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	<title>still ACTING after all these years &#187; SAG Eligible</title>
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	<itunes:summary>a Texas based actor spouts off about the actor&#039;s life</itunes:summary>
	<itunes:author>still ACTING after all these years</itunes:author>
	<itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
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	<itunes:subtitle>a Texas based actor spouts off about the actor&#039;s life</itunes:subtitle>
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		<title>still ACTING after all these years &#187; SAG Eligible</title>
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		<title>SAG or SAG Eligible &#8211; What Does Your Resume Say?</title>
		<link>http://txactor.com/2008/04/29/sag-or-sag-eligible-what-does-your-resume-say.html</link>
		<comments>http://txactor.com/2008/04/29/sag-or-sag-eligible-what-does-your-resume-say.html#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 29 Apr 2008 06:38:33 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>txactor</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Actors]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[SAG]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[SAG Eligible]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[SAG Membership]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Joining SAG]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Texas Actors]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Recently, I wrote a piece in this blog asking for input from actors about the issues of being a SAG member vs being &#8216;SAG Eligible&#8217;. So far I haven&#8217;t heard from any actors who want to offer their input. To be fair, many actors who might reply probably have no idea this web site exists. [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Recently, I wrote a piece in this blog asking for input from actors about the issues of being a SAG member vs being &#8216;SAG Eligible&#8217;.</p>
<p>So far I haven&#8217;t heard from any actors who want to offer their input. To be fair, many actors who might reply probably have no idea this web site exists. But, since I first posted my &#8216;call for opinions&#8217;, the site has been viewed several thousand times and maybe some actors will chime in eventually.</p>
<p>I first got interested in this issue because I kept seeing &#8216;SAG Eligible&#8217; on actor&#8217;s resumes when at auditions.  I remember being a little annoyed when I first saw this label at the top of a resume.  It struck  me as saying &#8216;I want the credit&#8230;I just don&#8217;t want to pay the price&#8217;.   Maybe that&#8217;s too harsh.  </p>
<p>But, either you&#8217;re in SAG or you&#8217;re not.  In or out doesn&#8217;t necessarily mean squat about an actor&#8217;s talent and in our market it means almost nothing about an actor&#8217;s professional experience.  But membership does come at a price. Pretend membership does not.</p>
<p>Let me say upfront that I have good friends who are SAG eligible and have chosen not to join SAG&#8230;yet.  I have no animosity toward those friends or any other actors in that situation.  However, I make no apology for being adamantly in favor of SAG membership.  I&#8217;ve been a SAG member for many years and that, no doubt, colors my thinking on the matter.</p>
<p>I thought it would help to have some way to relate the number of SAG member actors in Central Texas to the number of represented actors who advertise themselves as &#8216;SAG Eligible&#8217;.  That has proven a little more difficult than I had hoped.</p>
<p>According to an official at SAG, there are approximately 450 SAG members residing in Austin and San Antonio. Frankly that number seems a bit high to me, but that&#8217;s the number I&#8217;ve been given so I&#8217;ll use it.  I tried to poll area agents to get an idea of how many SAG and SAG eligible actors they represent.  That effort wasn&#8217;t very successful, I&#8217;m afraid.  </p>
<p>Therefore, I&#8217;m not sure how many &#8216;SAG Eligible&#8217; actors reside in the Austin/San Antonio area.  I do know that a quick survey of just one Austin agent&#8217;s web site shows that particular agent represents almost 150 actors who identify themselves as being &#8216;SAG Eligible&#8217;.  That&#8217;s one third of the reported Central Texas SAG membership and that&#8217;s only one agent&#8217;s talent roster.</p>
<p>The decision to join SAG in a right-to-work state, particularly a state where one is never forced to join the guild regardless of the amount of work performed, is certainly not an easy one.  So I guess it&#8217;s not surprising to see actors who ostensibly qualify for SAG membership tout themselves as being &#8216;SAG Eligible&#8217;.  </p>
<p>It&#8217;s a way to &#8216;rub up against&#8217; SAG membership without making the commitment&#8230;financial or otherwise.  </p>
<p>It&#8217;s not that difficult to understand the mindset of actors who can legally work both union and non-union productions.  Some of the rationale often heard include:</p>
<ul><em><strong>There isn&#8217;t enough SAG and AFTRA work in this market to make a decent living.</strong></em></ul>
