‘Matrix’ Co-Creator & Hundreds Of Hollywood A-Listers Want To Stop AI Obliterating Copyright Laws; Lilly Wachowski, Paul McCartney, Ava DuVernay, Cate Blanchett, Alfonso Cuaron + More Write White House

Former Beatle Paul McCartney, Ava DuVernay, Taika Waititi, Cate Blanchett, Natasha Lyonne, Alfonso Cuaron, Matrix co-creator Lilly Wachowski, Ben Stiller, Carrie Coon, and Lily Gladstone are among over 400 entertainment industry power players who want the Trump administration to hold the line when it comes to Artificial Intelligence and tech companies’ desire to weaken copyright rules.

 “We firmly believe that America’s global AI leadership must not come at the expense of our essential creative industries,” the A-listers, rock god, Oscar winners and nominees, blockbuster stars and more told the White House Office of Science and Technology in an open letter that started circulating this weekend.

“America’s arts and entertainment industry supports over 2.3M American jobs with over $229Bn in wages annually, while providing the foundation for American democratic influence and soft power abroad,” the 12-page letter adds. “But AI companies are asking to undermine this economic and cultural strength by weakening copyright protections for the films, television series, artworks, writing, music, and voices used to train AI models at the core of multi-billion dollar corporate valuations.” 

As well as Beatle Paul, Poker Face’s Lyonne, Wachowski, the Origin director, Oscar winner Blanchett, and others, Oscar nominee Cynthia Erivo, Mark Ruffalom Chris Rock, Ben Stiller, Judd Apatow, and Guillermo del Toro all signed the warning letter. Along with John Leguizamo, Slave Play‘s Jeremy O. Harris, Rosario Dawsom, Ron Howard, Paul Giamatti, long time anti-AI advocate Justine Bateman, Bette Midler, Ayo Edebiri, Dan Levy,  Alfonso Cuaron, Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Paul Simon, Damon Lindelof, and Aubrey Plaza were also among the hundreds of other signatories to the letter.

See the full letter below, as well as the list of 443 industry individuals who have signed it.

The Hollywood heavy correspondence comes as techlords OpenAI and Google jumped last week to Donald Trump’s call for an AI Action Plan by filling briefs outlining a wish list they said would ensure American dominance in artificial intelligence.

Sounds good in principal, but both companies’ wish lists included sections on copyright and IP workarounds they wanted given the copious amounts of data needed to train large language models. As more than a few AI companies have learned, compensating rights holders, as well as meeting them in court, is expensive and complicated — and many in Silicon Valley and elsewhere are hoping Trump will let them dodge the efforts and costs.

Having come out of a 2023 strike that had AI protections at its core and facing massive looming shifts in the creation of culture and American soft power, the letter now made public respectfully disagrees with where OpenAI and Google are coming from.

“For nearly 250 years, U.S. copyright law has balanced creator’s rights with the needs of the public, creating the world’s most vibrant creative economy,” the missive says. “We recommend that the American AI Action Plan uphold existing copyright frameworks to maintain the strength of America’s creative and knowledge industries, as well as American cultural influence abroad.”

Amid a wave of legal action over the past several years from the light speed fast evolving technology The New York Times sued OpenAI for copyright infringement. Other publications have worked out deals for compensation piecemeal, but no comprehensive methodology has emerged in what is becoming a digital Wild West. With no small degree of self interest involved, OpenAI’s Altman last year said there needs to be “a new deal standard, protocol for how creators are going to get rewarded. Copyright law and fair use need to keep applying. But I think there are additional things we are exploring … We need to find new economic models where creators will have new revenue streams.” 

(Photo by Artur Widak/NurPhoto via Getty Images)

Creators like the ones who signed this new letter would argue the streams are already there in copyright law. They contend OpenAI and Google “are arguing for a special government exemption so they can freely exploit America’s creative and knowledge industries, despite their substantial revenues and available funds. “

Birthed in one of the many Executive Orders inked since the 45th POTUS returned to office on January 20, Trump’s Action Plan aims “to sustain and enhance America’s global AI dominance.” In that, it was open to comments on the Federal Register website through March 15, a deadline which the Hollywood letter met with a minute to spare this weekend. The organizers plan to submit more signatures in the coming days.

