This is why I love unions *Updated 8/22*

Ns1

No Lifer
Jun 17, 2001
55,420
1,600
126
You get to do shit like this when someone doesn't give you a job:

The Teamsters picketers were already mad. By the time Top Chef host Padma Lakshmi’s car pulled up to the Steel & Rye restaurant in the picturesque New England town of Milton just outside Boston, one of them ran up to her car and screamed, “We’re gonna bash that pretty face in, you fucking whore!”

“She was scared,” said a Top Chef crewmember who witnessed the incident, which occurred in June while filming an episode for the upcoming 12th season of Bravo’s popular skein, which premieres October 15. “He was screaming at her aggressively and violently.”

Teamsters Local 25Angry that the show had not signed a Teamsters contract and that the production hired local PA’s to drive cast and crew vehicles, the dozen or so picketers from Boston’s Teamsters Local 25 kept at it for hours, raining down racist, sexist and homophobic threats and slurs as staffers came to and left the set that summer day. Jenn Levy, Bravo’s SVP Production, wasn’t spared. Arriving at the restaurant in her black SUV, she soon found herself running a gauntlet of vitriol. “She got of her car in front of the location and quickly ran through the picket line,” a source said. “They were yelling, ‘You bitch! You slut! We’re gonna get you!’ It went on like that all day.”

John King, Milton’s Deputy Police Chief, said the Teamsters were “threatening, heckling and harassing.” The first officer on the scene, he said, had to call for back-up after the Teamsters “gave the officer trouble.” Reading from the police report, he said the Teamsters were “hostile, swearing, and refusing to let people come in and out. Officers repeatedly tried to de-escalate the situation.” When more police arrived, the Teamsters went to the show’s hospitality tent and “harassed the crew there.” When the officers went there, King said, “A group of them slashed the tires on 14 different cars owned by the crew.”

Numerous calls to Local 25 seeking comment on the incident were not returned, and one of the local’s organizers said he could not speak for the union. Many of those interviewed for this story called the incident the most uncomfortable and threatening labor dispute they’d ever witnessed. No one was injured and no one was arrested, but by the end of the day, more than a dozen of the show’s production vehicles had their tires slashed, and many had their antennae broken off. Several people familiar with the scene said that such bullying and thuggish behavior is what gives the Teamsters a bad name. Rowdy picketing is one thing; threatening women and slashing tires is another.

“As any employee of our show walked on or off set, the picketers verbally attacked us, calling the gays ‘fags,’ the blacks ‘******s’ and most of the women ‘sluts and whores,’ ” the crewmember said. “It got worse as the day went on. They chased us down the sidewalk when we had to run from one end of the location to the next in the middle of our busy work day. They threatened to kill us, beat us, and said that they would find us and force us out of the city. Needless to say, we were terrified. I’m a strong person, but being called names and yelled at and harassed for 12 hours while working, I started to crumble. I was scared and worried for my safety.

“Meanwhile, the executive producers, the representatives from the network, the production management, and the line producers stood by and did nothing,” the crewmember continued. “They never addressed the problem with the staff, or apologized for putting us in such a bad situation. They never called a meeting with us, or sent the employees an email acknowledging what a terrible situation they put us all in.” The local labor board told this member there was nothing they could do. So for two more weeks, “the picketers continued to subject us to threats of violence, sexual and racist harassment,” the crew member said. “I was scared to go to work. We had to face this nightmare daily until we wrapped the show.”

Another crewmember on the scene recalled a tense confrontation as protesters tried to push their way into the restaurant during filming. Several crew members and a security guard blocked them, and someone inside hurriedly locked the doors behind them. “It was pretty scary,” he said. “They slammed our guys with their chests, screaming at them face to face — ‘Go back to LA you fucking scabs! This isn’t your fucking town! You’re taking our jobs.’ ”

The restaurant’s owners did not return calls and emails. Magical Elves, the show’s production company, declined comment and attorney Jonathan Huh sent out a company-wide email on August 14 telling staff not to talk to Deadline. “One of our staff was recently approached by an outside reporter to comment on union activity that occurred on location at a recent Elves production,” he wrote. “If you are approached by a magazine, newspaper, blog, or other press, DO NOT make any comment, even if ‘off the record,’ without the express permission of your supervisor.”

