To Live and Die in LA's Film Industryhttps://hotair.com/tree-hugging-sister/2026/03/18/to-live-and-die-in-las-film-industry-n3812994Someone likened it to 'killing the Golden goose,' and if there was ever anything golden about Los Angeles, it was the glitter of its legendary film industry.
I mean, the celebrity culture and mystique of the movie industry was, next to palm tree-lined boulevards, the association most often made in the average American's mind when asked what represented Los Angeles to him.
...
If you thought of television and film, the beating heart of it was Los Angeles.
But much like what the film industry and its 'stars,' writers, and producers have done to itself with woke, repetitive, and derivative product releases that do nothing but lecture, diminish, and destroy much-loved franchises for lack of a single, fresh, original, and independent thought...
...
...the city of Los Angeles has been bleeding the Golden goose dry on the production end.
What a shock that LA has been wrapping the film industry in an ever-tightening noose of regulations, permitting fees, union restrictions, and mandates, right? As if they would always be there, because...well...they always have.
That's not the case now and hasn't been for a few years. The city and its progressive leadership are only beginning to wake up.
I do not understand how LA city and county gooberment could avoid noticing that Hollyweird was shifting film and TV production out of LA. I think I first recognized it back when Tyler Perry's "Diary of a Mad Black Woman" was in theaters. Perry produced "Diary ..." and his subsequent movies and TV in Georgia. Much TV content is being produced in Canuckia, as well as Texas (the Gaines), Missippi (the Napiers), Arkansas (the Marrs), and elsewhere.