Like the signatories of the letter this week, OpenAI and Google have presented the AI race in urgent geopolitical terms. However, unlike Hollywood, they are laying the emphasis on very different metrics.

“As America’s world-leading AI sector approaches artificial general intelligence (AGI), with a Chinese Communist Party (CCP) determined to overtake us by 2030, the Trump Administration’s new AI Action Plan can ensure that American-led AI built on democratic principles continues to prevail over CCP-built autocratic, authoritarian AI,” OpenAI said. in their submission. “DeepSeek shows that our lead is not wide and is narrowing,” the Altman run and Elon Musk co-founded company said, referring to the popular and highly effective Chinese AI startup created on the cheap that took the market by storm in recent months. “The AI Action Plan should ensure that American-led AI prevails over CCP-led AI, securing both American leadership on AI and a brighter future for all Americans,” OpenAI went on to say, playing a powerplay tune they know Trump loves.

“The federal government can both secure Americans’ freedom to learn from AI, and avoid forfeiting our AI lead to the PRC by preserving American AI models’ ability to learn from copyrighted material.”

Altman’s OpenAI didn’t go into detail in its own offering on the AI Action Plan, but did say OpenAI’s models “are trained to not replicate works for consumption by the public.” It added: “Instead, they learn from the works and extract patterns, linguistic structures, and contextual insights. This means our AI model training aligns with the core objectives of copyright and the fair use doctrine, using existing works to create something wholly new and different without eroding the commercial value of those existing works.”

The language used by the tech companies in this pivotal moment in America’s AI future is in some ways is reminiscent of the 1990s. Back in the Clinton Era, legislators sought to protect a nascent Internet by shielding providers from legal liability for content on their platforms.

For Google, copyright is one of three key areas to address “to secure America’s position as an AI powerhouse and support a golden era of opportunity.” The Sundar Pichai-run tech giant went on to say: “Balanced copyright rules, such as fair use and text-and-data mining exceptions, have been critical to enabling AI systems to learn from prior knowledge and publicly available data, unlocking scientific and social advances. These exceptions allow for the use of copyrighted, publicly available material for AI training without significantly impacting rightsholders and avoiding highly unpredictable, imbalanced, and lengthy negotiations with data holders during model development or scientific experimentation.”

Here is the full AI guardrails letter and the list of Hollywood players have signed it so far:

 We, the members of America’s entertainment industry — representing an intersection of cinematographers, directors, producers, actors, writers, studios, production companies, musicians, composers, costume, sound & production designers, editors, gaffers, union and Academy Members, and other industrious, creative content professionals – submit this unified statement in response to the Administration’s request for input on the AI Action Plan. 

We firmly believe that America’s global AI leadership must not come at the expense of our essential creative industries. America’s arts and entertainment industry supports over 2.3M American jobs with over $229Bn in wages annually, while providing the foundation for American democratic influence and soft power abroad. But AI companies are asking to undermine this economic and cultural strength by weakening copyright protections for the films, television series, artworks, writing, music, and voices used to train AI models at the core of multi-billion dollar corporate valuations. 

Make no mistake: this issue goes well beyond the entertainment industry, as the right to train AI on all copyright-protected content impacts all of America’s knowledge industries. When tech and AI companies demand unfettered access to all data and information, they’re not just threatening movies, books, and music, but the work of all writers, publishers, photographers, scientists, 

architects, engineers, designers, doctors, software developers, and all other professionals who work with computers and generate intellectual property. These professions are the core of how we discover, learn, and share knowledge as a society and as a nation. This issue is not just about AI leadership or about economics and individual rights, but about America’s continued leadership in creating and owning valuable intellectual property in every field. 

It is clear that Google (valued at $2Tn) and OpenAI (valued at over $157Bn) are arguing for a special government exemption so they can freely exploit America’s creative and knowledge industries, despite their substantial revenues and available funds. There is no reason to weaken or eliminate the copyright protections that have helped America flourish. Not when AI companies can use our copyrighted material by simply doing what the law requires: negotiating appropriate licenses with copyright holders — just as every other industry does. Access to America’s creative catalog of films, writing, video content, and music is not a matter of national security. They do not require a government-mandated exemption from existing U.S. copyright law. 

