Hollywood Work Was Already Drying Up. Then the Fires Hit.

1 week ago 11

You have a preview view of this article while we are checking your access. When we have confirmed access, the full article content will load.

The wildfires have given new urgency to discussions about how to revive one of Los Angeles’s defining, and dominant, industries: film and television production.

The Hollywood sign seen from the distance, with smoky haze over the hills.
The Hollywood sign was shrouded in smoke this month as several wildfires burned across Southern California. Credit...Loren Elliott for The New York Times

Nicole SperlingMatt Stevens

Jan. 26, 2025Updated 9:06 a.m. ET

Even before the devastating wildfires, Hollywood was struggling.

Squeezed by studio cutbacks and competition from other states and countries, film and television production in the Los Angeles region had already fallen to a near-record low last year, imperiling the livelihoods of not just casts and crews but also the caterers, drivers and many others who depend on the entertainment industry. Some, seeing their work dry up, were leaving for other states that have lured productions with tax credits.

Then the fires swept through, dealing yet another blow to a region, and an industry, that had been buffeted in recent years by a pandemic and then strikes that halted production amid a rapidly changing entertainment landscape. The Southern California fires have given new urgency to efforts by state and local officials to keep Los Angeles a place where films and television shows are made, and not just greenlit by studio executives to be shot elsewhere.

At stake is the future of a defining industry that helps make Los Angeles a vibrant creative capital, employing tens of thousands of workers in a wide variety of fields — people like John W. Rutland, a cinematographer, and his wife, Marta Gené Camps, a television writer.

Just a week before the fires the couple had been looking over their mortgage documents. They wanted to reassure themselves that even though work had grown sparse, the equity in their three-bedroom home was on the rise. Then the Eaton fire rampaged through the eclectic art hamlet of Altadena, burning their pet chickens, destroying their home and leaving them with “a worthless strip of charred land,” as Rutland described it.

Image

The home of John W. Rutland, a cinematographer, and his wife, Marta Gené Camps, a television writer, was destroyed in the Eaton fire.Credit...John Rutland

“Who knows when it’ll be safe to come build again?” asked Rutland, 44. “And if we want to build again?”


Thank you for your patience while we verify access. If you are in Reader mode please exit and log into your Times account, or subscribe for all of The Times.


Thank you for your patience while we verify access.

Already a subscriber? Log in.

Want all of The Times? Subscribe.

Read Entire Article
Olahraga Sehat| | | |