<p>For most regional actors this is unfortunately true. For most actors in any market, making a middle class income is very difficult. But, I suspect there will always be a lack of SAG and AFTRA work in our market as long as there is a ready supply of talented, experienced, SAG eligible actors who remain non-union so they won&#8217;t lose out on any possible work. Which comes first, more SAG actors or more SAG work?</p>
<ul><em><strong>Why cut out a significant portion of the possible work, even low paying work, by joining SAG and taking myself out of the non-union work pool?</strong></em></ul>
<p>This line of thought makes sense for the beginning actor who wants a professional career or for a hobbyist who has no professional aspirations.  </p>
<p>It takes time to develop into a professional caliber actor. It takes experience and practice. </p>
<p>Joining SAG too soon can be a mistake for the young or new actor of any age. That&#8217;s a great benefit to working in a right-to-work state. The actor is not forced to join the guild before they are really ready to compete as a professional actor. </p>
<p>That said, declining to join when your resume is replete with professional credits is another matter.  </p>
<ul><em><strong>I live in a right-to-work state. The law allows me to work on SAG productions and get SAG wages and working conditions without joining SAG.  I can get SAG pension and health benefits without joining SAG, too. If it&#8217;s legal to do that, why would I pay money for initiation fees and dues to a union? That sounds dumb to me.</strong></em></ul>
<p>Personal and professional ethics do exist&#8230;even in the movie biz.  Sometimes doing the &#8216;right thing&#8217; means taking action that some people will say is &#8216;dumb&#8217;.   Is it right to take benefits secured by SAG actors&#8217; collective bargaining agreements, fueled by their initiation fees and dues payments and never give anything back to the organization of fellow actors that secured those benefits for you? </p>
<ul><em><strong>Even if I join SAG I can still work non-union because of right-to-work laws.</strong></em>.</ul>
<p>That&#8217;s not correct.  If you join SAG, you are agreeing to adhere to Rule 1 which states that SAG members will not work for non-signatory producers.</p>
<ul><em><strong>I want to join SAG some day. But right now it&#8217;s too expensive. I&#8217;ll join before I go to L.A.</strong></em></ul>
<p>Wow. Thanks for your support for the local acting community. Particularly the SAG actors who live and work here. I&#8217;ve heard this line a hundred times. I guess it&#8217;s okay to take all you can get while you&#8217;re here, but when it comes time to move to &#8216;the big time&#8217; then you&#8217;ll suck it up and pay the freight.</p>
<p>How do you decide when you are a professional or when you&#8217;re professional enough to take the SAG plunge:</p>
<p>Here are some questions to ponder:</p>
<ul><strong>Do you spend a significant amount of your time working to become a better actor?</strong></ul>
<p>You&#8217;re on the right track.</p>
<ul> <strong>Does your agent regularly call you for auditions or is an audition a &#8216;once in a great long while&#8217;, out of the blue, SURPRISE!!! kind of thing?</strong></ul>
<p>If your agent hasn&#8217;t called you in weeks or months, and you haven&#8217;t called the agent either&#8230;you&#8217;re probably not too serious about an acting career. You probably don&#8217;t belong in SAG.</p>
<ul> <strong>Have you canceled travel plans, celebrations or surgery rather than miss an audition?</strong></ul>
<p>Okay. You are serious about this acting thing. SAG should be in your future.</p>
<ul><strong>Have you ever answered &#8220;NEW HEADSHOTS&#8221; when asked what you want for your birthday?</strong></ul>
<p>If you haven&#8217;t, please take the words &#8216;SAG Eligible&#8217; off your resume.</p>
<ul>
 <strong> Do you consider &#8216;a video copy of the final project&#8217; to be adequate payment for your contribution to a film or video project?</strong></ul>
<p>Nothing wrong with this. Especially if you&#8217;re trying to gain experience and looking for tape or film for a demo reel. Just understand that most projects that advertise this as your payment never get finished and you never get the promised footage.  If these are the type projects you&#8217;re pursuing, you&#8217;re probably not ready for SAG membership.</p>
<ul> <strong>Are all or most of your credits in amateur productions, university or commercial film school productions where no one is paid? </strong></ul>
<p>You&#8217;re doing what you should be doing to gain experience. Keep working and look forward to the day you become a professional, SAG actor.</p>
<ul><strong>How many credits for paid work does it take before an actor should consider him/herself a professional?</strong> </ul>
<p>I don&#8217;t know the answer.</p>
<ul>
<p><strong>How many credits go on the resume before the term &#8216;SAG Eligible&#8217; appears under the actor&#8217;s name?</strong></ul>
<p>I suspect that happens after the very first job in a SAG signatory production.</p>
<p>Whatever the number of credits, mindsets or other criteria an actor employs, there comes a time when an actor who is regularly competing for paying jobs will surely identify him/herself as a professional. And when casting directors, agents and other industry professionals will do likewise. Maybe that&#8217;s the time to consider changing that label at the top of the resume from SAG eligible to SAG member.</p>
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