where an employer might have to kick in contribution hours

to continue an employee's medical coverage. Please note: an employee

cannot be required to use his bank of hours to cover a leave period.


Q: How can I enforce my FMLA rights?


A: An employee who has not been given the notices, leaves, benefits or

reinstatement rights provided for by the FMLA may:


1) file a lawsuit on his or her own behalf, or

2) file charges with the Wage and Hour Division, Employment

Standards Administration of the Department of Labor, or

3) do both. Employees can file their charges in person, by

telephone or by mail.


Space prevents us from going into all the details of the new FMLA regs.

If you have questions we haven't covered here, please call the union

office.


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ANIMATION IN THE NEWS


In 1996, Disney will release direct-to-video sequels to The Lion King

and Aladdin (the second after The Return of Jafar) ...


Lion King art work garnered almost $2 million at Sotheby's auction house

in New York on February 11, a record for animation art. The highest

price paid by the SRO crowd at the 256-piece auction was $39,100 for an

image of the lion cub Simba with Pumbaa the warthog and Timon the

meerkat ...


Hanna-Barbera's two-year cartoon shorts project kicked off on February

20, with the simultaneous airing of World Premiere Toon-In on TBS, TNT

and The Cartoon Network. The show included Craig McCracken's Powerpuff

Girls, Pat Ventura's Yuckie Duck and Genndy Tartakovsky's Dexter's

Laboratory ...


Mindy Farrell has left her post as senior vice-president of creative

affairs for Warner Bros.'s feature animation unit, and will now serve as

a consultant to the company ...


Silicon Graphics Inc. has announced the $500 million purchase of Alias

Research Inc. and Wavefront Technologies Inc. SGI's computers are widely

used with Alias and Wavefront 3-D graphics software in motion picture

animation and visual effects.


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AT THE WATER COOLER


Congrats to Chuck Jones on receiving a long-overdue star on the

Hollywood Walk Of Fame on February 13 ...


Corey and Kathleen Fredrickson of Disney Feature Animation are the proud

parents of a baby girl, born January 27 ... Turner's Kevin Johnson and

wife Marla had a daughter, Chaya Olivia, born January 17 ... Disney

assistant Wendy Muir and hubby Dave had a baby boy, Joshua ... Vladimir

Spasojevic and his wife Jelena are proud parents of a son, Sava, born

January 27 ...


Disney has honored Carmen Sanderson for her fifty years employment at

the studio ...


Retired MGM/Hanna-Barbera cartoonist Walter Clinton would like to hear

from old friends in the industry. His address is 10714 Brookside Drive,

Sun City, AZ 85351.


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CORRESPONDENCE


I'm just getting over a head cold/flu bug that has lasted a good 10

days. When the symptoms first came up, I really wanted to stay in bed

and get some needed rest. I didn't because our union contract has no

"sick day" pay. Consequently, I've been to work knowingly risking giving

my germs to fellow employees. I know this is a common experience.


Even if the producers come back and say some people will abuse the

system and "fake" sick to take a few days off each given year, those

same people could feel that is time that is important to "recharge their

batteries" so to speak.


Since our industry is a pretty strong one these days, I see no reason

why our people shouldn't be treated any differently than most other

corporations. It only seems to me to be the human thing to do. At our

next negotiations, I hope we don't let this far request flit away as

something "expendable." Thanks for your time.


-- Peter Gullerud


Warners employees have long complained about the company's unenlightened

attitude toward sick days. Other companies -- Disney being the most

notable -- have sick days for employees, but those sick days are not a

contractual requirement.


And therein lies the problem. At contract time, sick days are a burning

issue for some and not for others. When 1993 contract proposals were

being formulated, sick days were not at the top of the agenda. We urge

members of the Screen Cartoonists (beg, even) to let us know what

proposals should be brought forward in 1996 contract negotiations.


If sick days are important, show up and let us know, and the issue will

be joined.


