Film and TV production has been moving out of Los Angeles for the past few years. California Gov. Gavin Newsom has unveiled a proposal to reverse that trend, but industry leaders are still worried.
Film and TV production has been moving out of Los Angeles for the past few years. California Gov. Gavin Newsom has unveiled a proposal to reverse that trend, but industry leaders are still worried.
Gov. Gavin Newsom has played Santa Claus for the last week, promising bigger state subsidies to Hollywood’s film and video ...
State Sen. Anthony Portatino and Asm. Rick Zbur will have the job of ushering the $750 million package through six months of budget talks ...
Hollywood is thought of as the mecca of entertainment, but fewer and fewer shows and movies are actually being filmed there.
The governor seeks to double film and television incentives to $750 million a year in a first step to stop the flight of ...
The California governor has increased tax credits by more than $220 million to attract film and TV production back to the state.
Gov. Gavin Newsom's new tax credit proposal signals a significant — albeit belated — attempt to address one of the key ...
The governor wants to increase incentives to film and television to $750 million a year. Further changes may be on the way as ...
Having narrowly closed a $47 billion budget shortfall this year and economic prospects growing darker, it’s unclear how Newsom plans to pay for the the program’s $420 million expansion.
The state has been losing production business to Canada and other states that offer more attractive incentives, most ...
Newsom on Sunday announced a proposal to significantly boost California’s Film & Television Tax Credit Program allocation to ...