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‘Equal Pay for Equal Paint!’

The Animation Guild (TAG), Local 839 of the Theatrical Stage Employees (IATSE), resumed negotiations with Hollywood studios this week and are fighting for pay equity for color designers, a job historically staffed by women. TAG represents thousands of animation artists, writers and technicians. In addition to winning language that will protect members from the creeping influence of artificial intelligence, the union is hoping to secure a new three-year contract that also ensures fair pay across genders. The job of color designers stems from the traditionally women-dominated department called ink and paint, which was created during the animation boom of the 1930s. Because it was labeled as women’s work and entry-level, studios used this to justify paying the workers less—a devaluation that still persists today.

AFL-CIO Daily Brief

San Francisco Symphony Chorus Authorizes Strike

The leadership of American Guild of Musical Artists (AGMA) and AGMA members of the San Francisco Symphony Chorus voted overwhelmingly to authorize a strike on Monday. AGMA represents 32 paid professional singers of the 152-person chorus. Symphony management wants to slash AGMA choristers’ pay by 65%.

AFL-CIO Daily Brief

Mercury Ballroom Stagehands in Louisville Vote to Form Union

On Thursday (9/12), stagehands at the Louisville, Kentucky-based Mercury Ballroom voted unanimously to join Theatrical Stage Employees (IATSE) Local 17. The unit will include around a dozen staff at the Mercury Ballroom, which is one of the city’s premier venues for live music, performances and other events. This resounding victory marks the third crew at a Live Nation venue to organize in recent months, following successful votes by workers at Denver’s Summit music hall and Marquis Theater earlier this summer.

Narsiso Martinez Exalts the Individuality of America’s Farmworkers in ‘Joyfully Grown’

“In the Works,” the centerpiece of Narsiso Martinez’s solo exhibition at Charlie James Gallery in Los Angeles, spans three walls and is made from dozens of found produce boxes. At the center of the piece and above a doorway is a long table resplendent with apples, kiwi, oranges, and grapes, all crowned by a chandelier. Flanking the dinner, farmworkers climb ladders or sit on the ground, sorting the harvest into the very boxes the composition is made from. Back in the center, the faceless attendees at the table enjoy the literal fruit of the workers’ labor. Read more.

Colossal

New Album "Labor Day" by George Mann and Si Kahn Features a Star-Studded Cast of Folk Icons

George Mann has announced the release of his latest album Labor Day, a collaboration with legendary songwriter Si Kahn. The album showcases 21 songs written by Kahn, with performances by both Kahn and Mann, as well as contributions from renowned folk artists such as Peggy Seeger, Billy Bragg, John McCutcheon, and Tom Chapin. The album includes eight never-before-released tracks, with four sung by Kahn and three by Mann. A standout contribution is Billy Bragg’s rendition of "We’re the Ones," a previously unrecorded song by Kahn. John McCutcheon, who has worked with Kahn for 50 years, offers a powerful new version of "Go to Work on Monday." Labor Day is a tribute to workers and their unions, featuring 10 additional tracks from artists like Magpie, Joe Jencks, Cathy Fink, and Michael Johnathon. Notably, Odetta appears on Michael Johnathon’s version of "Gone Gonna Rise Again." For more information, including lyrics, background, and full credits, visit Mann's website here. Fans of folk and labor movement music will find this album a heartfelt and inspiring collection celebrating the enduring spirit of workers’ rights.

CLICK HERE to listen to the show!

Shift Happens: Children’s book author J. Albert Mann, author of “Shift Happens: The History of Labor in the United States”; Clean Up on Aisle 4” host Jamie Mack, with They/Them; “Therapy” from poet Chris Butters; the R.J. Phillips Band celebrates immigrant workers with “Piece of the Pie”: Chris says Netflix hit “The Union” is a miss; Booker T. Washington and the “Atlanta Compromise Speech” on Labor History in 2:00; plus the DC Labor Chorus live from the Takoma Park Folk Fest!

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LABOR VIDEO OF THE WEEK

The Picket Line – Hali Hammer

“This is a true story about an action I took when I was nine.”