America didn’t become a global cultural powerhouse by accident. Our success stems directly from our fundamental respect for IP and copyright that rewards creative risk-taking by talented and hardworking Americans from every state and territory. For nearly 250 years, U.S. copyright law has balanced creator’s rights with the needs of the public, creating the world’s most vibrant creative economy. We recommend that the American AI Action Plan uphold existing copyright frameworks to maintain the strength of America’s creative and knowledge industries, as well as American cultural influence abroad. 

This statement is endorsed by the following individuals and groups—representing America’s commitment to both creative excellence and responsible AI innovation

1. Guillermo del Toro, DGA, WGA, SAG, PGA 

2. Paul & Nancy McCartney 

3. Ángel Manuel Soto, DGA/WGA, Asteria Studios, La Que te Hablé, LLC. 

4. Cord Jefferson, WGA, DGA 

5. Bette Midler, SAG/AFTRA, Artist, Musician 

6. John Leguizamo, SAG/DGA/WGA 

7. Damon Lindelof, DGA/WGA/PGA 

8. Aubrey Plaza, SAG/WGA/PGA, Evil Hag 

9. c. Craig Patterson, DGA 

10. Janicza Bravo, DGA/WGA/SAG 

11. Alfonso Cuaron, DGA, WGA 

12. Christine Ng, ICG 600 

13. Marisa Tomei, SAG/AFTRA/PGA 

14. Reed Morano, DGA, ICG 600 

15. Maggie Gyllenhaal, DGA, SAG/AFTRA, WGA 

16. Ava DuVernay, DGA, WGA, PGA 

17. Cate Blanchett, SAG/AFTRA, PGA 

18. Phil Lord, DGA, WGA, SAG, PGA 

19. Chris Miller, DGA, WGA, SAG, PGA 

20. Carrie Coon, SAG/AFTRA 

21. Azazel Jacobs, DGA 

22. Paul Simon, Songwriter 

23. Rian Johnson, DGA/WGA 

24. Janelle Monáe, SAG/AFTRA, Songwriter/Actor 

25. Geraldine Viswanathan, SAG/AFTRA 

26. Ayo Edebiri, DGA, WGA, SAG/AFTRA 

27. Taika Waititi, DGA, WGA, SAG, PGA 

28. Rita Ora, SAG, Musician 

29. Pamela Adlon, DGA/WGA/SAG/AFTRA 

30. Craig Mazin, DGA/WGA/SAG/PGA 

31. Cynthia Erivo, SAG/AFTRA,EQUITY, Musician 

32. Chlöe Sevigny, SAG/AFTRA 

33. Bryn Mooser, PGA, Asteria Studios, XTR & Doc+ 

34. Ben Stiller, DGA, WGA, SAG/AFTRA, Red Hour 

35. Matthew Heineman, DGA/WGA 

36. Tim Heidecker DGA//SAG/AFTRA 

37. Nick Confalone, WGA/TAG/IATSE, Asteria Studios 

38. Sam Rockwell, SAG/AFTRA 

39. Naeem Talukdar, Moonvalley AI 

40. Mateusz Malinowski, PhD, Chief Scientific Officer, Moonvalley AI 

41. Sarah Charlton, Moonvalley AI 

42. Sam Mendes, DGA, WGA, PGA 

43. Michaela Coel, Filmmaker 

44. Natasha Lyonne, DGA, WGA, SAG/AFTRA, Animal Pictures, Asteria Studios 

45. Phoebe Waller-Bridge SAG, WGA 

46. Martin McDonagh, Filmmaker & Playwright 

47. Mark Ruffalo, SAG 

48. Lena Waithe, DGA, WGA, SAG, PGA 

49. Brit Marling WGA/DGA/SAG 

