OK, here's the email I received...
When the American Federation of Musicians (AFM) discovered that entertainment company Lionsgate had made preparations to go to London to do the score for a uniquely American movie, The Hunger Games, International President Ray Hair contacted Lionsgate music executives and protested. He asked the company to stay in North America and do the score with AFM musicians, under a Union agreement like those the company has with the actors, writers, directors and stage crew. When the production heads refused to budge, Hair pushed back, taking Lionsgate to task in a video clip released today.
See what Ray Hair has to say about Lionsgate and The Hunger Games at
http://youtu.be/QjeJph1gJSo.
"The movie takes place in the future, in Appalachia," Hair explains. "But for the Americana, Appalachian-style music the movie needs, Lionsgate is going to Europe, so that the company can escape having to provide health care and pension contributions, fair wages, and royalty payments – benefits that everyone else working on The Hunger Games will most certainly receive." Running away to lower wage, benefit-free, non-union settings enables producers to avoid paying fair wages, residual payments. and other benefits that are standard fare for workers up and down the line in the television and film industry."
"The new AFM administration is committed to reaching out and publicizing the advantages of hiring AFM musicians and exposing the immoral, unethical, and unjust practice of looking to professional musicians to fatten the wallets of entertainment industry executives," said Hair. "Lionsgate can afford to do the right thing for musicians. They do it for everyone else," he said.
The Hunger Games was filmed in North Carolina on tax subsidies, says Hair. "It's not right for a $2 billion company like Lionsgate to go to Europe on taxpayer dollars and deprive the finest musicians in the world—AFM musicians—of a decent living," Hair said. "It's an American movie, with American actors, and American crews, with a soundtrack that's uniquely American, going to Europe to record the music. It's just plain wrong."
If you stand with us, click on the link below to sign our petition.
Click here to sign our petition asking Lionsgate to record "The Hunger Games" film scores in the United States with all the fair wages, benefits and protections that an AFM agreement affords.