-- Steve Hulett


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Turner Feature Animation -- Storyboard Artists Wanted


If you are looking for a exciting place to work on non-traditional

feature projects, then we are eager to meet you or at least have a look

at your work. Turner Feature Animation is presently seeking storyboard

artists with two years feature experience preferred, to work on upcoming

feature projects. If interested, please drop off your portfolio and

resume to 3330 Cahuenga Blvd., second floor. For more information call

(213) 969-4184.


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IN MEMORIAM


Key assistant animator Chris Chu died on February 5 after a long battle

with cancer. Since 1977 he had worked for Hanna-Barbera, Filmation,

Bakshi, Disney, Baer Animation and Turner Feature Animation. His family

asks that contributions in his name be made to Heal The Bay or The

Cousteau Society.


1984 Golden Award winner Larry Silverman died on January 30. From 1926

until his retirement in 1982, he worked for Terrytoons, John Terry,

Disney, Harman-Ising, Van Beuren, Film Graphics, Famous, Hanna-Barbera,

Kinney-Wolf, Sam Singer and Filmation.


Retired inker Helen Emily Stafford died on December 27. From 1938 until

her retirement in 1971, she worked for Disney, Famous, John Sutherland,

Raphael Wolff, Cascade, TV Spots, MGM, Lantz, Hanna-Barbera, Harmon-

Ticktin, Sam Singer, DePatie-Freleng, Pat Jenks and Warners.


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MOTION PICTURE SCREEN CARTOONISTS

AND AFFILIATED OPTICAL ELECTRONIC AND GRAPHIC ARTS,

LOCAL 839 IATSE

4729 Lankershim Boulevard, North Hollywood, CA 91602-1864

phone (818) 766-7151 * fax (818) 506-4805

E-mail inquiries: mps...@netcom.com

Anonymous FTP: ftp.netcom.com:/pub/mp/mpsc839

PRESIDENT -- Tom Sito

BUSINESS REPRESENTATIVE -- Steve Hulett

VICE-PRESIDENT -- George Sukara

RECORDING SECRETARY -- Jeff Massie

SERGEANT-AT-ARMS -- David Teague

PEG-BOARD EDITOR -- Jeff Massie

EXECUTIVE BOARD

Viki Anderson * Bronwen Barry * Sheila Brown * Jan Browning

James Davis * Earl Kress * Craig Littell-Herrick * Tom Ray

Pat Sito * Ann Sullivan * Stephan Zupkas

TRUSTEES -- Pat Sito * Ann Sullivan * Stephan Zupkas


Contents (c) 1995 by MPSC Local 839 IATSE. All rights reserved.

Publications of bona fide labor organizations may reprint articles from

this newsletter so long as attribution is given. Permission is also

given to distribute this newsletter electronically so long as the ENTIRE

contents are distributed, including this notice.

--

_______________________________________________________________________________

Motion Picture Screen Cartoonists and 4729 Lankershim Blvd.

Affiliated Optical Electronic and North Hollywood, CA 91602-1864

Graphic Arts, Local 839 IATSE phone (818) 766-7151 * fax (818) 506-4805

ftp://ftp.netcom.com:/pub/mp/mpsc839 mailto://mps...@netcom.com


The Peg-Board (January 1995), Animation Guild Newsletter archive

 Original link: https://groups.google.com/g/comp.graphics.animation/c/TzhGZgyGhII/m/agjRQnVr46YJ


THE PEG-BOARD -- Information Superhighway Edition -- January 1995

This is a monthly posting of excerpts from THE PEG-BOARD, the newsletter

of the Motion Picture Screen Cartoonists and Affiliated Optical

Electronic and Graphic Arts, Local 839 IATSE. THE PEG-BOARD is also

published in printed format.


This file is available by anonymous ftp, along with a number of other

files about Local 839. The address is:


ftp.netcom.com:/pub/mp/mpsc839


Local 839 IATSE is the largest local union of motion picture graphic

artists in the world. We have over 1,600 active members employed in

animation and CGI in Southern California.


In this month's issue:


* Health plan on the mend

* From the Business Representative, by Steve Hulett

* From the President, by Tom Sito

* Correspondence

* Dreams may come true

* Short takes command

* Animation in the news

* Whither the 401(k)?