50. Chris Rock, DGA, WGA, SAG/AFTRA, PGA 

51. Sarah Schechter, Berlanti-Schechter Films 

52. Christine Vachon, PGA, Killer Films 

53. Judy Rhee, USA Local 829 

54. Joseph Gordon Levitt, WGA/DGA, SAG 

55. Benny Safdie, DGA, WGA, SAG 

56. Eric Day, PGA, Asteria Studios 

57. Chris Teague ICG 600, DGA 

58. Jaron Presant, ASC, ICG 600 

59. Paul Trillo, DGA, Asteria Studios 

60. D.J. Gugenheim, PGA, Partner Incognegro Productions 

61. Ellenor Argropoulos, Mermaid Toast 

62. Daniel Bonventre & Ian McLees, TalkBoys Studio 

63. Michael Govier, SAG/AFTRA/TAG/IATSE, Warner Bros, Asteria Studios 

64. Carolyn Strauss, PGA 

65. Anna Boden, DGA/WGA 

66. Tessa Thompson, SAG 

67. Alia Shawkat, DGA, WGA, SAG/AFTRA, Artist 

68. Nick Kroll DGA, WGA, SAG, PGA 

69. Tim Robbins, DGA, SAG/AFTRA, WGA 

70. Judd Apatow DGA, PGA, WGA 

71. Marielle Heller DGA, WGA, SAG AFTRA, EQUITY 

72. Sean Ono Lennon, Musician/Chimera Music 

73. Patton Oswalt, WGA, SAG 

74. Kim Gordon, SAG/AFTRA 

75. Stephanie Hsu, SAG/AFTRA 

76. Carrie Brownstein, DGA, WGA, SAG/AFTRA 

77. Fred Armisen, SAG, WGA, Songwriter 

78. Ted Chiang, Writer 

79. Clea DuVall, WGA, DGA, SAG/AFTRA 

80. Sian Heder, DGA/WGA/SAG 

81. Adam Scott, SAG/AFTRA, DGA 

82. Franklin Leonard, The Black List 

83. Gia Coppola, DGA 

84. Patricia Richardson SAGAFTRA, AEA, DGA 

85. Hari Nef, SAG/WGA 

86. Melanie Lynskey, SAG/AFTRA 

87. Kenneth Lonergan, DGA, WGA 

88. Liz Goldwyn, WGA, Author 

89. Mara Casey, SAG/AFTRA 

90. Larry Karaszewski, WGA, DGA 

91. Uzo Aduba, SAG/AFTRA, EQUITY 

92. Francesca Scorsese, SAG/AFTRA 

93. Trayce Gigi Field, CDG Local 892 

94. Holland Roden, SAG/ AFTRA 

95. Charlotte Kemp Muhl, Musician/Robotics/Fini Musican 

96. David Alan Grier, SAG/AFTRA/EQUITY/WGA 

97. Juliette Lewis, SAG/AFTRA 

98. Chelsea Handler, SAG/AFTRA, PGA, WGA 

99. José Morey, Eisenhower Fellow, Ad Astra Media 

100. Simon Rex, SAG/AFTRA 

101. Mimi Cave, DGA 

102. Jodie Turner-Smith, SAG/AFTRA 

103. Kenya Barris, DGA/WGA/PGA/SAG, Khalabo Ink Society 

104. Amandla Stenberg, SAG/AFTRA, Musician 

105. Nina Fialkow, BAFTA 

106. Diaz Jacobs, Flmmaker 

107. Joan Wasser, SAG/AFTRA, BMI, Songwriter 

108. Murray Hill, SAG/AFTRA 

109. Benjamin Michel, Asteria Studios 

110. Cara Delevingne, SAG/AFTRA 

111. Carly Mensch, WGA/PGA 

112. Dascha Polanco, SAG/AFTRA 

113. Johan Renck, DGA 

114. Ana Lily Amirpour, DGA, WGA 

115. Callie Khouri 

116. Aphra Williams, SAG/AFTRA, ACTRA 

117. Ryan Koo, Writer-Director, Founder No Film School 

118. Amy Seimetz, SAG/WGA/DGA 

119. D.V. DeVincentes, WGA/PGA 

120. Anna Christopher, WGA/TAG 