The crewmember who witnessed the Teamsters threatening and harassing Lakshmi and Levy said Bravo and Magical Elves share blame for putting the cast and crew in a dangerous situation. “Their poor handling of this situation comes as no surprise and really is a symptom of the overall dysfunction of reality-TV production,” the crewmember said. “Reality TV is cost efficient and easier to produce than scripted or more cinematic television. As a result, everyone suffers. To save money, reality TV workers are hired for lower than standard rates because the production companies and networks refuse to embrace unions or hire union workers. Along with that comes a lack of experience, professionalism and integrity. Production executives and showrunners just don’t have the experience or wherewithal to make the right decisions on how to handle issues such as the unions harassing a crew.”

Bravo declined comment, as did Lakshmi. A person from the network with knowledge of the incident said that “the police were called, and given the situation, that was the best we could do.” This person said the network “was willing to make a compromise, but in the end, the Teamsters were not willing to agree.” The Teamsters’ goal, this person said, “could have been accomplished if they did not react that way.”

http://deadline.com/2014/08/padma-lakshmi-boston-teamsters-attack-top-chef-820137/

Update:
Mayor Martin Walsh was not happy. By the time he learned that Top Chef was filming in Boston with a non-union crew, he’d already wrapped a guest appearance on the Bravo show. “The mayor’s office said he felt ‘sideswiped,’” a source familiar with the situation said, “and because of that, they held up the show’s permits for a couple of days and threatened to not issue permits for the rest of the shoot.”

Mayor Martin WalshShot at a local museum, the episode showed the mayor chowing down and welcoming Top Chef to the city. A few days later, reps from Teamsters Local 25 called the Mayor’s Office of Tourism, Sports and Entertainment to find out where the show had received permits to shoot around the city so they could set up picket lines. Panicky phone calls ensued, and “that’s when the mayor realized it was a non-union production,” the source said, “and he was concerned that by appearing on the show, it made him look like he doesn’t support the local unions. So they held the show’s permits for a couple of days and it delayed their schedule.”

Withholding film permits because of a show’s union status is a Teamsters Local 25violation of Massachusetts state law. “That would be unlawful discrimination,” Boston labor attorney John Davis told Deadline. No one in the Boston film office or in the mayor’s office would comment on the record about the incident.

A few weeks later, Top Chef was filming in the Boston suburb of Milton when about a dozen members of Boston’s Teamsters Local 25 showed up to picket the show and began screaming racist, sexist and homophobic threats at members of the cast and crew. The show’s host, Padma Lakshmi, and Jenn Levy, Bravo’s SVP Production, both were threatened as they drove onto the set.

Local 25 President Sean O’Brien rejected Deadline’s account of the fracas, first reported on Wednesday, despite police and other corroboration of the published account.

Sean O'Brien“The Top Chef situation as it is written is fiction at best,” he said in a statement released by the union. “We have the right to lawfully demonstrate and protest the filming of non-union non-Massachusetts workers. We have fought long and hard to protect our members, their livelihoods and will continue to do so. If the allegations were true, Milton Police would have taken appropriate action.”

Local 25 spokeswoman Melissa Hurley told the Boston Herald, “As far as we’re concerned, nothing happened.”

That claim doesn’t hold up against a police report about the incident. John King, Milton’s Deputy Police Chief, told Deadline that the Teamsters were “threatening, heckling and harassing” the cast and crew. He said the first policeman on the scene had to call for backup after the Teamsters “gave the officer trouble.”

Reading from the police report, he said that the Teamsters were “hostile, swearing, and refusing to let people come in and out. Officers repeatedly tried to de-escalate the situation.” When more police arrived, the Teamsters went to the show’s hospitality tent and “harassed the crew there.” When the officers went there, King said, “A group of them slashed the tires on 14 different cars owned by the crew.”

The Boston Globe on Thursday confirmed Deadline’s account. “Source top Chefconfirms ‘Top Chef’ harassment by local Teamsters,” reads the Globe’s headline. “A source close to the network did tell us that details of the Deadline account are true,” the story states.

“Historically, the relationship between Hollywood and the Charlestown-based Teamsters Local 25 has been volatile,” the Globe story continued. “Following the 1978 filming in Boston of The Brink’s Job, directed by William Friedkin and produced by Dino De Laurentiis, two members of the Teamsters were convicted on racketeering charges. At the time, De Laurentiis said hiring pressure from the Teamsters added $1 million to production costs. For many years, that and similar incidents had a chilling effect on the state’s efforts to lure Hollywood to the Hub.

http://deadline.com/2014/08/rankled...-non-union-permits-for-top-chef-crews-823460/
 
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smackababy

Lifer
Oct 30, 2008
27,024
79
86
Too bad they don't act like that in Texas. Running and threatening to "bash my pretty face in" would result in my legally being able to get a "good shoot".
 

mmntech

Lifer
Sep 20, 2007
17,501
12
0
Yeah, I'm pretty sure it's behaviour like this that's turning people against unions, not conservative politicians. Not exactly helping your cause here. Just a bunch of thugs who belong in jail.