* Q & A

* At the water cooler

* Hollywood Hands-On seminar

* Classifieds

* In memoriam


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HEALTH PLAN ON THE MEND

$28 mil deficit becomes $22 mil surplus


The headline of the September 1992 Peg-Board carried the chilling news

that "Our health plan is in trouble". At that time, the plan's reserves

had dropped so low that we were in danger of losing the "bank of hours"

provisions by which members are allowed to extend their benefits during

long layoffs.


The ensuing contract negotiations between the IATSE and AMPTP producers'

association addressed the plan's financial problems. Cuts were made in

areas such as psychiatric and chiropractic care, and incentives were

added to encourage participants to use HMOs. Residual payments were

diverted from the retiree health plan, which remains comfortably in the

black.


A year ago, the plan was $7.1 million in the red, a 75% improvement over

conditions in '92. A recent Daily Variety article reported that the Plan

is now $22 million in the black -- its first surplus in years.


This is especially good news in light of the recent elections, which

have doomed any chance of national health care for the foreseeable

future. It's especially incumbent on us not to rest on our laurels. In

the next negotiations, the employers must not be allowed to roll back

contributions until and unless we regain the benefits surrendered in the

1993-94 talks. We've earned it -- we deserve to get it back.


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FROM THE BUSINESS REPRESENTATIVE

The animation landscape: early 1995


As I write, the Motion Picture Screen Cartoonists stand on the cusp of

the one of the great periods of their forty-three-year history.

Employment is at an all-time high, total membership moves toward new

records, and we are moving to embrace the new technologies in computer-

land.


I have done more negotiating in the last year than in the first four

years of my tenure combined. 1993 and 1994 were tough in the negotiating

sphere. Employers wanted major rollbacks in wages and overtime, but

finally backed off in the face of a united membership. In the past six

months, Universal/MCA came knocking twice with the same contract

demands: 45% wage cuts for digital ink and paint and elimination of

overtime for all supervisory personnel. At a time when almost every

animation employee who can hold a pencil or paintbrush is employed at

well above scale, we respectfully declined their modest requests.


And now here it is 1995 already, and the change in the animation

landscape is changing again:


Rich Animation, which employed 180 MPSC members just eight months ago,

has now laid off most of its staff. Warner Bros. Feature Animation,

after a hiring frenzy through the Spring, Summer and Fall, has

temporarily gone into hibernation while the Warner higher-ups decide

which feature project to greenlight (that should end soon). Disney

Feature Animation, freshly housed in its new animation building, races

to meet its June release deadline for Pocohontas, all the while hiring

new staffers for releases that come after. On the movie horizon, the

triumvirate of Spielberg, Katzenberg and Geffen loom like thunderheads

(and we expect to be negotiating with them shortly.)


In Tee Vee Land, Hanna-Barbera is concentrating on its shorts shows,

some of which it hopes to spin off into half-hour series. Disney TV is

busy working on direct-to-video projects for Aladdin and Lion King, busy

producing half-hours of Aladdin, Duck Daze, The Shnookums and Meat

Funny Cartoon Show, and Timon and Pumbaa. At Graz Entertainment, work

continues on X-Men, Tick, and Skeleton Warriors; Warners TV is deep into

work on Sylvester and Tweety, Animaniacs, and Freakazoids. Warners

Classics is finishing up their short Carrotblanca and continuing with

commercials. Hyperion has completed new orders of Itsy Bitsy Spider,

Happily Ever After, and Life with Louie. In the next couple of months

they will begin work on two new Brave Little Toaster direct-to-video

sequels. Universal Cartoon StudioS is finishing post-production on its

second Land Before Time direct-to-video release.


That, in a nutshell, is an overview of what's going on today in L.A.

animation. The Screen Cartoonists have contracts with every active

theatrical animation producer in Los Angeles. Unfortunately, that's not

the case in television. While contract studios Disney, Warners, Graz

Entertainment, Hyperion, Universal and Hanna-Barbera are active, major

producers of television product, so also are Film Roman, DIC, Klasky-

Csupo and Games, Inc., none of which enjoys contractual relationships

with the Screen Cartoonists. The fact that they are out there driving

down wages (their occasional protests to the contrary), should concern

every artist and technician who intends making a long-term career in

animation. It's considerably easier to support a family on a thousand to

thirteen hundred a week rather than six or eight hundred.


