Bass announced the creation of an Entertainment Industry Cabinet last week as permitting nonprofit FilmLA hikes fees
Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass met with heavy hitters in the entertainment industry last week to form a cabinet that can advice the city on how to keep Hollywood jobs in Los Angeles after the number of productions shot in L.A. plummet.
Alarming statistics released by the Bureau of Labor Statistics indicated that “motion picture and sound recording” jobs have grown nationwide, “but the share of workers in LA or New York,” who represented half of those jobs in 2023, now make up just one-third of that number in 2024 this year,” according to a Marketplace report.
Bass announced the creation of the city’s Entertainment Industry Cabinet to advice city officials on ways they can streamline efforts to keep creative jobs in the Hollywood Hub. The Cabinet is a who’s who of Hollywood insiders from union bosses to studio heads, agents and Motion Picture Association executives who, the Mayor says, “will urgently focus on addressing the challenges,” the entertainment industry is facing in Los Angeles.
Last week we launched our new Entertainment Industry Cabinet – a working group that will urgently focus on addressing the challenges our legacy industry is facing.
— Mayor Karen Bass (@MayorOfLA) July 26, 2024
Together, we will work to create more jobs and keep production in L.A.https://t.co/q3I1ZAKlx3 pic.twitter.com/C3pkc7XfQm