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Film Industry

Actors Win AI Deal – But Your Face Is Still Training the Machine

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SAG-AFTRA’s new rules on digital replicas are being framed as a major win for performers. But while actors gained stronger rights around consent and compensation, the bigger fight over AI training data is still far from settled.


May 20, 2026 · 3 min read

The headline win

In Hollywood, the latest SAG-AFTRA agreements are being described as “historic” because they finally force studios to be more explicit about how artificial intelligence can be used in connection with a performer’s work. Actors now have stronger protections around consentcompensation, and transparency when producers want to create a “digital replica” of their face, body, or voice.

That is not a small shift. For years, performers feared being scanned once and reused indefinitely, sometimes under vague contract language they had little power to negotiate. These new guardrails move AI out of the fine print and into the center of the conversation.

Where the loophole is

The problem is that most of these protections are built around the use of digital replicas, not the broader issue of training data. In other words, a contract may now be clearer about when a studio can create an AI version of you, while still saying much less about whether your performance can be analyzed, stored, and used to teach AI systems how to generate human-like acting in the future.

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That distinction matters. A performer can be protected from one obvious form of replacement while still contributing to the system that may eventually replace them. The AI may not legally “be” you without permission, but it can still learn from you.

Why performers are worried

What actors bring to the screen is not just a face or a voice. It is timingmicro-expressions, emotional instinct, and a set of creative choices developed over years of work. Those are exactly the kinds of patterns modern AI systems are designed to absorb when they are trained on large collections of audio and visual material.

That is why many performers see the current moment as both a win and a warning. Yes, the industry has finally acknowledged that digital cloning needs boundaries. But until contracts and laws deal directly with AI training data, the protections remain incomplete.

What happens next

The legal system is still catching up. Existing copyright rules were not built for a world where a machine can study style, likeness, and performance at scale without copying a single clip in a way that is easy to challenge. Some new laws are beginning to address deepfakespublicity rights, and consent-based standards, but the framework is still uneven.

For now, the burden remains on performers to read every AI clause carefully, question any language involving scans or reuse, and push for specific limits on how their work can be used beyond the immediate project. The contracts may have moved the line, but they have not ended the fight.

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The real issue is no longer just whether AI can copy you. It is whether it can study you long enough to build something that competes with you.

In that sense, this is the contradiction at the center of the AI era in entertainment: actors may have won important new protections, but their faces, voices, and performances are still helping train the machine.

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Film Industry

What Movies Are Really Saying About Racism in 2026

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Watch: How Get Out helps us see modern racism on and off screen.

Conversations about racism haven’t gone away—they’ve just gone quieter in headlines and louder in the stories we tell on screen.


In 2026, films about race are doing more than “raising awareness”; they’re showing how power, history, and everyday choices collide in ways that still shape people’s lives.

For filmmakers and audiences, the question isn’t just “Is this movie about racism?”
It’s “What kind of racism is this film exposing—and what does it want us to do with that knowledge?”


From Overt Hate To Everyday Systems

Older films often focused on obvious villains: the open bigot, the hate group, the slur shouted in public.
Today’s projects still acknowledge overt racism, but many go a layer deeper, looking at how institutions, policies, and “normal” behavior keep unequal systems in place even when nobody says the quiet part out loud.

This shift matters.


It helps viewers understand that racism isn’t only about extreme moments; it’s also about who gets believed, protected, resourced, hired, housed, or forgiven—and who doesn’t.


Films As History Lessons In Real Time

Some recent films work almost like living history classes.
They connect a specific story—a family, a teacher, a court case, a protest—to decades of policy and social attitudes that made that story possible.

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When these projects are done well, they do three things at once:
they honor individual experience, they situate that experience in a larger system, and they force the audience to ask, “What around me still looks like this today?”

That framing is what makes certain films feel “current” even if they’re set in the past.
They aren’t just saying “look what happened”; they’re saying “this is still happening, just with better branding.”


The New Racism On Screen: Code, Silence, And “Neutrality”

One of the most important shifts in modern stories about race is how they handle subtlety.
Instead of only showing explicit violence or slurs, more films are highlighting:

  • Coded language that sounds polite but dehumanizes whole groups.
  • Institutions that claim to be “neutral” while repeatedly producing unequal outcomes.
  • Characters who say they are “not racist” but never challenge racist decisions, policies, or jokes.

This matters for representation.
It helps audiences recognize that racism often hides inside HR policies, school funding formulas, algorithms, casting choices, news framing, and everyday “professionalism,” not just in obvious hate.


What This Means For Filmmakers

If you’re a filmmaker exploring racism in 2026, you’re carrying real responsibility.
Audiences are more media‑literate now; they’ve seen trauma porn, one‑note villains, and “very special episode” storytelling, and they’re asking for more honesty and depth.

