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AI: Jobs, Power & Money
16APR

WGA settles money, ducks AI principle

3 min read
13:29UTC

The Writers Guild reached a four-year tentative deal with studios on 4 April that resolved a $122m health fund shortfall with a record $321m contribution, while leaving AI training payment on the table.

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Key takeaway

The writers settle solvency; the AI principle carries to the 27 April SAG-AFTRA table.

The Writers Guild of America, or WGA, reached a tentative four-year deal with the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers on 4 April 2026, according to Variety 1. Studios will put $321m into the writers' health fund, a record contribution that resolves a $122m shortfall; health contributions rise from 13% to 16.75% of gross compensation, with base health contribution rate up 3.75 percentage points. The WGA health fund, projected to run dry without action, is now funded for roughly a decade.

Streaming residuals improved, the success bonus moved from half to 75% of base residual, and annual minimums rise 1.5%, 3%, 3%, 3% over the life of the contract. The writers got the money.

On AI itself, the studios conceded notification, not compensation. AMPTP agreed to tell the WGA when it licenses writers' work for AI training. It refused to pay writers for that training use. The core demand of the 2023 strike, that workers share in the value their own material produces when it becomes machine data, was left on the table.

Against the Goldman 25,000/month anchor , displacement was already running well ahead of declared layoffs. The WGA's failure to win training payment means the value writers create for AI models is uncompensated in the same quarter those models are replacing headcount at IBM, Wipro and Snap. A training-data right would have been the closest thing to a structural hedge. The deal ships without one.

The 4 April settlement clears the path for the SAG-AFTRA session on 27 April, but it also sets the floor the performers' union is arguing against. The WGA accepted a notification-only settlement. SAG-AFTRA is arguing that notification without payment is not an AI protection at all. That is the principle the studios have already banked once, and the one the actors are meeting on 27 April to contest.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

The Writers Guild of America, the union representing TV and film writers, reached a four-year deal with Hollywood studios in early April. The headline number is $321 million going into the writers' health fund, which was running out of money. On AI, the studios agreed to tell writers when they use writers' material to train AI. They did not agree to pay writers for that training use. This matters because when an AI model learns from writers' scripts, it can subsequently generate content in the style of those writers without paying them. The actors' union (SAG-AFTRA) resumes its own negotiations on 27 April. Its demand goes further: a royalty each time AI replaces a human performer, not a notification requirement.

What could happen next?
  • Precedent

    The WGA deal establishes that notification of AI training use is achievable through collective bargaining; the payment question is deferred, not closed. Any union negotiating AI training terms in the next four years can cite WGA's notification precedent as a floor but will need to argue above it.

  • Risk

    Studios that train AI on WGA members' material between now and the next negotiating cycle will do so under the notification framework without payment; the window of maximum value extraction for studio AI training is now open, with four years until the next bargaining opportunity.

First Reported In

Update #7 · Meta codes its own org chart

Variety· 23 Apr 2026
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This Event
WGA settles money, ducks AI principle
The deal solves the writers' solvency crisis but concedes notification rather than compensation on AI training, setting the floor SAG-AFTRA inherits.
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