Up First from NPR - Biden Meets Zelenskyy, June Inflation, SAG-AFTRA Deadline Expires
Episode Date: July 12, 2023President Joe Biden meets his Ukrainian counterpart. New inflation numbers are set to show easing inflation. And major Hollywood studios' contract with the actors' union is set to expire.Want more com...prehensive analysis of the most important news of the day, plus a little fun? Subscribe to the Up First newsletter.Up First is produced by Nina Kravinsky, Shelby Hawkins and Kaity Kline. Our editors are Olivia Hampton, Rafael Nam, Michael Sullivan, Denice Rios and Alice Woelfle. Our technical director is Zac Coleman with engineering support from Arthur Laurent.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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President Joe Biden meets Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelensky at the NATO summit after the alliance said Ukraine can join eventually.
Slava Ukrainiya!
When or how might that happen?
I'm Michelle Martin, that's A. Martinez, and this is Up First from NPR News.
After a long stretch of seeing prices rise, our wallets may finally be getting a break.
We are not yet at the promised land where the Federal Reserve could say mission accomplished.
Inflation seems to be easing. So what about those interest rates?
And tonight, major Hollywood studios face a deadline before their contract with the Actors Union expires.
We're ready to go on strike, but we don't know if it is going to come to that.
Will the actors join the screenwriters and go on strike?
Stay with us.
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President Biden and the leaders of 30 other NATO countries are wrapping up their annual summit in Lithuania today. Biden will meet with Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelensky a day after NATO
agreed that Ukraine would be allowed to join the Transatlantic Military Alliance eventually,
but the current members didn't say when or exactly how. NPR's Elnor Beersley joins us now from the
Summit Filing Center in Lithuania's capital, Vilnius. Elnor, Ukraine will likely dominate
the day. Take us through what got us here. Yeah, absolutely. You know, yesterday NATO put out a communique saying Ukraine's future is in the alliance.
And Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg said NATO would be issuing an invitation for Ukraine to join when allies agree and the conditions are met.
And it's clearly not going to happen while this war is raging.
Ukraine wants a timeline and assurances now. It says it's fighting a brutal Russian attack
on its people and land. And Ukrainians say Russian President Vladimir Putin can just keep the war
going and use it as a kind of veto for Ukraine getting into NATO. Analysts say it's actually
the U.S. exercising the most caution. President Biden has made it clear he doesn't want to get
into a direct conflict with Russia. Of course, the allies are pledging assistance to keep Ukraine
fighting as long as it takes. Biden and the G7 leaders will outline a long-term commitment
that will help Ukraine defend itself and deter future attacks. They say this will send a strong
message to Russia that time is not on its side. You mentioned Ukraine wants a timeline and
insurances right now. How has President Zelensky reacted? Well, he arrived yesterday here with his wife and they were given a hero's welcome by tens of
thousands of people in a park in downtown Vilnius as leaders met at the summit site
outside the city. Let's hear what that sounded like. Thanks, Lithuania. Thank you very much.
So yeah, you hear how he thanked Lithuania for its courageous support.
But he tweeted before arriving that NATO's failure to set up a timeline was absurd.
Zelensky has always said that Ukraine doesn't have time.
So he's clearly piqued. He wants something more concrete.
Nothing replaces NATO membership with Article 5.
An attack on one is an attack on all, meaning your allies will fight alongside you.
Still, Zelensky has also said that he's grateful for NATO's support during this war.
He's meeting with Biden today. We'll see what they say.
And when you think about it, Lithuania used to be a Soviet republic. So what's the mood like there as people watch Russia wage a war on Ukraine, which also was a former Soviet republic?
Well, it just feels so close.
This is nothing like the summit in Madrid
where it was held last summer.
Lithuania is one of the three Baltic nations
that were occupied for 50 years by the Soviet Union,
and the idea of NATO's collective defense
is not some esoteric concept.
It's about real protection from what they view
as a clear and present danger, Russia.
And Baltic leaders are much more gung-ho
about Ukraine getting into NATO
very soon. Let's listen to Estonia's Prime Minister Kaya Kallis. Ukraine is using the equipment that
the Allies are giving and the ammunition, so it is already taking those boxes. So what more can we do
in order to really go to that membership? So, you know, the people in the Baltic states, they really consider themselves on NATO's front line.
They see Ukraine as the only buffer between them and Russian forces.
And the quicker the allies can do everything to help Ukraine defeat Russia, the better.
NPR's Eleanor Beardsley in Lithuania.
Thanks for checking in.
Thank you. Americans have been wrestling with high inflation for more than a
couple of years now. Like many people, Alexandra Kloster is getting tired of prices for everything
going up, everything from rent to groceries and gas. It's just has been really difficult to try to raise a family and to get ahead. It feels like two step forwards and one step back.
Closer in her family, along with the rest of us, may finally be getting a breather.
When the government's cost of living report for June comes out this morning, it's expected to show an annual inflation rate of around 3%.
That would be the lowest since the spring of 2021.
NPR's Scott Horsley joins us now with a preview of today's report. Scott,
good news to hear that inflation is coming down because high prices have been really
tough to budget for. How are folks making do?
Well, people are definitely looking for ways to economize. We've heard from a lot of people who've
adjusted their grocery buying habits, maybe cut back on entertainment expenses.
A Closter told me she's turned to a secondhand store to find shoes and blue jeans for her two growing children.
It is summertime, though.
Many people are still eager for a getaway.
A Closter who works in a medical office and her husband, who's a full-time student, are spending this week at a cabin in northern Wisconsin.
She says it's nice to get out of their cramped apartment in Milwaukee,
but they are still watching their pennies. We're definitely not doing as much going to town or doing the tourist things. We're just trying to find free things to do, like walking, fishing.