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A few questions to check your work against:

  • Are you centering people who live with racism, or using their pain just to shock the audience?
  • Does your story connect individual prejudice to larger systems, or pretend everything would be fine if one bad person changed?
  • Are you leaving viewers with context and agency—showing both harm and possibilities for action—or only with despair?

When you get this balance right, your film can do more than win applause.
It can become a tool for classrooms, communities, organizers, and viewers who are trying to name what they already feel but can’t always explain.


Watching With Intent, Not Just Emotion

For viewers, the next step is to watch these films as mirrors and maps, not just as emotional rollercoasters.


Ask yourself: Who gets to be complex? Who gets to be safe? Whose perspective is treated as “normal,” and whose is treated as “other” or “exceptional”?

Movies alone won’t end racism, but they can sharpen our language, expand our empathy, and expose how power really moves.


In a time when many people insist “things are better now,” films that honestly show the gap between that claim and lived reality are not just entertainment—they’re evidence.


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Advice

How Indie Filmmakers Actually Make Money In 2026

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If you are making an indie film in 2026, the harsh truth is this: getting your movie finished and on a platform is no longer the hard part—getting paid is.
More films are being made than ever, distribution is technically easier, but revenue per title is thinner and attention is brutally fragmented.

The filmmakers who are still making real money are not the ones waiting on a miracle streaming deal. They are the ones treating their film like a business from day one and building multiple income streams around a clear audience.

1. They Pick A Profitable Film Type

By 2026, industry voices are clear: most indie films lose money not because they are bad, but because they are built in the wrong category.
The projects that consistently work fall into three lanes: contained genre films, niche‑audience films, and platform‑native projects.

  • Contained genre (usually horror/thriller) wins because budgets stay low, hooks are simple, and global genre audiences are always hunting for new titles.
  • Niche‑audience films aim at a specific community—faith‑based, diaspora, LGBTQ+, true crime, or professional/educational groups—and monetize depth, not mass appeal.
  • Platform‑native projects are designed for YouTube, TikTok or vertical drama platforms first, focusing on retention, recurring episodes, and community, then later spinning out into features or specials.

If your film does not clearly sit in one of these lanes (or intentionally combine them), your odds of recouping drop fast.

2. They Use Hybrid Distribution, Not Just “Pray For Netflix”

Experienced producers now treat hybrid distribution as the default, not the backup plan.
Rather than chasing one big check, they stack windows: festivals or event screenings, transactional VOD, ad‑supported platforms (AVOD/FAST), niche streamers, community screenings, and educational or territory sales.

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Commentary from 2026 emphasizes that many indie films now generate their first meaningful money from AVOD/FAST exposure and niche platform deals, not prestige SVOD buys.
Educational licenses, targeted theatrical runs, and community tours can also push a well‑positioned film into six‑figure revenue even on modest budgets.

The point: filmmakers making money in 2026 are not hoping for “one big sale.”
They design a revenue ladder—several smaller checks that add up over time.

3. They Build An Audience Before Picture Lock

The filmmakers who will thrive in 2026 are the ones who start audience‑building as soon as they start development.
Industry advice is blunt: if you do not have a few thousand people waiting for your trailer, your film is functionally invisible on day one.

Winning filmmakers treat their project like a startup:

  • They collect emails, DMs, and community members months before release.
  • They share behind‑the‑scenes content, concept tests, and character moments on social platforms to validate demand.
  • They line up partners—podcasts, newsletters, community leaders—who can help drive the first wave of views or ticket sales.

This audience then powers crowdfunding, launch‑day sales, merch, and even future projects.

4. They Think Like Producers, Not Just Directors

In 2026, investors and buyers are saying yes to filmmakers who show they understand the commercial side, not just the artistic one.
Thought leaders keep repeating the same idea: ideas don’t get funded, producers do.

That means:

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  • Clear budgets that match the realistic earning potential of the project.
  • A one‑page plan for who the film is for, how it will reach them, and which revenue streams are in play.
  • A willingness to scale down the dream if the numbers don’t add up—better a lean, recoupable film than a bloated “donation.”

If you want to make money as an indie filmmaker in 2026, start by asking two questions:
Which lane is my film in—and exactly how does it get paid.

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Entertainment

STREAMING PREMIERE · JUNE 13, 2026

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Laughter Meets Inspiration: Our Ladies Show Lands on The Roku Channel

A bold new sketch comedy series for women premieres June 13 across the U.S., U.K., and Canada — arriving on the back of a festival-winning run that has critics and audiences already paying attention.

It isn’t every day a brand-new comedy arrives already wearing a row of trophies. Our Ladies Show does. The seven-episode inspirational sketch comedy series — created, written by, and starring Christin Jezak — begins streaming on The Roku Channel on Friday, June 13, 2026, available free to viewers in the United States, United Kingdom, and Canada.