And what about computers? The Screen Cartoonists continue to represent

more CGI artists than any other union in town; within a decade most of

our members will be working in front of a computer screen. Over the past

six months, we have received at least an inquiry a week from CDROM

companies wanting to use the service of feature-quality animators. There

is no reason that artists working in those areas should not be working

under a contract that gives them quality pension and health benefits,

that enhances their working conditions.


To sum up, 1995 looks like a banner year. Just how big the unfurling

flag will be, and how briskly it will snap in the wind, depends on each

one of us.


-- Steve Hulett


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FROM THE PRESIDENT

Complete self-interest


December is the month of warmth, parties, waxing poetic and thinking of

others.


January is the month of cold, tax planning, plain talk and thinking of

yourself.


Some of us don't need this time of year to grow self-absorbed, let's

face it, most of us are out for ourselves. All those words about union

unity and solidarity is just so much gas, what's in it for Me? How does

it solve My problems? Me! Moi! Numero Uno!


Well boys and girls, never mind history lessons, you saw in 1994 how you

benefited from hanging together and hanging tough. All attempts to cut

your overtime pay and wages were shot down, the stingiest companies were

made to cough up the retroactive pay they owed you, you are about to

have the chance to enroll in a multi-employer 401(k) plan that only a

few union locals enjoy, and the big bosses are beginning to think the

unthinkable, residuals. Your medical plan has stayed strong while some

employers have cut their executive plans to no longer cover families or

dependents.


That's what you got.


However, in other ways we're still blowing it. Example: When we recently

negotiated with a large employer, their first negotiator (who's since

been replaced) tried as an opening gambit the same tired requests for

cutting overtime for top animators and supervisors and the salaries of

digital ink & paint. I educated him about our united muscle and asked

for profit sharing, employer matching 401(k) participation and a

structured bonus system. Part of my argument was: "Try and do it

without us! Call Fox in Phoenix and ask how many pros they're getting.

Nobody! They can't get anyone good without signing a contract with us!"


The next day I heard that one or two H-B artists were going to Phoenix.

Luckily it's only one or two, but you see the psychological effect.

Those artists must figure "It's good money, what the heck?" But it's a

gut punch to any attempts to get you those aforementioned goodies I

demanded. And it brings you one step closer to a smaller paycheck if

you're a painter and no overtime if you're an animator or department

head.


You think the big company execs aren't sharing info about you? Go to the

corner of Ventura and Firmament in Encino and look at the big building

with the Scarlet O'Hara and Little Mermaid mosaics all over it. That's

the AMPTP headquarters, the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television

Producers, the employer's clubhouse.


Is it clairvoyance that almost every large company last year had the

identical demands for overtime rollbacks? Look at that building -- then

try and go it alone against all of them united.


Look for these demands to resurface in the future. As the big companies

swallow up computer software houses, they've whetted their appetite on

the na•vete of young computer artists' acceptance of long hours for no

pay, a situation considered sacrilege in Hollywood for forty years.

They can't be faulted, they're doing what they think is right for them.


There's a lot of small animation houses who depend on freelance from

you. Some slipped out of the contract after the '82 debacle, others are

run by old working friends.


Hulett and I can't go break their knuckles for you, you gotta do what's

right for you and ask them to sign a union contract. Last year when just

one top artist at Cornell-Abood complained he wasn't getting his

benefits, they weakened and asked to talk about a deal. Unfortunately

when they realized they could still get you and some Canadians to

freelance they changed their minds. It's in their self-interest. To hell

with your kids' glasses or your pension, here's a few bucks.


If you're in a non-union house, what'll it kill you to sign a rep card?

They're anonymous, it's against federal law to fire you. Will Bluth and

Goldman move back to Dublin and dismantle an investment of millions

because you signed a card? In 1994 all the British artists of

Amblimation signed a petition which the government considers a request

for union representation. They're not folding up and moving to Cambodia

or canceling the work visas, they're still coming here.