121. Shaz Bennett, DGA/WGA 

122. Alex Buono, DGA/WGA/IATSE 

123. Sean Smith, Freelance Writer, Songwriter 

124. Taylor Schilling, SAG 

125. Alex Winter, SAG/DGA/WGA 

126. Samira Wiley, SAG/AFTRA, Equity 

127. Wyatt Caine, WGA 

128. Derek Peterson, DGA 

129. Pablo Schreiber, SAG/AFTRA 

130. Dylan Guerra, WGA 

131. Sherry Cola, SAG/AFTRA 

132. Nick Antosca, WGA/DGA 

133. Sarah Adina Smith, DGA/WGA 

134. Stephen Gyllenhaal, DGA/WGA 

135. Jonah Feingold 

136. Fairuza Balk, SAG/AFTRA, Musician 

137. Callie Khouri DGA/WGA 

138. Eric Kissack, DGA/ACE 

139. Harper Simon, Songwriter 

140. Joshua Homme, SAG/AFTRA, Songwriter 

141. Kelsey Lu, SAG/AFTRA, Songwriter 

142. Julie Bush, WGA 

143. Susie Balaban, DGA 

144. Chase Pletts, Novelist, Screenwriter, VERSES AI 

145. Evan Ross, SAG/AFTRA, Songwriter 

146. Rowan Blanchard, SAG/AFTRA 

147. Michael Sucsy, DGA/WGA 

148. Peter Mosiman, IATSE Cinematographer 

149. Griffin Dunne, WGA, DGA, SAG 

150. Miles Skinner, Hypothesis Films 

151. Tara Miele DGA/WGA 

152. Evan Twohy, WGA 

153. Zak Williams, Hypothesis Films 

154. Amber Sealey, DGA, SAG/AFTRA 

155. Sam Fragoso, Talk Easy 

156. Christopher Fryant 

157. Karen O, SAG/AFTRA, Songwriter 

158. Nick Zinner, Musician 

159. Melissa Auf der Maur, Musician 

160. Stephen Root, SAG/AFTRA 

161. Romy Rosemont 

162. Norma Nongauza, SAG/AFTRA 

163. Eva Vives, DGA/WGA 

164. Lana Kim, PGA 

165. Alex Israel, Artist 

166. Ione Skye, SAG, Author 

167. Ben Lee, Musician 

168. Incognegro Productions 

169. Mark Subias, Arey Cove Media 

170. Elgin James, DGA/WGA/ASCAP 

171. Patti Harrison, SAG/AFTRA, WGA 

172. Daphne Lambrinou, Producer 

173. Abbi Jacobson, WGA, DGA, SAG/AFTRA 

174. Alex Somers, Composer 

175. Liz Flahive, WGA/DGA 

176. Anthony Ramos SAG/AFTRA, ASCAP 

177. Dita Von Teese, SAG/AFTRA 

178. Dee Rees, WGA/DGA/PGA 

179. Henry Bean, WGA 

180. Brian Savelson, WGA 

181. Karen Maine, DGA, WGA 

182. Zelda Williams DGA, WGA, SAG/AFTRA 

183. Mo Stark, SAG/AFTRA 

184. Colleen McGuinness, WGA 

185. David Cross, WGA, SAG AFTRA 

186. Amber Tamblyn, SAG AFTRA 

187. Noah Segan, SAG/AFTRA 

188. Lydia Dean Pilcher DGA/WGA/PGA 

189. Tamara Jenkins, WGA, DGA 

190. Adam Green, Musician / Artist 

191. Kareem Rahma, Creator 

192. Amy Aniobi, DGA/WGA/PGA 

193. Marcel Dagenais, IATSE Local 798 

194. Peter Sollett DGA/WGA 

195. Benjamin Lock, PGA, VES, BAFTA, ATAS 

196. Joey King SAG/AFTRA 

197. Michael Rubin SAG/AFTRA, ASCAP 

198. Sarah Egan IATSE Local 798 

199. Gregory Nussen, Critic, Deadline 

200. Jonathan Groff SAG/AFTRA 

201. Rayan Al Rubaish, IP Lawyer 

