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Hollywood’s Mass Exodus: Why Film and TV Production Is Fleeing L.A. and What Can Be Done About It

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CitrixNews Staff
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Hollywood’s Mass Exodus: Why Film and TV Production Is Fleeing L.A. and What Can Be Done About It
VENICE, CA - MARCH 18: Shay Mitchell, Noah Beck, Hassie Harrison, and Stephen Amell are seen on the set of Baywatch on March 18, 2026 in Venice, California. (Photo by MEGA/GC Images) MEGA/GC Images

Baywatch” was a staple of low-budget, first-run syndication in the 1990s, as natural to Los Angeles as David Hasselhoff’s chest hair and as defining of the city in that era as the O.J. trial and the Sunset Strip.

By the time it ended its run in 1999, it had become too costly to produce at a profit.

But the show’s red trunks and swimsuits returned to L.A. lifeguard towers in March of this year. Like an endangered pelican reintroduced to its native habitat, the Fox reboot was hailed as a triumph for the industry’s hometown, which is suffering through a long slide in production activity. Gov. Gavin Newsom bragged that the show was back “where it belongs,” at a cost to the state of $21 million.

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Originally reported by Variety. Read the full story at the original source.