Tom Cruise Urged Studios on SAG-AFTRA Stunt and AI Positions
The Mission: Impossible star also urged SAG-AFTRA to consider allowing actors to promote films during a strike given the state of movie theaters.

That wasn’t the Mission: Impossible star’s sole concern. He also wanted to urge the AMPTP to support the guild’s position on stunt performers.

SAG-AFTRA had proposals concerning stunt professionals, including stunt coordinators and stunt performers, which the 160,000-member union represents.
The union also sought to institute more guardrails on the use of generative AI in entertainment in its 2023 talks with studios and streamers, focusing on ensuring that performers give consent and are appropriately compensated when their performances are ingested into the technology.
Despite Cruise’s participation in the talks, after 5 weeks of negotiation the performers’ union and the AMPTP failed to come to a deal by 11:59 p.m. on Wednesday, July 12, when the union’s film and television contracts package expired.
Starting July 14, performers began picketing at studio lots and corporate headquarters in New York and Los Angeles and withholding their work, which subsequently has shut down or delayed productions including Mission: Impossible 8.
In addition to lobbying studios and streamers on behalf of SAG-AFTRA, Cruise has asked the union to consider allowing actors to promote films during a strike given the fragile state of movie theaters, reminding his union that promotion matters to actors, too.
SAG-AFTRA’s strike rules maintain that publicity, including “conventions, interviews, tours or promotion via social media of any struck work or struck companies” is expressly forbidden during the work stoppage.