202. Ian McDonald WGA 

203. Amy Wang, WGA 

204. E.L. Katz, WGA/DGA 

205. JC MOLINA Local800 

206. James Ponsoldt WGA/DGA 

207. Rhys Thomas, DGA/WGA 

208. Andrew Wyatt SAG AFTRA AMPAS 

209. Josh Ruben 

210. Crystal Reed SAG/AFTRA 

211. Dylan Sprayberry SAG/AFTRA 

212. Elvira Gonzalez IATSE Local 798 

213. Chris Brewster DGA, SAG/AFTRA 

214. Andrew Crabtree, WGA 

215. Rosario Dawson SAG/AFTRA 

216. Annie Murphy SAG/AFTRA 

217. Kris Rey DGA 

218. Charles Ingram, DGA 

219. J. Smith-Cameron , SAG 

220. Greg Gallant WGA/TAG 

221. Oren Brimer DGA/WGA 

222. Alexandra Neil SAG/AFTRA 

223. Morgan Lynch SAG/AFTRA 

224. Laura Terruso, DGA/WGA 

225. Allison Briner Dardenne 2SAG/AFTRA, AEA 

226. Rob Yang, SAG/AFTRA 

227. Jennifer Phang, DGA3 

228. John Lee DGA/WGA/SAG/AFTRA 

229. Scott Nicholson SAG/AFTRA/AEA 

230. Doug Wright WGA/DGA/SAG/AFTRA 

231. Mel Mah SAG/AFTRA 

232. Inara George SAG/AFTRA 

233. Mara Palumbo IATSE Local 798 

234. Rita Baghdadi DGA 

235. Sonja O’Hara, SAG/AFTRA 

236. Chloe Fineman SAG/AFTRA 

237. Tommy Dorfman, WGA, SAG/AFTRA 

238. Vanessa Joy Smith IATSE Local 600 

239. Albert Hammond Jr., Musician 

240. Whitney Cummings, WGA, SAG, PGA 

241. Dagmara Dominczyk, SAG/AFTRA, AEA 

242. Mark Townend, WGA 

243. Waris Ahluwalia, SAG/AFTRA 

244. Angela Wildflower, SAG/AFTRA 

245. Jeremy Radin, SAG/AFTRA 

246. Jess Wolfe, musician 

247. Natalie Gold SAG/AFTRA 

248. Laura Prepon SAG,DGA 

249. Elizabeth Benjamin WGA 

250. Frances Fisher SAG-AFTRA,AEA 

251. David Zellner, DGA/WGA/SAG 

252. Jodi Long, SAG/AFTRA/AEA, AMPAS 

253. Dan Stevens, SAG/AFTRA 

254. Will Grahame, WGA, DGA 

255. Broti Gupta, WGA 

256. Joel Marsh Garland, SAG/AFTRA 

257. David Slack, WGA 

258. Kate Bond, SAG/AFTRA 

259. David Krumholtz SAG/AFTRA 

260. Davionte’ GaTa’ Ganter, SAG/AFTRA 

261. Smiley Stevens, Asteria Studios 

262. Numa Perrier, SAG, DGA, WGA 

263. Cynthy Wu, SAG-AFTRA 

264. A.V. Rockwell, by WGA/DGA 

265. Sophie Zucker, SAG/AFTRA/WGA 

266. Todd Downing, ACE 

267. Madeline Brewer, SAG/AFTRA 

268. Glenn Garland, ACE 

269. Genevieve Simpson, Moonvalley AI 

270. Alison Brie, DGA/WGA/SAG-AFTRA 

271. Christopher C. Rogers, WGA 

272. Tawny Sorensen, SAG/AFTRA 

273. Max Encke, Moonvalley AI 

274. Tori Scott, IATSE 161/476 

275. Sarah Clowes-Walker, Moonvalley AI 

276. Ben Marshall, WGA/SAG-AFTRA 

277. Minta Ann Carlson, Asteria Studios 

278. Becca GT, SAG/AFTRA 

279. Spike Einbinder, SAG/AFTRA 

280. Matthew Cooke 

281. Erik Passoja, SAG-AFTRA 

282. Michael Mohan, DGA/WGA 

283. Laura Chinn DGA/WGA/SAG 

284. Khristina Louise LaMonte SAG-AFTRA/IATSE 

