• Los Angeles sees continuing decline in film and television production

    From useapen@21:1/5 to All on Wed Jun 11 09:10:24 2025
    XPost: free.go.woke.go.broke, alt.california, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh
    XPost: sac.politics, talk.politics.guns

    Los Angeles has seen a decline in local film and TV production, causing
    some to worry the city could face the same fate as Detroit did with the
    auto industry several decades ago.

    "As the auto industry left Detroit, it really hollowed out that city, and
    now thereÆs some concern that the same thing could be happening here in
    Los Angeles and in Hollywood as movie productions move out of town," FOX Business correspondent Max Gorden reported Tuesday.

    In a report released last week, FilmLA said the greater Los Angeles areaÆs on-location production for movies, TV, commercials and other projects
    amounted to just shy of 5,300 shoot days in the first quarter of the year, marking a 22.4% drop from the same three-month period in 2024.

    That came amid a "global decline in production and intensifying
    competition for film projects and jobs" from other places, the not-for-
    profit organization said.

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    Los Angeles faced massive wildfires in January but, according to FilmLA,
    they had a "small effect on L.A. area filming" during the quarter.

    On-location production in Los Angeles during 2025Æs first quarter was also lower than that seen in the first quarter of 2021, when the local industry notched over 7,000 shoot days, Gorden reported, citing FilmLA data.

    The head of a Los Angeles location agency told Gorden that small companies
    were having trouble.

    "A lot of the smaller companies I know are unfortunately struggling to the point where theyÆre having to call it a day in this industry, and
    especially for the people that work here, IÆve hired countless people over
    the years, and itÆs getting harder and harder for below-the-line crew to
    find work," Real to Reel Location Agency CEO Gary Onyshko said.

    Industry experts want fewer regulations and more incentives from the
    California government to encourage productions to return and film in the
    Golden State, according to Gorden.

    "People feel like, æWell, why does Hollywood need handouts from the
    government? Like theyÆre rich, theyÆre all a bunch of rich people.Æ ItÆs
    like, thatÆs not true at all," location scout Dale Dreher told Gorden.
    "This is my backyard. I live in South LA. IÆve lived here for 21 years,
    and IÆm worried about my next house payment just like anybody else."

    In late October, Gov. Gavin Newsom proposed upping CaliforniaÆs Film and Television Tax Credit Program to $750 million per year, representing a
    $420 million increase from the $330 million currently allocated.

    His office said at the time that it would "allow California to outpace
    other states offering tax credits, luring more entertainment industry
    projects back to the Golden State."

    More recently, in February, state lawmakers introduced legislation to
    revamp CaliforniaÆs Film and Television Tax Credit Program. On top of
    raising the overall program amount to $750 million, the bills would make
    more productions eligible for tax credits and up the size of the tax
    credits each project could receive, among other things, according to a
    press release.

    The entertainment industry in Los Angeles "brings over $30 billion to California and supports over 200,000 local jobs," according to the City of
    Los AngelesÆ Economic And Workforce Development Department. It is also a
    major driver of tourism for the city.

    https://www.foxbusiness.com/economy/los-angeles-sees-continuing-decline- film-television-production

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  • From Ted Nolan @21:1/5 to yourdime@outlook.com on Wed Jun 11 13:46:07 2025
    In article <XnsB2FB161B217EBX@135.181.20.170>,
    useapen <yourdime@outlook.com> wrote:
    Los Angeles has seen a decline in local film and TV production, causing
    some to worry the city could face the same fate as Detroit did with the
    auto industry several decades ago.

    "As the auto industry left Detroit, it really hollowed out that city, and
    now thereÆs some concern that the same thing could be happening here in
    Los Angeles and in Hollywood as movie productions move out of town," FOX >Business correspondent Max Gorden reported Tuesday.


    I would not suggest starting work in movies or TV. AI is coming and
    actors, sets, costumes will all be going...
    --
    columbiaclosings.com
    What's not in Columbia anymore..

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