Just last week, the Gateway Pundit reported that there are people working in the entertainment industry in Hollywood who are afraid that Los Angeles could ending up becoming the next Detroit.

California has made it so expensive and difficult to do business there that the film and TV industry is constantly moving production to other countries that offer tax breaks and other incentives.

Just after being elected, Trump appointed actors Jon Voight, Mel Gibson, and Sylvester Stallone as Special Ambassadors to Hollywood.

Next week, Jon Voight is set to offer some recommendations to Trump on how to keep film and TV production in the United States.

Townhall reports:

Jon Voight Will Present Trump With Plan to Fix Hollywood

Actor Jon Voight, along with his manager, Steven Paul, plan to present ideas to President Trump as early as next week in order to help increase film and TV production in the United States.

Ideas Voight plans to propose may include infrastructure incentives, tax code changes and job training, all while exceeding tax credits that states usually offer.

“It’s important that we compete with what’s going on around the world, so there needs to be some sort of federal tax incentives,” Paul said.

In January, Trump named Voight as a special ambassador to Hollywood, alongside fellow actors Mel Gibson and Sylvester Stallone.

Trump referred to Hollywood as a “great but very troubled place.”

Currently, states compete with generous tax credits in order to lure film productions. The group wants national initiatives to help the U.S. win business over other countries, Paul added.

In the clip below, actor Rob Lowe talks about how California’s current leadership has made it near to impossible to make movies and TV shows in the state:

The entertainment industry has always been a golden goose for California. Somehow, the Democrats in charge of the state have almost managed to kill it.



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