So in 1995 lets get good and selfish and ask not only for money but for

our union benefits as well. Nothing personal. Just pure self-interest.


As Leopold I, the "Old Dessauer", said before the Battle of Kesselsdorf

in 1745:


Oh God, let me not be disgraced in my old days. Or if thou wilt not help

me, do not help these scoundrels; but leave us to try it ourselves.


-- Tom Sito


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CORRESPONDENCE


Dear Steve:


{Re the December Peg-Board column,} I was surprised to read that you

voted Democrat. I thought you and the President were Communists.


I'm so tired of opening the Peg-Board and reading the spewing rhetoric.

Can't you just focus on the issues and the goals that you were elected

to further and stop subjecting the rest of us to your political beliefs?


Don't you see the hypocrisy? You complain that "We'll be enlightened by

lectures on public morality from Newt Gingrich," while you yourself are

lecturing on your own version of public morality.


Steve, if you would just spend the time and effort trying to improve the

union stead of raving away, we'd all be better off.


Merry Christmas,


-- Cliff MacGillivray


*****


Dear Cliff:


Thanks for your Christmas greeting/letter of complaint. Joe Stalin

didn't appear on my ballot, so I guess I was forced to vote Democrat.


You could be right about subjecting unsuspecting members to my political

beliefs. Not that most people seem to care. So far one person has

congratulated me, and now you've written to tell me to get off it

already. That's what? Two members out of 1,800.


Since it's the second political column I've written in five years -- the

first being an attack on Hollywood liberals -- I don't think I'm being

excessive. Now, you might not like the union rah-rah stuff which usually

gets printed ... but the Peg-Board is (supposedly) a union publication.

Pro-labor cant goes with the territory.


Nevertheless, I will work hard to improve the union, and spend less time

raving away. And I apologize for any offense given. Hope to see you, one

day, at a union meeting.


Happy New Year,


-- Steven Hulett, USN Retired


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DREAMS (OF RESIDUALS!) MAY COME TRUE


The long-anticipated announcement has been made that the "Dream Team" of

Steven Spielberg, Jeffrey Katzenberg and David Geffen will call their

new operation DreamWorks. An article in the January 12 Hollywood

Reporter carried the enticing news that the new company is offering

profit participation to new employees. The article continues: "Allowing

profit participation by animators is part of an emerging industry trend,

and the dream team plan could change the salary structure of

animators".


We're glad to report that we're about to start negotiations with

DreamWorks, and we have every anticipation that they will become a part

of our family of employers. Until the company sets up its own

operations, we understand that resumes are being accepted at

Amblimation, 100 Universal City Plaza, Bungalow 477, Universal City, CA

91608; (818) 777-1000.


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SHORT TAKES COMMAND


Thomas C. Short was appointed IATSE President on December 15. He had

been the IA's General Secretary/Treasurer, and had served several years

as an International Vice-President.


We've been impressed with Tom's achievements to date as an IA official;

we wish him luck and look forward to working with him in the future.

(See IN MEMORIAM below.)


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ANIMATION IN THE NEWS


Hanna-Barbera has regained syndication rights to The Flintstones after

fourteen years. The company plans to resyndicate the entire package,

which will coincide with the thirty-fifth anniversary of The Flintstones

original network premiere.


Television animation will most likely be undergoing major restructuring

as the Warner Bros. Network and the United Paramount Network come on

line. Disney, Warners, Universal and other suppliers look toward a

tighter, more competitive market by 1997, when Paramount and Warners

will have their networks up and running. Mort Marcus, the head of Buena

Vista Television, believes that ratings might become too fragmented, but

that there is no clear picture yet as to how the marketplace will

finally look.


Disney is planning to raise as much as $500 million from outside

investors to finance their upcoming films. This outside financing would

be invested in live-action product only. Animated features would be

excluded. The trades reported in early January that The Lion King

became the second highest grossing picture in film history. Who wants to

share that boodle with outside investors?


Disney's next theatrical feature, The Goofy Movie, is scheduled for an

April 7 release date. Much of the project was completed at Disney's

Paris facility, with an assist from Burbank ...