I'm trying to keep my kids entertained, but also trying to keep our budget low.
Some good news.
Forecasters think we may see a break in some travel costs,
things like airfares and hotel rooms.
Even though there's a lot of demand for summer travel,
airline capacity has pretty much caught up now,
which is very different than where we were last summer.
Jet fuel prices are also down, so that's helping as well.
Where else are we seeing a break in inflation?
Gasoline prices have certainly come down a lot from this time last year. Of course,
last year, gasoline hit a record high in the wake of Russia's invasion of Ukraine.
Grocery prices have also eased up a little bit as supply chains have normalized. We've talked
in the past about egg prices, which took off and then came back to earth. We'll see what happens
with rent in today's numbers. We know that new leases being
signed now are generally showing smaller rent increases than has been the case in the past.
And over time, that filters into the government's cost of living statistics, but it doesn't happen
right away. All right, Scott. So I'm going to do a little if this, then that. If inflation is
cooling off, does that mean the Fed will stop raising rates? Not just yet. The Fed is still expected to raise interest rates
at least once more, maybe twice. Even at around 3%, inflation is still above the Fed's target,
which is 2%. And if you strip out food and energy prices, which bounce up and down a lot,
so-called core inflation is still up around 5%. So there's still a ways to go. But Mark Hamrick,
who is a senior economic
analyst at Bankrate, says inflation is moving in the right direction, especially compared to the
9 plus percent rate we saw this time last year. We are not yet at the promised land where the
Federal Reserve can say mission accomplished, that that 2% target has not only been met,
but has been sustained. But we are surely on the journey. Still, Fed policymakers think it
could take another couple of years to get that back down to 2%. So in other words, the last mile
could be slow going. Earlier this week, the Federal Reserve Bank of New York released a survey that
shows people are feeling a little better about inflation in the short run. But they also think
inflation is still going to be up around 3% five years from now. So inflation might be a less urgent problem than it used to be, but it's being seen as kind of a chronic irritant that was going to be with us for a while.
NPR's Scott Horsley. Thanks a lot, Scott.
You're welcome.
All right. Just before midnight tonight in Los Angeles, the contract between Hollywood Studios and the Film and TV Actors Union, SAG-AFTRA, will expire.
That means the actors could go on strike joining screenwriters who walked off the job in May.
NPR's Mandelit Del Barco has been reporting on Hollywood Labor News.
Mandelit, it seems like we were just here a couple of weeks ago.
Yeah, that's right.
The two sides agreed to an extension back then. And
now coming down to the wire, the union has agreed with the studios represented by the
Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers to call in federal mediators.
All right, federal mediators. So what have been the main sticking points of the negotiations?
Well, both sides have a media blackout, but we understand they're still very far apart on at least two key issues.
That is residuals and AI.
Actors want to get paid more residuals from the streaming platforms, especially if their movies or series are hits.
They want to tie their compensation to the number of views.
And there still may be disagreement over the use of artificial intelligence on work done by actors.
They want to control where their likenesses are used.
They don't want to be replaced by computer-generated images.
These are very similar issues to what the Writers Guild of America has been fighting over in their strike.
And, you know, I should note that many of us here at NPR are members of SAG-AFTRA,
but broadcast journalists have a very different contract than the Hollywood actors.
Monalik, you and I drive around L.A. all the time.
We see people all around the studios on strike.
So what's been the mood like in Los Angeles?
Because it's hard not to think about this story living here.
That's right.
You see the picket lines all over the place.
And there's a lot of nervousness and some excitement over how this could go. This could be the first time Hollywood actors and writers walk off the job together since 1960.
98% of SAG-AFTRA's members already voted to authorize a strike if their demands aren't met.
And a lot of big-named actors, including Meryl Streep and Fran Drescher, the president of the
union, signed a letter urging negotiators not
to cave into the studios. You know, I was outside Amazon Studios yesterday and I found Jamila Webb.
She's an actor you may have seen on Family Reunion on Netflix or Reboot on Hulu. Well,
like a lot of actors, she's been picketing in solidarity with the writers.
We're ready to go on strike, but we don't know if it is going to
come to that. I know sometimes Hollywood and entertainment can feel like we're in our own
bubble, but this is an opportunity to really get the message out to people who are like, hey,
are my shows coming on in the fall? No. And this is why. Ultimately, the goal is right to get a
great contract. That's what we want. And if it comes to that, me and my friends,
we're ready. We're ready. Webb says she's prepping to be a strike captain, but already the writer's
strike has closed down almost all production. Shows and films are delayed, so the union actors
haven't been working anyway. And the writers say they're still waiting for the studios to return
to their negotiations, too. So, okay, if they do strike, what happens first? Well, we might
see a lot of movie and TV stars on the picket lines, but union actors won't be able to promote
their shows or movies that they're in. The Emmy Award nominations are coming out today and the
actors won't be able to do press for that. They won't be able to show up at next week's Comic-Con
to promote their projects. They won't be interviewed or photographed on the red carpet.
There are reports that SAG-AFTRA met with 140 Hollywood publicists
this week to advise them about what the actors
will and won't be allowed to do.
These folks are reportedly very nervous
about the possible strike. Panicked is
the word I've seen. The whole
Hollywood machine is really on pins and needles
today. NPR's Manali Talabarco.
Thanks a lot.
Thank you.
And that's Up First for Wednesday, July 12th. I'm Amy Martinez.
And I'm Michelle Martin.
Up First is produced by Nina Kravinsky, Shelby Hawkins, and Katie Klein.
Our editors are Olivia Hampton and Alice Wolfley.
Our technical director is Zach Coleman with engineering support from Arthur Laurent.
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