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"path": "/peppa-pig-ai-kids",
"publishedAt": "2026-06-25T16:30:37.000Z",
"site": "https://nofilmschool.com",
"tags": [
"Voice cloning",
"Sag aftra",
"Artificial intelligence",
"Ai actor",
"Ai",
"Deadline",
"Variety",
"www.youtube.com"
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"textContent": "\n\n\n\nI know the conversations around AI are kind of fraught and nuanced, but this one seems very sister to me. Imagine you're a child hired to be a voice on one of the most popular kids' shows out there. They're happy to have you on one condition: they own your voice forever.\n\nNow, this might sound ludicrous, how coulda kids' TV show own a child's voice forever?\n\nBut that's exactly what's happening on _Peppa Pig_ right now, according to Deadline.\n\nThe studio behind _Peppa Pig_ has been allegedly pushing child voice actors on the series to sign away their voice rights to artificial intelligence (AI).\n\nAccording to Variety, this led nearly 1,000 entertainment professionals to sign a letter demanding immediate protection for young performers.\n\nLet's dive in.\n\n* * *\n\n## The \"Take It or Leave It\" Ultimatum\n\nAccording to industry insiders, Hasbro has allegedly introduced new contract terms requiring child voice actors to agree to comprehensive AI clauses.\n\nThese clauses give the studio the right to clone the children's voices and use the resulting AI-generated audio across any and all commercial assets within the franchise...forever.\n\nLet's pause for a second and talk about how cheap and dystopian it is to grift child actors out of their own voices and to own them for perpetuity.\n\nThis has been presented to new actors as a strict \"take-it-or-leave-it\" condition. If a child’s parents or guardians refuse to sign over their child's vocal likeness, they won't be hired at all or will be replaced on the show.\n\nSo the studio is also using its leverage to get what it wants.\n\nWhy would they do this? Well, Hasbro has teamed up with ElevenLabs to allow their characters to be manipulated with AI. You can pay into the market and use those characters in any way you want. And Peppa Pig is among them.\n\n- YouTube www.youtube.com\n\n## Can a Child Consent to Forever?\n\nYou can see why Hasbro wants all these voices replicated for free forever... but this feels wrong. These are children. Are there clauses to protect them from aging up their voices or from being manipulated in other ways in the marketplace?\n\nThey are not even consenting adults and have to have a parent or guardian sign these contracts, which feels so exploitative.\n\nThe Agents of Young Performers Association (AYPA) is fighting back. They organized an open letter to the industry as a whole, stating that this behavior is unacceptable.\n\nNow, here's the thing: the letter carefully avoids naming _Peppa Pig_ directly to protect the actors involved in those shows and disputes.\n\nThe core of the protest rests on a fundamental ethical dilemma: Can a child legally or morally consent to the loss of ownership of their own identity?\n\n> AYPA Open Letter On AI Clauses In Kids Contracts:\n>\n> To studio executives, producers, casting teams, commissioners, and all those shaping the future of recorded performance.We write at a moment when artificial intelligence is already the topic of much dispute, discussion and grave concerns throughout the industry.\n>\n> Most recently, a major studio who owns the IP for an international children’s franchise producing a long running animated television series has offered contracts to child voice actors insisting that they agree to the use of AI thus allowing them to use the child’s voice in all commercial assets within their franchise.\n>\n> The refusal to remove this clause with an attitude of ‘take it or leave it’ has led us write this letter to make it clear that this will not be accepted and to bring this matter to the attention of the wider industry.\n>\n> Where the performer is a child, consent must be treated with the greatest of care. Children cannot provide fully informed legal consent and a parent or guardian’s approval should never be used as a blanket licence to capture, clone, train, or reuse a child’s voice indefinitely.\n>\n> Any agreement involving a child’s voice should be fully exempt from all AI usage. No child should have their future professional identity shaped by an AI model created before they were old enough to understand its consequences. Their voice should not become a permanent commercial asset before they have the legal and personal capacity to decide for themselves.\n>\n> We the undersigned urge you to commit to responsible industry practice. Collectively, we reject all contracts that require child performers to surrender voice rights indefinitely and without limits.\n\n## Why This is a Hollywood Tipping Point\n\nOnce you come for the kids, everyone's moral compass starts to spin.\n\nParents usually sign contracts on behalf of their children, but AI introduces a contract that outlives childhood. One that could also outlive your kid. The idea that they may not have ownership of their voice because of being on a show as a child is scary to most people.\n\nThink of it this way: if you got recorded at ten and they used your ten-year-old voice forever, you could be competing against yourself for voice jobs in the future.\n\nOr, what if you got famous and they said they could license your young voice to companies and begin selling off your name and likeness that your parents sold away while you were trying to have a career doing something else?\n\nNow, think of what happens if a precedent is set now. We might see this for actors moving forward. Want to book a commercial? Well, we own your likelihood at 25 or whatever age you're doing it. That kind of fragmented stuff is scary, especially if they use an ultimatum of not getting the job as part of it.\n\nThe industry is taking notice and fighting back.\n\nLet us know what you think in the comments.",
"title": "Why the Fight Over Peppa Pig’s Voice Is An AI Tipping Point"
}