LOS ANGELES — After 27 years, it’s lastly time to fill the empty lifeguard stands. In 2026, beleaguered California leisure trade staff will see the return of what was as soon as a significant native employer: the TV present “Baywatch.”
A deliberate Fox reboot of the seashore drama, which filmed in California in 1999 earlier than it picked up its rescue buoys and moved to Hawaii, turned one in all 17 TV reveals to obtain an award from California’s lately expanded movie and tv tax credit score program. Twenty-eight movies, together with a Snoop Dogg biopic, an Ang Lee Western and Michael Mann’s long-awaited “Warmth” sequel, additionally acquired the credit score, Gov. Gavin Newsom introduced in November.
California has been shedding enterprise to manufacturing hubs in areas with beneficiant tax incentives, together with New Jersey, which has lately change into an East Coast manufacturing sizzling spot. In October, Paramount signed a 10-year lease to construct a studio there. Lionsgate, the studio behind the “Starvation Video games” franchise, and Netflix additionally started development on compounds there within the final yr.
California officers hope the brand new tax credit score, which greater than doubled from $330 million to $750 million in 2025, will assist them reverse what has been a brutal, yearslong slowdown in manufacturing in Hollywood’s residence state.
“Staff are going to be getting again to constant employment in California in 2026,” mentioned Colleen Bell, govt director of the California Movie Fee, the state company that administers the movie and TV tax credit. “Grips, electricians, costume designers. We needed to sound the alarm. One thing daring and pressing wanted to be addressed.”
The Hollywood workforce endured an intense shock when the Covid-19 pandemic halted manufacturing in 2020. The 2023 actors and writers strikes, the 2025 Los Angeles County wildfires and an total contraction in studio spending because the streaming bubble popped all worsened the issue.
Even with the tax credit score increase, California leisure staff will face new challenges in 2026, together with the prospect of a merger between Warner Bros. Discovery and both Netflix or Paramount Skydance, a significant trade consolidation that may be prone to end in extra misplaced jobs.
And there may be the uncertainty of Hollywood’s adoption of synthetic intelligence instruments, anticipated to be a degree of rivalry when the Alliance of Movement Image and Tv Producers begins its negotiations with the Display Actors Guild in February.
“We’re very conscious of the workforce implications of AI,” Bell mentioned. “However storytelling nonetheless relies on folks, and our job is to ensure these jobs stay in California.”
“Survive ’til ’25” turned the hopeful mantra in California, the place many within the manufacturing world had been depleting their security nets. However 2025 didn’t develop into the growth yr staff had been anticipating. In line with FilmLA, the nonprofit group that administers movie permits in Los Angeles, 2025 was truly the town’s second-worst yr, after 2020, by way of the variety of native shoot days for movies, TV reveals, commercials and different productions.

“Individuals had been beginning to surprise if California continues to be the place to make our residence,” mentioned Philip Sokoloski, vp of built-in communications at FilmLA. “Their anguish lastly reached the ears of our leaders.”
California misplaced about 40,000 jobs in movement image and video manufacturing in 2024 in contrast with 2022, a drop of 28%, in accordance with latest information from the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Different companies that depend upon Hollywood exercise and expense accounts, like eating places, accommodations and dry cleaners, additionally suffered.
After a push from Newsom and months of lobbying from leisure unions, the grassroots “Keep in LA” motion, the Movement Image Affiliation and out-of-work crew members, California legislators handed the expanded tax credit score final summer time.
It’s in 2026 that trade watchers count on the good thing about the expanded credit score to start out paying off.
Producers of the brand new “Baywatch” plan to rent 12 forged members and 181 crew members to shoot over 95 days in California this yr, gathering a $21 million tax credit score from the state in opposition to the present’s $52.6 million manufacturing finances. The makers of the Snoop biopic plan to rent 84 forged members and 190 crew folks to shoot over 50 days, gathering a $17 million credit score in opposition to a $48.3 million finances.
“Massive like to the California Movie Fee and Gov. Newsom for holdin’ it down with that tax credit score,” Snoop mentioned in an announcement offered by Newsom’s workplace. “Y’all making it potential for us to inform my story proper right here the place all of it started. California raised me, impressed me, and now helpin’ carry this biopic to life in 2026. A lot respect — that’s actual teamwork, ya dig…”
Past interventions on the state stage, there has additionally been a motion for a federal movie tax incentive to assist the U.S. compete with international locations like Canada, the U.Ok., Australia and Eire, which have all lured productions abroad.
Lengthy thought of politically unpopular with conservative voters, the notion of a federal movie tax incentive bought an sudden increase in Might when President Donald Trump floated a plan to implement a 100% tariff on films made in different international locations which might be imported to the U.S.
The tariff hasn’t materialized, however on the time, Jon Voight and his supervisor, Steven Paul, two of Trump’s Hollywood advisers, advisable a federal tax incentive as a part of a broader plan to carry moviemaking again to the U.S.
Within the ensuing months, there have been “actually productive talks throughout the aisle” concerning the concept, mentioned Rep. Laura Friedman, D-Calif.
“I’ll give President Trump some kudos for calling out the significance of this trade,” mentioned Friedman, who’s a former movie producer. “As soon as he began speaking about that and needs to maintain the trade in America, it did assist encourage my colleagues on the opposite aspect of the aisle. We subsidize oil, pharma — it’s not like that is exceptional.”
