SAG, AFTRA CALL ON IMDB TO STOP PUBLISHING AGES

By in News
on Saturday, October 29th, 2011

A couple of weeks ago on this blog Randy Astle wrote about an unnamed Texas actress’s lawsuit against IMDb for printing her age on her professional iMDB Pro profile. Many scoffed at the suit, wondering how an actress could sue an industry database for publishing accurate information.

While they haven’t gone so far as to join the suit, Hollywood’s two unions representing actors have made a public statement supporting its aim.

Reports The Guardian:

In a joint statement, the Screen Actors’ Guild, Sag, and Aftra, the American Federation of Television and Radio Artists, said IMDb had a “moral and legal obligation not to facilitate age discrimination in employment”.

The statement continued: “An actor’s actual age is irrelevant to casting. What matters is the age range that an actor can portray. For the entire history of professional acting, this has been true but that reality has been upended by the development of IMDb as an industry standard used in casting offices across America.”

The guild’s participation brings an interesting angle to this story. Producers aren’t supposed to ask actors their age when considering them for a part. But, as the statement continues, “Entertainment industry employers who would never directly ask a potential employee’s age routinely access that information through IMDb and its professional subscription site IMDbPro.”

No response yet from IMDb or its corporate parent, Amazon.

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  • Randy

    That’s a really interesting development in the case. I can understand why the unions would say IMDb has a moral obligation to not publish ages, but does anyone know their reasoning in saying they have a legal obligation? On what grounds or under what law?

    I know as a viewer I’ve often checked IMDb for people’s ages; I’m just curious how old they are. It seems like a useful service, but it’s also obvious how it could upset those worried about discrimination. What’s an agreeable solution?

    • Anonymous

      It goes back to the same reason why any employer isn’t allowed to ask you your age during the interview side of things. All they can ask is if you fit the legal criteria for the job. 

      The trouble here is that IMDB is often the ‘background check’ for lesser known actors and the age is right there in the employers face. and once someone knows your age it is harder to look at you and see the first impression which could be much younger

      When an actor gets to the level of a Christian Bale, a Meryl Streep etc age is less of an issue because the talent is a known commodity. 

      Not to mention that birth dates and legal names (something else they love to post on IMDB and refuse to take down) are hot commodities in this age of id theft. 

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