285. Luc Doucedame 

286. Nelson Truong, Moonvalley AI 

287. Zoe Chao, SAG/AFTRA 

288. Sarah Ann Masse, SAG-AFTRA, AEA, Hi Survivors Hollywood® 

289. Mel Rodriguez, SAG/AFTRA 

290. Noelle Stehman, DGA 

291. Charmaine DeGrate, WGA 

292. Ryan Fleck, DGA/WGA 

293. Rachel Zegler, SAG/AFTRA, EQUITY 

294. Jovan Adepo, SAG/AFTRA 

295. Andrew Maher, Moonvalley AI 

296. Paul Scheer WGA/DGA/SAG 

297. Will Dinsmoor, SAG-AFTRA 

298. Michael Colton, WGA 

299. Chris Sheridan, WGA/SAG 

300. Jenna Lamia, WGA/SAG 

301. Rebecca Metz,SAG-AFTRA/AEA 

302. Anthony Marciona SAG-AFTRA/AEA 

303. Antonio Campos, WGA/DGA 

304. B Rigney Hubbard, ICG 600 

305. Daniel Pinchbeck, Author 

306. Jinkx Monsoon, SAG, AEA 

307. Thomas Ochoa, SAG-AFTRA 

308. Ron Ostrow, SAG-AFTRA, AEA, ATAS 

309. Jameela Jamil, SAG-AFTRA 

310. Jemima Kirke, SAG-AFTRA 

311. Gina Gershon, SAG/AFTRA 

312. Gino Vento SAG/AFTRA 

313. Ben Goldwasser, musician 

314. Jared Ian Goldman, DGA/ PGA, Mighty Engine 

315. Benjamin Kasulke, DGA/IATSE Local 600 

316. Lexie Kahanovitz, TAG 839 animation writer 

317. Ben Kutchins, ASC 

318. Lennon Parham, SAG/WGA/DGA 

319. Haley Bartels, WGA 

320. lLissy Trullie, Musician/Songwriter 

321. Byron Wu, WGA 

322. Justine Bateman, WGA/DGA/SAG 

323. Kate Thulin, WGA/TAG/SAG-AFTRA 

324. Mermaid Toast 

325. Mitra Jouhari, WGA, SAG/AFTRA 

326. Greta Titelman, SAG/AFTRA 

327. JR Bourne, SAG/AFTRA 

328. Martin Pensa, Editor (ACE, LOCAL 700) 

329. Jesse Peretz, DGA 

330. Crystal Moselle, DGA/WGA 

331. Josephine Decker, DGA/WGA 

332. Diedrich Bader 

333. Dulcy Rogers 

334. Christina Won, PGA 

335. Odessa A’zion (SAG) 

336. Robin Eisenberg, Artist 

337. Paula Killen, SAG/AFTRA, WGA, AEA 

338. Rose Kuo, ICG 600 

339. Larry Gross, WGA 

340. Brian Chamberlayne, WGA 

341. Joshua Z Weinstein, WGA 

342. Dwayne Johnson-Cochran 

343. Mark Webber, SAG/AFTRA 

344. Nia Vardalos, SAG, WGA, DGA 

345. Matthew Modine SAG-AFTRA 

346. Jordan Firstman, SAG/AFTRA, WGA, DGA 

347. Jack Quaid, SAG-AFTRA 

348. Stephanie Meurer, DGA 

349. Craig Bolotin, WGA, DGA 

350. Max Ferguson, Animal Pictures 

351. Ariana DeBose SAG-AFTRA, AEA 

352. Mo Zelof, SAG-AFTRA 

353. Peggy Lane ORourke, SAG-AFTRA, AEA, ATAS 

354. Leslie Stevens, SAG-AFTRA, AEA, AGMA 

355. Lauren Campedelli, SAG-AFTRA, AEA 

356. Martin Starr ,SAG-AFTRA, WGA 

357. Chase Sui Wonders, SAG-AFTRA 

358. Nora Garrett, WGA, SAG-AFTRA 

359. Michelle Buteau, WGA, SAG/AFTRA 

360. Becky Chin, DGA 

361. Peter Beck, ADG 800 IMA, Storyboard Artist 

362. David Lowery, DGA, WGA, IATSE 

363. Heather Alexander, SAG-AFTRA 

