The New York Times - Friday Briefing: Thailand in turmoil

Also, an industry-wide strike in Hollywood, floods in Delhi and Netflix’s Asia strategy.
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By Amelia Nierenberg

Writer, Briefings

Good morning. We’re covering Thailand’s political turmoil and Hollywood’s biggest strike in decades.

Pita Limjaroenrat, 42, has considerable popular support. Lauren Decicca/Getty Images

Thailand’s Pita fails to win vote for prime minister

After the military-backed Senate rejected Pita Limjaroenrat as prime minister, Thailand was staring down what could be another intense period of political unrest and nationwide protests.

Pita, a former technology executive who had positioned himself as a champion of reform, was unable to muster enough support from senators. His party won elections in May, and the victory had challenged not only the generals but also the nation’s powerful monarchy.

As Parliament prepared to hold a second vote on Wednesday, the political fate of Pita, and his coalition, hangs in the balance. He received only 324 combined votes in the House of Representatives and the Senate — short of the 376 he needed to win the premiership.

“This is déjà vu,” a political science professor said, referring to the cycles of elections, protests, coups and crackdowns that have occurred in Thailand since 2007. Supporters of Pita’s coalition gathered outside the Parliament building in Bangkok where the vote was held, and some had vowed to hit the streets in protest if he did not win enough votes to become prime minister.

What’s next: A likely scenario is that Pheu Thai — another party in the coalition that backed Pita in the elections — would field Srettha Thavisin, a property tycoon who is considered a more palatable candidate among Thailand’s military establishment. The tumultuous week ahead may or may not end with a new prime minister in charge.

Actors and writers picketed in Los Angeles on Wednesday. Mario Tama/Getty Images

Hollywood is going on strike

About 160,000 television and movie actors voted yesterday to strike as of midnight, joining screenwriters, who walked off the job in May. It will be the first industrywide shutdown in 63 years.

Both groups say the crisis was created mainly by the explosion of streaming, which has changed the way they are paid. Actors say that their residuals, a type of royalty payment, have “severely eroded” in recent years. The writers say their compensation has stagnated.

Another core issue is how artificial intelligence could be used to replicate actors’ performances using their previous work without compensation or permission.

The dual strikes pit the workers against old-line studios like Disney, Universal, Sony and Paramount as well newer juggernauts like Netflix, Amazon and Apple. The studios maintain that they’re in crisis, too. They say streaming has cut into share prices and profit margins.

“I don’t think Hollywood is ready for this,” my colleague Nicole Sperling, who covers entertainment, said. Studio executives were caught off guard by the resolve of the actors, who, unlike the writers, have not staged a major strike in four decades, she added.

“Hollywood was already about 80 percent shut down, but any production that was hobbling along will now close, and upcoming projects will be severely hampered,” she explained.

Water enveloped sections of residential areas and historical sites in Delhi.Adnan Abidi/Reuters

A view from India’s flood zone

Thousands of people were evacuated from their homes in Delhi, India’s capital city, after the authorities warned of widespread flooding. Days of torrential rains have battered large swaths of northern India, killing dozens of people.

The Yamuna River, which flows through the capital, breached the so-called danger mark by three meters (about 10 feet), the authorities said. Migrant workers living on the banks lost their makeshift homes. Officials closed schools and converted them into disaster relief camps. Three water treatment plants were shuttered after they were flooded, threatening access to drinking water.

The Yamuna River is a tributary of the Ganges.Arun Sankar/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

Context: So far this monsoon season, at least 91 people have died in six states near Delhi. The country’s annual monsoon season has become erratic and more extreme in recent years as the world warms.

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ARTS AND IDEAS

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Netflix’s K-drama game plan

“Squid Game” showed Netflix that a laser focus on local taste can deliver a global audience. It was the most-watched show ever on the streaming service, and it sparked interest in Korean content.

Netflix wants to dominate the entertainment world, but it is pursuing that ambition one country at a time. Instead of creating shows and movies that appeal to all 190 countries where the service is available, it is betting that a compelling story somewhere is compelling everywhere, no matter the language.

Netflix already has shows in more than 30 Asian languages. That strategy seems to be working: Last year, 60 percent of subscribers worldwide watched a Korean-language show or movie.

PLAY, WATCH, EAT

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What to Listen to

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Now Time to Play

Play the Mini Crossword. Here’s a clue: Smile wide (four letters).

Here are the Wordle and the Spelling Bee. You can find all our puzzles here.

That’s it for today’s briefing. I hope you have a lovely weekend! — Amelia

P.S. Our series on slavery and racism in the U.S., “The 1619 Project,” was nominated for the Emmy for best documentary or nonfiction series.

The Daily” is on affirmative action.

If you have thoughts or suggestions, you can always reach us at briefing@nytimes.com.

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