September 14, 2023 Daniel Greenfield @ Sultan Knish Blog
Over the summer, Barry Diller warned
that the double strike by Hollywood actors and writers could
“potentially produce an absolute collapse of an entire industry.”
Diller, who once headed Paramount and 20th Century FOX, may know what he’s talking about.
Hollywood,
trying to compete with the vast resources of dot coms like Netflix and
Amazon, has been spending untold billions of dollars to convince
everyone to buy subscriptions to their streaming services. Netflix will
spend $17 billion, Amazon spent $16.6 billion while Disney blew through
$32 billion. Disney is trying to recoup some of the billions it lost on
Disney+ by cutting costs and going into the lucrative but shady business
of sports betting through ESPN.
Once upon a time, Disney might
have worried about the damage to its ‘family friendly image’ but once it
started peddling sexual materials to kids, gambling is actually a major
step up.
The entertainment industry’s big companies have blown
through over $100 billion to secure streaming subscribers. The longer
the strike lasts, industry figures like Diller fear that the pipeline of
new shows and movies will fade and the subscribers will go away. After
spending a fortune they don’t have to lock in subscribers, Hollywood may
be left with nothing.
But if Hollywood were to die, would anyone really miss it very much?
From
the popularization of the cowboy to space exploration and the action
hero, Hollywood once made up a vital part of the American mythos. Where
the industry once sold the American Dream around the world, it has
traded that in for a new woke identity that disdains the country.
New
Hollywood is no more integral to the American story than the video game
industry or Silicon Valley. It’s an addiction mechanism that no longer
adds the faintest iota of anything to the culture. It can no longer
pretend to be a dream factory, it’s where the dream goes to die to be
reborn as intellectual properties with scripts written by woke AI that
will soon star AI actors.
Hollywood is still big business and the
strikes are estimated to cost the economy $5 billion, but there are
industries that add far more, with less negative side effects, that are
under siege.
Occasionally conservative movies, like ‘Voice of
Freedom’, emerge as a reminder that the country can have a film industry
that speaks to us without Hollywood. And that such an industry would be
much more likely to emerge if Hollywood were to destroy itself or be
destroyed.
Disney has been battered by its wasteful streaming
spending, but also by its battle with Gov. DeSantis in Florida. The
biggest old school studio in Hollywood took such a severe beating
because the industry is far more vulnerable than most conservatives
realized it was.
Hollywood has dozens of vulnerabilities from a
dependence on tax credits and foreign investors to its infamously
illegal accounting practices and countless legal exemptions. Until
recently, Hollywood studios threw around their weight in red states,
announcing boycotts over religious freedom issues and demanding (and
getting) millions in tax credits from Republican governors.
There’s no real sign that’s changing outside of Florida.
Georgia has allocated a whopping $1.3 billion in Hollywood tax credits. That’s more than New York and California combined. A proposal to cap the credit at
under $1 billion, and save $1.7 billion, was shot down by House Speaker
David Ralston (now retired), who argued, “I’m not prepared to run that
industry out of Georgia.” Capping Hollywood tax credits at a gargantuan
$900 million somehow amounted to running the entire film industry out of
Georgia.
Hollywood was more than ready to run Republicans out of Georgia by backing Stacey Abrams.
From
Alabama to Mississippi, even the most conservative southern states have
lined up to court Hollywood even when they lose money doing it. For
example, Mississippi gets 49 cents to the dollar it spends on incentives, while other states are doing even worse.
Rather
than fighting Hollywood, conservative states are actually backing it
with tax dollars, pleading with it to come to their neck of the woods
and film movies and shows which depict Americans as backward racists.
Most Republican states have actually created, added or expanded their
film tax credits in the last few years in a desperate bid to bring in
more jobs.
And in the process they’ve ignored the cultural damage that Hollywood is doing to us.
There
are exceptions to the rule. There was outrage when Netflix released
‘Cuties’ depicting the sexualization of young girls. DA Lucas Babin in
Tyler County, TX,, who has his own history in the entertainment
industry, got a grand jury to indict Netflix. While the streaming giant
has far more money and resources, Babin has managed to tie it up in
court.
While most people thought that the battle over ‘Cuties’
had ended back in 2020, it has kept on going into 2023. Babin has been
badly outmatched and outspent, but he also showed that it’s possible to
take on the biggest giant in the industry, which wields almost unlimited
resources and whose wealth is utterly staggering, and still make it
feel some pain.
Imagine if more conservatives were willing to take on Hollywood instead of pandering to it?
Conservatives
complain about a culture war and too many would rather fight it with
lame memes than with sharp legal elbows. Hollywood has never been this
vulnerable and yet most conservatives do little more than complain about
‘wokeness, rather than expecting their elected officials to do to
Hollywood what leftist politicians are trying to do to the oil and gas
industry. Not to mention the automobile industry, gun manufacturers and
countless others.
The Left has spent generations fighting
corporations, sometimes to take them over, other times to outright wipe
out an industry, while conservatives are still too timid to think big in
this way.
The entertainment industry consists of a handful of
incestuous giants that dominate video, music and book publishing with no
legal pushback or serious challenge from conservatives. Its lobbyists
know that all they need to do is spread some money around Capitol Hill,
hire a few former Republican staffers to lobby for them and they can get
whatever they want.
And that is how it will be until conservatives start expecting more from their politicians.
If
the governor of a state that is heavily dependent on tourism can take
on Disney and the DA of Tyler County can take on the most powerful
entertainment industry corporation, there’s no excuse for House and
Senate Republicans to keep doing favors for Hollywood, or for most red
states to shove millions of dollars at productions wanting to show their
people as inbred hicks.
Rep. Laurie Schlegel, a freshman state representative in Louisiana, recently brought down Pornhub,
a massive industry giant, by passing bills mandating age verification.
Those bills have been moving from state to state, threatening a
pornography company with an estimated annual revenue of $97 billion.
That’s what happens when politicians stop explaining why they can’t do
things and actually do the simplest thing possible even when it
supposedly ‘can’t be done.’
It doesn’t take much to be a giant
slayer when the giants have glass jaws. What it does take is principles,
a refusal to be bribed and a determination to take down cultural
enemies who have countless regulatory weaknesses, but lots of money and a
base of support from their users.
Hollywood can be killed and
something better, more American, can rise from the ashes. The industry
has never been this fragile and vulnerable. All it will take is the
willpower to do it.
Daniel Greenfield is a Shillman Journalism Fellow at the David Horowitz Freedom Center. This article previously appeared at the Center's Front Page Magazine.
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Tags: entertainment industry, Hollywood, recent
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