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WHITHER THE 401(K)?


DISNEY: As the Peg-Board goes to press we can report that Disney has

approved the pertinent documents. Disney employees will receive

information in the mail between now and the start of enrollments on

February 6. Starting on that date, enrollment meetings will be

scheduled on the studio premises.


HANNA-BARBERA/TURNER: It looks like the 401(k) is a virtual lock at H-B.

Lawyers are reviewing documents, and we have every expectation that the

plan will be available in the immediate future.


Warner BROs. continues to be the only union shop that has flatly refused

to consider a 401(k) plan. The majority of Warners employees have signed

petitions asking management to take the union's proposals seriously; to

date there has been no reply.


Several studios have asked to see the union plan, and have expressed

interest in talking to us about it. We believe that labor market forces

will eventually compel most if not all union shops to sign up to our

plan.


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Q&A


Q: My divorce will be final next month. Will my ex-spouse still qualify

for medical benefits under our health plan?


A: No. Coverage for your ex-spouse will expire the last day of the month

in which the divorce is finalized.


It is very important that you promptly notify the Trust Funds of any

divorce. Otherwise, you will be held liable for any claims submitted by

your ex-spouse.


Your children from a previous marriage should continue to qualify,

provided they are your natural children. The rules regarding coverage

for stepchildren or adoptees of a divorced family are complicated. For

further information, contact the Motion Picture Industry Health and

Pension Plan, POB 1999, Studio City, CA 91614-0999, or call (818) 769-

0007 or (310) 769-0007.


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AT THE WATER COOLER


Congratulations to Al Holter of Turner Feature Animation, and his wife

Nancy Turner, on their baby girl named Emma born November 20 ... Warner

Bros.'s Brian Mitchell and his wife Cindy's little girl, Jennifer Marie,

was born November 19, weighing six pounds, five ounces ... Yet another

bundle of joy for Warner Bros.'s Eric Mahady and wife Carolyn, whose

baby girl, Madison Waite, was born on December 7. She weighed in at

seven pounds, two ounces ... Mike Milo married Laura Escudero on

November 12 ... Our condolences to Maxine Markota on the death of her

husband, Richard ...


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HOLLYWOOD HANDS-ON PRESENTS

CAREERS IN THE NEW MEDIA with Pam Hogarth


Spend the afternoon learning about what's happening with careers in the

new media -- what are they, where are they, who's doing them, what

skills they require, how you get one. Hollywood and Silicon Valley are

colliding in interactive entertainmentm special effects, and video

production.


Where do you fit in? Is there a place for you in the digital revolution?

What skills do you need to get your job done? Do you acquire those

skills -- or hire them? This seminar will clear much of the current

confusion and help yopu plot a road for your career future.


Pam Hogarth has been leading seminars in the new media and careers and

technology at The American Film Institute. She has a masters degree in

vocational counseling and extensive experience in counseling adults in

their career choices.


Sunday, February 12 * 2-5 pm * $25.00

held at Hollywood Hands-On, 4729 Lankershim, 2nd floor, North Hollywood

For information and reservations, call (818) 762-0060


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Leonard Maltin will host An Animation Tribute: 25 Years Of Oscar-Winning

& Nominated Animation, celebrating the twenty-fifth anniversary of the

Tournee of Animation. This will take place on February 2, at 8 pm, at

the Samuel Goldwyn Theater of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and

Sciences. For additional information call (310) 278-5673.


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Multimedia artists wanted: Full-time contract work. Extensive 3d Studio

and Animator Pro Experience required. Also 2D Photoshop artists needed.

Fax resume to: (415) 243-8630.


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BAFTA L. A. -- the British Academy of Film and Television Arts Los

Angeles -- promotes the excellence of British film and television in the

United States. For information about membership, contact Tracy Dodd,

BAFTA L. A., 8500 Melrose Ave., Suite 208, Los Angeles 90069; phone

(310) 652-4121 or fax (310) 854-6002.


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For sale: Animation light board, dark wood, with disc (glass cracked).

Also, 3 boxes of Pantone and Design art markers, all colors. Leona,

(213) 469-8730.


