Current:Home > ContactNow's your chance to solve a crossword puzzle with Natasha Lyonne -FinanceMind
Now's your chance to solve a crossword puzzle with Natasha Lyonne
SignalHub Quantitative Think Tank Center View
Date:2025-04-06 12:29:45
You know that moment when you've knocked out 12 of 73 clues for the New York Times crossword, you're starting to sweat, and you think to yourself, "Man, I really wish the Emmy-award-winning actress Natasha Lyonne of Orange is the New Black was here to help me power through?"
OK, so maybe it's not a scenario you've been dreaming about, but it could soon be your reality — that is if you have upwards of $2,100 to bid in a new online auction to support the ongoing writers and actors strike.
For the next eight days, those with big checkbooks can vie for a trove of celebrity experiences featuring some of Hollywood's most beloved names.
The auction is hosted through Ebay and organized by the Union Solidarity Coalition, which is pledging to financially support crew members who lost their health insurance as the film and television industry ground to a halt this summer.
That means you could pay for Lena Dunham to paint a mural in your home (leading bid at time of publication: $3,050), for Bob Odenkirk and David Cross to take you out to dinner ($2,624) or for Busy Philipps to be your buddy at a pottery class ($2,800).
John Lithgow will paint a watercolor portrait of your pup ($4,050) and Adam Scott will take it for a one-hour stroll ($2,025). The cast of Bob's Burgers will write and perform a song just for you ($3,050) and the cast of The Bear is shelling out a sartorial boost in the form of a signed blue apron ($1,525).
You can also buy Tom Waits' fedora ($1,525), Brit Marling's OA wolf hoodie ($4,000) or a Hawaiian shirt co-signed by Daniel Radcliffe and "Weird Al" Yankovich ($1,600).
There's also a handful of one-on-one virtual hangouts with names like Maggie Gyllenhaal, Sarah Silverman and Zooey Deschanel (actually, with the whole cast of New Girl), promising everything from career coaching to relationship advice — a form of screen time more intimate than catching your favorite shows' new episode, a ritual the public has been sorely missing.
The Writers Guild of America first called a strike in early May and was joined by the actors' guild, SAG-AFTRA, in July. (SAG-AFTRA also represents most of NPR's journalists, but under a separate contract.)
Both unions are fighting major entertainment studios for increased compensation, regulations for AI usage and terms for streaming. Negotiations are reportedly at a standstill.
The association that represents the studios publicly released the concessions they offered to writers in a press release on Aug. 22, which included a 13% increase in pay over three years and increases in some specific types of residual payments.
WGA described the offer as "neither nothing nor nearly enough" and full of "loopholes, limitations and omissions" that were "too numerous to single out."
SAG-AFTRA President Fran Drescher told NPR last week that the conversation couldn't move forward until the studio bosses put aside their financial greed and started acting with empathy.
veryGood! (8)
Related
- Highlights from Trump’s interview with Time magazine
- Sean Diddy Combs' Alleged Drug Mule Arrested at Airport Amid Home Raids
- Potential Changes to Alternate-Fuel Standards Could Hike Gas Prices in California. Critics See a ‘Regressive Tax’ on Low-Income Communities
- US economic growth for last quarter is revised up slightly to a healthy 3.4% annual rate
- Former longtime South Carolina congressman John Spratt dies at 82
- West Virginia bill adding work search to unemployment, freezing benefits made law without signature
- Who Are Abby and Brittany Hensel? Catch Up With the Conjoined Twins and Former Reality Stars
- Video shows 'Cop City' activists chain themselves to top of 250-foot crane at Atlanta site
- Head of the Federal Aviation Administration to resign, allowing Trump to pick his successor
- A timeline of the Francis Scott Key Bridge collapse
Ranking
- Sam Taylor
- Riley Strain Case: Family Orders Second Autopsy After Discovery
- Judge rejects officers’ bid to erase charges in the case of a man paralyzed after police van ride
- Ruby Franke’s Husband Kevin Reveals Alleged Rules He Had to Follow at Home
- $73.5M beach replenishment project starts in January at Jersey Shore
- This woman's take on why wives stop having sex with their husbands went viral. Is she right?
- Universities of Wisconsin president proposes 3.75% tuition increase
- Barges are bringing cranes to Baltimore to help remove bridge wreckage and open shipping route
Recommendation
'No Good Deed': Who's the killer in the Netflix comedy? And will there be a Season 2?
Winning ticket for massive Mega Millions jackpot sold at Neptune Township, New Jersey liquor store
In a first, shuttered nuclear plant set to resume energy production in Michigan
Subaru recalls nearly 119,000 vehicles over air bag problem
Questlove charts 50 years of SNL musical hits (and misses)
What caused the Dali to slam into Baltimore's Francis Scott Key Bridge? What we know about what led up to the collapse
Powerball winning numbers for March 27 drawing: Did anyone win the $865 million jackpot?
Score 60% off Lounge Underwear and Bras, $234 Worth of Clinique Makeup for $52, and More Deals