Not surprising though that they're pulling stunts like this. Membership is dropping. Probably because unions provide very little in terms of support for their members. Especially in non-industrial settings. It's just another big business.
 

smackababy

Lifer
Oct 30, 2008
27,024
79
86
The benefit of unions has long since passed. We don't need collective bargaining to improve working conditions or receive fair wages in the US today. All you need is a cellphone and a youtube account.
 

bobeedee

Senior member
Jun 18, 2001
305
12
81
Worked as a manager with Local 25 at a warehouse outside of Boston. Very few good guys but mostly lazy thugs whose filing of baseless grievances was an art form.
 

KK

Lifer
Jan 2, 2001
15,903
4
81
People should be able to execute union fucktards that pull this bullshit.
 
Feb 6, 2007
16,432
1
81
The benefit of unions has long since passed. We don't need collective bargaining to improve working conditions or receive fair wages in the US today. All you need is a cellphone and a youtube account.

One small group of union people acts like idiots, therefore we must end all unions. Because SCIENCE!

Incidentally, are we sure that these people acted like assholes because they were Teamsters and not because they were from Boston? Before we go bashing unions, let's find out if we can actually make this about people from a certain region; region bashing is way more fun than union bashing.
 

phucheneh

Diamond Member
Jun 30, 2012
7,306
5
0
Too bad they don't act like that in Texas. Running and threatening to "bash my pretty face in" would result in my legally being able to get a "good shoot".

My immediate thought was along the same lines...essentially, 'it's a shame that stereotypes are usually true.' The gays are a clean and industrious people, and I gots nothing against them. But they don't typically carry firearms.

If this were a different group of people...I dunno, say, a bunch of construction workers or something, as opposed to production assistants for what is pretty much GayTV, I would wager those pussy Teamster pricks wouldn't have been fucking with them. It really is a shame they didn't at least get hosed with bear mace or something.
 

SunnyD

Belgian Waffler
Jan 2, 2001
32,675
146
106
www.neftastic.com
This is why I love unions

:hmm:

Not sure if sarcasm.

Teamsters Local 25. Angry that the show had not signed a Teamsters contract and that the production hired local PA’s to drive cast and crew vehicles ...

Aww, poor union dipshits upset that a business is exercising its right to hire whomever it wants.

“A group of them slashed the tires on 14 different cars owned by the crew.”

... And yet none of them were arrested.

The local labor board told this member there was nothing they could do. So for two more weeks, “the picketers continued to subject us to threats of violence, sexual and racist harassment,” the crew member said. “I was scared to go to work. We had to face this nightmare daily until we wrapped the show.”

Nothing? A restraining order, arrests and charges for hate crimes sounds like it was in order. Pretty sure being on deck for felony hate crimes prison time would get those asshats in line pretty damn quickly.

Oh wait... the local labor board... :rolleyes:
 

akugami

Diamond Member
Feb 14, 2005
6,210
2,552
136
One small group of union people acts like idiots, therefore we must end all unions. Because SCIENCE!

Incidentally, are we sure that these people acted like assholes because they were Teamsters and not because they were from Boston? Before we go bashing unions, let's find out if we can actually make this about people from a certain region; region bashing is way more fun than union bashing.

It's sad because unions helped make labor fair and non-oppressive for the average Joe but there are many unions today who abuse their power. Just look up the carpenters union in Philadelphia and their dispute with the Philadelphia Convention Center issue.

For years Philadelphia kept losing convention business because of the unions, especially the carpenters union. Now that we have a stronger team with balls managing the Philadelphia Convention Center, the unions are having to reform. I mean, if you're setting up a booth in Philadelphia Convention Center, do you need some dick charging you $150 an hour to plug in your laptop or set up your folding table and table cloth? If you dared do something like that, they would literally have guards come in, unplug the laptop or fold the table back down. They would then plug in the laptop or set up the table, and charge you an arm and a leg for it.

:hmm:
... And yet none of them were arrested.

Nothing? A restraining order, arrests and charges for hate crimes sounds like it was in order. Pretty sure being on deck for felony hate crimes prison time would get those asshats in line pretty damn quickly.

Oh wait... the local labor board... :rolleyes:

There's a lot of union protection laws. The laws were meant to originally help unions fight for fairness in the work place. It's sickening that these union protection laws now allow these fucktards currently in charge of many of the unions to act in an illegal and oppressive manner and get away with it.
 