PICKET SIGN OF THE WEEK

Sent in by Yvette De La Cruz: “It was at the IAM hall for Boeing strikers. Helped out for a bit and then hit a picket line.” 

LABOR SONG OF THE WEEK
LABOR ART OF THE WEEK

Posted by @RyanElward, Teamsters Local 665

CLICK HERE for our complete labor arts calendar; look for our Labor Arts Calendar edition on Monday

Love and Work

Friday, September 20, 2024, 7:30 PM until 8:45 PM; Dryden Theatre, 900 East Avenue, Rochester, NY  14607

In a desolate Texas town, manufacturing work is unnecessary and illegal, and those caught a third time will be in “big trouble.” For Diane and Fox, and other members of a small underground group, life without the production of things in a well-disciplined workplace is unthinkable. So, they furtively try to satisfy their uncontrollable need to work, ready to make anything. Given the latest advances in artificial intelligence, robotics and other labor-saving strategies, Love and Work prepares us to consider how we will want to live in management’s dream world of “lights-out manufacturing.”

Radical Carols – A Memorial Tribute to Carol Gay

Saturday, September 21, 2024, 2:00 PM until 5:00 PM; Reformed Church of Highland Park, 19 South 2nd Ave., Highland Park, NJ  

Carol Gay’s Family and the New Jersey State Industrial Union Council (IUC) invite you to a memorial program with music by the Solidarity Singers and remembrances from Larry Cohen, Hetty Rosenstein, Larry Hamm, Ed Zipprich, members of Carol’s family, and everyone else who wishes to speak.

The Farmer-Labor Movement: A Minnesota Story

Saturday, September 21, 2024, 5:00 PM until 7:00 PM; St. Mark AME Church, 530 N 5th Ave E., Duluth, MN  55805

From the early 1920s to its merger with the Democrats in 1944 to create the modern DFL, Farmer Laborites united urban and rural Minnesotans in a powerful movement for social justice. The issues they fought for remain as relevant today as they were back in the 1930s.

Faces from an American Dream

Through December 28, 2024, 4:00 PM; American Labor Museum, 83 Norwood Street, Haledon, NJ 07508

Photography exhibit by Martin Desht documenting American post-industrialism at the end of the twentieth century.

LABOR HISTORY TODAY

September 20, 1887

According to folklorist John Garst, steel-drivin’ man John Henry, born a slave, outperformed a steam hammer on this date at the Coosa Mountain Tunnel or the Oak Mountain Tunnel of the Columbus and Western Railway (now part of the Norfolk Southern) near Leeds, Ala. Other researchers place the contest near Talcott, W. Va.

LABOR HISTORY TODAY PODCAST
CLICK HERE TO LISTEN TO THE SHOW!

Hamilton Nolan and “The Hammer”: Labor journalist Hamilton Nolan on the labor movement past, present and future and his new book “The Hammer: Power, Inequality, and the Struggle for the Soul of Labor.” Recorded live at the eighth annual Reuther-Pollack Labor History Symposium on August 31 in Wheeling, West Virginia. Music by the Pittsburgh Labor Choir.  

LABOR HISTORY QUIZ OF THE WEEK
On Sept. 20 1965, the International Hod Carriers changed their name to what?
International Union of Bricklayers and Allied Craftworkers
Laborers' International Union
International Brotherhood of Teamsters

LAST WEEK’S QUIZ: On September 13, 1926, the Post Office Department ordered 25,000 railway mail clerks to shoot to kill any bandits attempting to rob the mail.

"The worker must have bread, but she must have roses, too."

Please CLICK HERE NOW to pledge your financial support to our 2024 program, which includes our annual Solidarity Forever Award, the Great Labor Arts Exchange, the DC Labor FilmFest and much more (check out our website for details!).

Donations are tax-deductible to the extent allowed by law. 

RECENT NEWSLETTERS

Dallas Black Dancers Fight for Their Union (9/13)

Netflix hit “The Union” is a miss (9/6)

Labor Day weekend films, music & more! (8/30)

No justice, no dancing (8/23)

Beyoncé’s labor anthem (8/16)

Union Songs for Kids! (8/9) 

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