364. Max Barbakow, DGA/WGA 

365. Ka-Ling Cheung, SAG-AFTRA 

366. John Thomas, Moonvalley AI 

367. Whitmer Thomas, SAG 

368. Flora Birnbaum, WGA 

369. Aminatou Sow, WGA 

370. Naomi Foner, WGA 

371. Brett Goldstein, WGA, SAG-AFTRA 

372. Lizzy Goodman, WGA 

373. David Shayne, TAG (IATSE) 

374. Lewis Pullman, SAG-AFTRA 

375. Santi White, SAG-AFTRA 

376. Robert Sweeting, Creative Destruction Films 

377. Bruce Feirstein WGA 

378. Karen A. Brown SAG-AFTRA LA GAPP Committee 

379. Lily Gladstone, SAG-AFTRA 

380. Mimi Kennedy, SAG-AFTRA 

381. Jeremy O. Harris WGA, SAG-AFTRA 

382. Paul Giamatti SAG-AFTRA 

383. Karen Murphy ADG 

384. Erica Chidi 

385. Justin Carter 

386. Mirirai Paída Moyo (née S’thole): SAG-AFTRA, AEA 

387. Hussein Dembei Sow, AI Artist 

388. Jen Euston, NY Local 817, Casting Director 

389. Olivia Wilde, WGA, DGA, SAG, PGA 

390. Akilah Hughes, SAG-AFTRA, WGA 

391. Suzy Nakamura, SAG-AFTRA, AEA 

392. Freddy Rodriguez, SAG-AFTRA 

393. Fernando Rodríguez Morales, DYAD 

394. Brian Epps, DYAD 

395. Tom Scharpling, WGA, SAG-AFTRA, DGA 

396. Nathan Dean, SAG-AFTRA 

397. Aaron Moorhead, DGA 

398. Thomas Benski, PGA, Lumina 

399. Anaïs Mitchell, songwriter 

400. Robert Harlow IATSE LOCAL 52 

401. Patrick Wilson, AEA, SAG-AFTRA, DGA 

402. Katie Robbins, WGA 

403. Ryan McGinley, Photographer, Artist 

404. Seith Mann, DGA, WGA 

405. Sarah Pillsbury, Producer 

406. Cory Burris, Moonvalley AI 

407. Yizhe Zhu, PhD, Moonvalley AI 

408. Cecilia Samartin, Author. 

409. Gillian Robespierre, WGA, DGA 

410. Denise Cormier, SAG-AFTRA, AEA 

411. Lilly Wachowski, WGA, DGA 

412. Sam Stefanak, WGA 

413. Ron Howard SAG, WGA, SAG 

414. Ilana Glazer, DGA, WGA, SAG AFTRA, EQUITY 

415. Suzi Yoonessi, DGA 

416. Ry Russo Young, WGA, DGA 

417. Lisa Rubisch DGA 

418. Leslye Headland, DGA, WGA 

419. Mark Verheiden WGA 

420. Eric Heisserer, WGA 

421. Jeff Davis, WGA, DGA 

422. Sarah Sutherland, WGA 

423. Maude Apatow 

424. Carolina Saavedra 

425. Mary McCormack 

426. James Lees, DGA 4 

427. Willow Smith 

428. Lauren Wolkstein, DGA 

429. Jada Pinkett Smith, SAG-AFTRA, DGA, WGA, PGA 

430. Georgia Lee, WGA 

431. Eric Heisserer, WGA 

432. Dan Levy, WGA, DGA, SAG/AFTRA 

433. Genna Moroni 

434. Matt Spicer 

435. Colin Trevorrow WGA/DGA 

436. David Anderson AI 

437. Fisher Stevens SAG/AFTRA,DGA,AEA 

438. Daniel Scheinert DGA, WGA, SAG/AFTRA 

439. Heather-Ashley Boyer SAG-AFTRA 

440. Les Claypool, Bass Player 

441. Will McCormack WGA, SAG/AFTRA, TAG/IATSE, Warner Bros, Asteria Studios 

442. Brendan Bradley SAG-AFTRA/AEA 

443. LeQuan Antonio Bennett SAG-AFTRA 

Fuente