Imp

Lifer
Feb 8, 2000
18,828
184
106
Not just unions, it's any place where you get a group of people together and split them into "teams". See sports riots, political rallies, etc.
 

cubby1223

Lifer
May 24, 2004
13,518
42
86
Anyone who has been on the receiving end of union protests can tell the same story. Teamsters wanted to unionize one business I worked for, they refused, and proceeded to cause ~$50k worth of damage to their equipment.

Cops were called numerous times, but this was before the days of readily available and easy-to-use security cameras, it was a he-said, she-said situation and the union thugs got away with it all.
 

SunnyD

Belgian Waffler
Jan 2, 2001
32,675
146
106
www.neftastic.com
There's a lot of union protection laws. The laws were meant to originally help unions fight for fairness in the work place. It's sickening that these union protection laws now allow these fucktards currently in charge of many of the unions to act in an illegal and oppressive manner and get away with it.

Pretty sure union protection laws don't allow unions or them members to commit hate crimes.
 
Mar 11, 2004
23,444
5,852
146
Yes, because the Teamsters are the epitome of what a union is or should be. :rolleyes:

Fuck assholes like that, and fuck people that want to blanket all unions as bad (or good).

Anyone who has been on the receiving end of union protests can tell the same story. Teamsters wanted to unionize one business I worked for, they refused, and proceeded to cause ~$50k worth of damage to their equipment.

Cops were called numerous times, but this was before the days of readily available and easy-to-use security cameras, it was a he-said, she-said situation and the union thugs got away with it all.

Oh please, like there isn't an equal (likely greater, especially if you go back through history) of the opposite happening.
 

notposting

Diamond Member
Jul 22, 2005
3,499
35
91
Dumbasses like that are quickly ruining it for the remaining good union workers.

This quote is pretty special:
The crewmember who witnessed the Teamsters threatening and harassing Lakshmi and Levy said Bravo and Magical Elves share blame for putting the cast and crew in a dangerous situation. “Their poor handling of this situation comes as no surprise and really is a symptom of the overall dysfunction of reality-TV production,” the crewmember said. “Reality TV is cost efficient and easier to produce than scripted or more cinematic television. As a result, everyone suffers. To save money, reality TV workers are hired for lower than standard rates because the production companies and networks refuse to embrace unions or hire union workers. Along with that comes a lack of experience, professionalism and integrity. Production executives and showrunners just don’t have the experience or wherewithal to make the right decisions on how to handle issues such as the unions harassing a crew.”

Hahaha yeah.

WTF @ Local 25, good way to impress them and get anyone to want to hire you in the future.
 

cubby1223

Lifer
May 24, 2004
13,518
42
86
Yes, because the Teamsters are the epitome of what a union is or should be. :rolleyes:

Fuck assholes like that, and fuck people that want to blanket all unions as bad (or good).


Oh please, like there isn't an equal (likely greater, especially if you go back through history) of the opposite happening.

Yea, business owners were brutal to employees turn of the 1900's.

I was describing an experience of a business I worked for, with unions that took place in the 1990's.
Big difference.

Thugs stood across the street with their protests, and occasionally brought out slingshots to shoot nails and other sharp objects into the parking lot to cause flat tires. That was one of the nicer things the Teamster thugs did to destroy equipment.

That's what they do to get their way. This is the other side of the union that you're apparently happy to make believe doesn't occur.
 
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cubby1223

Lifer
May 24, 2004
13,518
42
86
There are a lot of businesses that treat their employees shitty. But businesses don't go after employees like the union thugs go after businesses. That's the difference. When's the last time you read a story about a business owner destroying an employee's vehicle?
 

BUTCH1

Lifer
Jul 15, 2000
20,433
1,769
126
There are a lot of businesses that treat their employees shitty. But businesses don't go after employees like the union thugs go after businesses. That's the difference. When's the last time you read a story about a business owner destroying an employee's vehicle?

Depends on the business and where it's located, when Energizer bought Hawaiian Tropic (where I had worked for 15 years) the "old-timers" got a bulls-eye painted on their back, some were "random" drug test 5-6 months in a row, sometimes twice in one month, a not-so-suttle way of saying "we don't want you". Others were brought in for reviews and told stuff like "your not worth what your pay rate is", I was terminated in '12 for an argument that lasted 30 seconds, a violation of the "anti-violence" policy, out went my insurance and my wife's insurance, (she's disabled). This is an example where the management took advantage of FL's employer-friendly laws and ran roughshod over the very people who helped build the company and the brand, the upper management started creating "positions" for spouses and friends as well, a union would have been of help but if you say that word in FL you'll be tossed to the curb, STAT.