If a concert or other performance I'm planning to see gets canceled, I am not particularly going to suffer. But the people who would be performing, most of whom are independent contractors, aren't going to get paid if they don't perform. One artist I follow mentioned that if X is canceled, there goes a very high percentage of their income for the year. Multiply this by the thousands of musicians, dancers, and actors out there, and you can see a catastrophe developing.
There are things you can do.
- Make donations to organizations you care about, in the amount of the tickets you would be buying and donations you would be making, even if you're not seeing the shows.
- Write letters urging these organizations to pay the artists anyway.
- Urge your friends to donate.
- Find funds that are raising money to support the performing artists who are going to take this kind of financial hit, and donate to them.
- Find other direct ways to support the artists you care about.
Here are the organized relief efforts that I know of:
- AGMA's fund
- The Actors Fund
- MusiCares Financial and Addiction Recovery Assistance
- Opera San José Artists and Musicians Relief Fund
- Musicians Foundation
- Merola Artists Emergency Fund, for recent Merola Fellows
- New Music Solidarity Fund, for new/creative/improvised music freelancers (accepting donations but has closed applications for now)
- Foundation for Contemporary Arts Emergency Grants (ENDS TODAY, May 31)
If you know of others, please let me know, with a comment, a tweet, a Twitter DM, etc.
Also: donate money to food banks. And demand a better social safety net, including universal health care, paid sick leave, improved cash payment supports, a rollback of cuts to SNAP, and decent housing for all.