Current:Home > StocksNetflix employees are staging a walkout as a fired organizer speaks out -Pinnacle Profit Strategies
Netflix employees are staging a walkout as a fired organizer speaks out
View
Date:2025-04-14 13:45:50
The weekslong fight inside Netflix comes to a head Wednesday, when employees at the company are expected to walk out, demanding that the company better support its trans and nonbinary employees.
Netflix co-CEO Ted Sarandos didn't respond to the walkout directly in a recently published Wall Street Journal interview but said, "I'm firmly committed to continue to support artistic freedom for the creators who work with Netflix and increase representation behind the screen and on camera."
But ahead of Wednesday's walkout, a Netflix spokesperson issued a statement that says: "We value our trans colleagues and allies, and understand the deep hurt that's been caused. We respect the decision of any employee who chooses to walk out, and recognize we have much more work to do both within Netflix and in our content."
The incident that incited the employee action may have been the company's handling of Dave Chappelle's new special, The Closer, which contains some jokes at the expense of transgender people. But B. Pagels-Minor says the dispute runs deeper.
Pagels-Minor is the employee Netflix recently fired, alleging that they leaked "confidential, commercially sensitive information" outside the company. The company says that this data made its way into a Bloomberg article revealing data about various metrics and expenditures — details the notoriously tight-lipped company usually keeps under wraps.
"I collected the data, but I did not leak the data," says Pagels-Minor, who spoke to NPR. They said they shared the information internally among co-workers, but not to anyone outside the company, and added that when they were terminated, they weren't offered an opportunity to prove their case.
"It was just like, 'Hey, you're the person. You're gone,' " Pagels-Minor says.
In a statement, a Netflix spokesperson said that a discrepancy in Pagels-Minor's account had gone unexplained and that Pagels-Minor had wiped their electronic devices, "making any further investigation impossible."
Pagels-Minor — who started at Netflix as a senior data product manager for membership and finance engineering, before moving on to work at the company's game launch department — says there wasn't any investigation to begin with.
Pagels-Minor co-led the employee resource group for transgender and nonbinary employees, known as Trans*, and was part of one for Black employees, known as Black@. They said the walkout began as a proposal for a day when trans and nonbinary employees would take paid time off as a result of the exhaustion incurred from the Chappelle news cycle, with any other employees invited to join in support. But then Pagels-Minor saw how executives weren't engaging with questions about the controversy and started organizing a full-blown walkout, along with drafting a list of employee demands.
A rally in support of the walkout is also planned for Wednesday.
The list of demands, first reported by The Verge, includes hiring trans and nonbinary people to executive positions, creating a fund to support trans and nonbinary talent and adding disclaimers "that specifically flag transphobic language, misogyny, homophobia, hate speech, etc. as required." It doesn't ask for anything to be removed from the platform; nor does it mention Chappelle. Instead, it asks for the promotion of trans-affirming content alongside any content deemed anti-trans.
Such demands are part of a growing trend of white-collar workers in tech speaking up about the direction of their companies, says Alan Hyde, a professor of labor and employment law at Rutgers Law School and author of Working in Silicon Valley: Economic and Legal Analysis of a High-Velocity Labor Market.
"They want to have a say in the kinds of businesses their company does, the kind of workplace culture they have, who the clients are. So these have been important demands in motivating worker unrest over the years," Hyde says, pointing to Facebook, Apple and Google as recent examples.
The usual course of these actions, he explains, is that employees make a lot of noise, the company might change one or two details and then things simmer back down to normal. But in the context of this year, when there has been a tremendous surge of labor activity at firms such as John Deere, Kellogg and Kaiser Permanente, Hyde admits, "I'm not sure we've seen this movie before."
veryGood! (6738)
Related
- US appeals court rejects Nasdaq’s diversity rules for company boards
- Gaza aid pier dismantled again due to weather, reinstallation date unknown
- Utah fire captain dies in whitewater rafting accident at Dinosaur National Monument
- In Georgia, a space for line dancing welcomes LGBT dancers and straight allies
- 'No Good Deed': Who's the killer in the Netflix comedy? And will there be a Season 2?
- Ford, Volkswagen, Toyota, Porsche, Tesla among 1M vehicles recalled: Check car recalls here
- Hurricane Beryl maps show path and landfall forecast
- Early 2024 Amazon Prime Day Fitness Deals: Save Big on Leggings, Sports Bras, Water Bottles & More
- Former Danish minister for Greenland discusses Trump's push to acquire island
- Early 2024 Amazon Prime Day Fitness Deals: Save Big on Leggings, Sports Bras, Water Bottles & More
Ranking
- Elon Musk's skyrocketing net worth: He's the first person with over $400 billion
- Nevada verifies enough signatures to put constitutional amendment for abortion rights on ballot
- US Olympic track and field trials: Winners and losers from final 4 days
- Simone Biles, pop singer SZA appear in 2024 Paris Olympics spot for NBC
- Opinion: Gianni Infantino, FIFA sell souls and 2034 World Cup for Saudi Arabia's billions
- Sen. Bob Menendez’s defense begins with sister testifying about family tradition of storing cash
- Whitney Port Reveals How She Changed Her Eating Habits After Weight Concerns
- The Karen Read murder case ends in a mistrial. Prosecutors say they will try again
Recommendation
The city of Chicago is ordered to pay nearly $80M for a police chase that killed a 10
Hurricane Beryl takes aim at southeastern Caribbean as a powerful Category 3 storm
Internet-famous stingray Charlotte dies of rare reproductive disease, aquarium says
Former Northeastern University employee convicted of staging hoax explosion at Boston campus
Woman dies after Singapore family of 3 gets into accident in Taiwan
Why Fans Are Convinced Travis Kelce Surprised Taylor Swift at Her Dublin Show
Documenting the history of American Express as an in-house historian
California Communities Celebrate ‘Massive’ Victory as Oil Industry Drops Unpopular Referendum