Produced in partnership with global media services leader Encompass Digital Media, the series sets out to do something rare in today’s streaming landscape: make women laugh out loud and leave them lifted. In a media moment crowded with noise and cynicism, Our Ladies Show is a deliberate counterweight — comedy with a conscience, built for women of every age and background.

A Show Built Around Real Life — and Real Laughs

Each of the seven episodes opens with a monologue from one of the cast members introducing the theme, then rolls into three or more sketches that hit the subject from every comedic angle. The series tackles the things women actually carry: holding grudges, comparison, beauty, patience, gift giving, the importance of community, and dealing with anxiety.

The comedy comes from a place of warmth rather than mockery — a “laugh at ourselves” spirit that runs through a gallery of unforgettable characters: a nosey neighbor, an overwhelmed mom, relentlessly optimistic flight attendants, beauty pageant winners past their prime, and a crew of unruly campers with a counselor who simply cannot hold it together.

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Then the show does something most sketch series don’t. In the final segment of every episode, the cast gathers in a living-room setting and invites the audience in — sharing real inspiration drawn from the theme, the sketches, and their own personal stories. It’s the moment the laughter turns into something that stays with you.

The Women Behind the Show

Our Ladies Show brings together three performers with serious range:

  • Christin Jezak — creator, writer, and star (Miracle at Manchester, Raising Hope, Jimmy Kimmel Live!)
  • Hillary Hawkins — (Primal, Nick Jr.’s Play Along, Gullah Gullah Island)
  • Sarah Hernandez — (Nefarious, Unplanned, House of Payne)

“In a world with so much division and depression, I hope women of all ages and backgrounds will watch this show, laugh, be reminded of how beautiful, unique, and loved they are, and remember how much we need each other.”— Christin Jezak, Creator & Star

Already a Festival Favorite

The series’ recurring long-form sketch, Neighborhood Watch, didn’t arrive quietly. Originally released as a web series and revamped for Our Ladies Show with new footage, sound, and music, it has been sweeping the festival circuit:

  • 🏆 Best Webseries — 2026 New Media Film Festival (Los Angeles)
  • 🏆 Best Web/TV Series — Paris Film Awards
  • 🏆 Best Web Series — Dallas Movie Awards
  • 🏅 Additional wins at the London Movie Awards, Florence Film Awards, and Hollywood Gold Awards
  • 🎬 Official Selection — 2026 Harvard Divinity School Film Fest
  • ⭐ Finalist — Houston Comedy Film Festival
  • 📣 Three nominations — 2025 Content Christian Media Conference, including Best Actress in a TV and Web Series nods for both Christin Jezak and Sarah Hernandez

Where and When to Watch

Our Ladies Show premieres Friday, June 13, 2026, streaming on The Roku Channel — the home of premium and free entertainment — in the U.S., U.K., and Canada. All seven episodes deliver the series’ signature blend of sharp sketch comedy and genuine encouragement.

Click Here To Get Tickets

Watch the trailer now on your platform of choice:

For more information, visit www.ourladiesshow.com and follow @ourladiesshow on Facebook, Instagram, and TikTok.


About Christin Jezak

Christin Jezak has worked for over 15 years in the entertainment industry. She created and stars in Our Ladies Show and the award-winning web series Neighborhood Watch. She produced the EWTN TV program For the Sake of the Gospel and the all-women web series Ladies Keepin’ It Real, played Dr. Sam in Miracle at Manchester (starring Dean Cain, Daniel Roebuck, and Eddie McClintock), and voices Agnes in the podcast Confessions of a Catholic Single. She held a lead role in a short film for NTT Data directed by Academy Award–winning cinematographer Janusz Kamiński, has co-starred on Raising Hope, and appeared in Jimmy Kimmel sketches and a Grubhub Super Bowl commercial.

About The Roku Channel

Roku pioneered streaming on TV and is the #1 TV streaming platform in the U.S., Canada, and Mexico by hours streamed (Hypothesis Group, Dec. 2025). The Roku Channel is the home of premium and free entertainment, alongside Roku’s Howdy and Frndly TV services. Roku is headquartered in San Jose, California.

About Encompass Digital Media

Encompass Digital Media is a global managed services company — technology-driven, software-defined, and people-powered. Trusted by world-leading broadcasters, networks, sports rights-holders, and OTT platforms, it processes over 25,000 hours of content daily, serves 850 channels to 84 countries, distributes over 243,000 live events annually, and reaches 400 million radio listeners weekly worldwide. Learn more at www.encompass.tv.

Media & Interview Requests: To interview creator Christin Jezak or the cast, contact Christin at cjezak@p2ptheatre.com.

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