It’s not loud. It’s not dramatic. But it’s real: Hollywood is quietly collapsing.
For all the glitz, premieres, and red carpets that still dot Sunset Boulevard, Los Angeles—the beating heart of the American entertainment industry—is bleeding out in silence. Beneath the facade of celebrity and prestige lies a production crisis that, if unchecked, could render Tinseltown a relic of its past. The numbers don’t lie. The first quarter of 2025 brought a brutal 22% drop in on-location filming compared to last year, according to a report released by FilmLA, the nonprofit group that handles filming permits in the city and county. TV production, once a stable economic engine for the region, plunged by nearly 50% against the five-year average. Thirteen pilots shot in L.A. this year—a record low.
This isn't a bump in the road. It’s the new normal.
The root cause? A perfect storm of post-strike stagnation, cost-cutting by studios, and a global arms race of tax incentives that California is losing. Meanwhile, competitors like Australia are experiencing a 14% boost in production volume, with countries like Slovakia and Austria siphoning off postproduction work by offering 66–90% cost savings on scoring music alone.
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