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Openings for cartoonists, pen-and-ink and painters. Help needed on

eleven four-page cartoon stories for small magazine. Good pay !! Contact

Gerald Ravel, Mr. G's, 16010 Crenshaw Blvd. Suite D, Gardena 90249;

(310) 719-1883.


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IN MEMORIAM

Al DiTolla, 1926-1994


ALFRED W. DITOLLA died of cancer on December 20, five days after

resigning as President of the IATSE (see "Short Takes Command", above).

A longtime IA officer, he was appointed to the presidency in 1986,

succeeding Walter Diehl.


If the history of DiTolla's years in office seems clouded, it's largely

for reasons beyond the control, or blame, of any one individual. In

remembering him, we prefer to credit the positive aspects of his work.

For the first time in our memories, a healthy emphasis on organizing

was added to the IA's agenda, and actions actually accompanied words. We

were continually reminded that, for all our faults, our International

and our fellow locals are at the forefront in the areas of worker

education and safety. We perceived a lessening of the climate of

hostility and antipathy that had been fostered between the West Coast

studio locals and the rest of the Alliance, as DiTolla grasped that the

Hollywood unions have become the most successful and important part of a

larger whole.


DiTolla understood the need to make hard decisions in difficult times,

even at the risk of antagonizing allies. If not all his choices turned

out to be the right ones, can we really blame him for not having perfect

foresight? Though some may disagree, we see no reason not to honor the

memory of a union official who worked to the best of his ability to move

our union forward, and often succeeded.


*****


1985 Golden Award honoree MARTY TARAS died on November 14. Since 1933,

he had worked for Van Beuren, Fleischer, Jam Handy, Terrytoons,

Paramount, Tempo, CBS, Bill Tytla, Bakshi-Krantz, Hal Seegar, Hubley,

Kim & Gifford, Ovation, D & R, Zander, N. Y. Institute of Technology,

Hanna-Barbera and Ruby-Spears.


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MOTION PICTURE SCREEN CARTOONISTS

AND AFFILIATED OPTICAL ELECTRONIC AND GRAPHIC ARTS,

LOCAL 839 IATSE

4729 Lankershim Boulevard, North Hollywood, CA 91602-1864

phone (818) 766-7151 * fax (818) 506-4805

E-mail inquiries: mps...@netcom.com

Anonymous FTP: ftp.netcom.com:/pub/mp/mpsc839

PRESIDENT -- Tom Sito

BUSINESS REPRESENTATIVE -- Steve Hulett

VICE-PRESIDENT -- George Sukara

RECORDING SECRETARY -- Jeff Massie

SERGEANT-AT-ARMS -- David Teague

PEG-BOARD EDITOR -- Jeff Massie

EXECUTIVE BOARD

Viki Anderson * Bronwen Barry * Sheila Brown * Jan Browning

James Davis * Earl Kress * Craig Littell-Herrick * Tom Ray

Pat Sito * Ann Sullivan * Stephan Zupkas

TRUSTEES -- Pat Sito * Ann Sullivan * Stephan Zupkas


Contents (c) 1995 by MPSC Local 839 IATSE. All rights reserved.

Publications of bona fide labor organizations may reprint articles from

this newsletter so long as attribution is given. Permission is also

given to distribute this newsletter electronically so long as the ENTIRE

contents are distributed, including this notice.

--

_______________________________________________________________________________

Motion Picture Screen Cartoonists and 4729 Lankershim Blvd.

Affiliated Optical Electronic and North Hollywood, CA 91602-1864

Graphic Arts, Local 839 IATSE phone (818) 766-7151 * fax (818) 506-4805

ftp://ftp.netcom.com:/pub/mp/mpsc839 mailto://mps...@netcom.com


Cottage Cartoon Industry (published by Taiwan Today, on November 1st 1993) - Cuckoos' Nest, Hung Long, Atlantic Cartoon, Colorkey Productions

  Cottage Cartoon Industry (published by Taiwan Today, on November 1st 1993 ) - https://taiwantoday.tw/news.php?post=25254&unit=20,29...