NEW YORK (AP):
Donald Trump wants to make Hollywood “bigger, better and stronger” and has cast Mel Gibson, Jon Voight and Sylvester Stallone as stars of what he is calling his “Special Ambassadors to a great but very troubled place, Hollywood, California”. On Wednesday, the president-elect announced on his social media site that the three actors would be his eyes and ears to the moviemaking town.
“It will again be, like The United States of America itself, The Golden Age of Hollywood!” he wrote on Truth Social. He also called the trio special envoys.
Special ambassadors and envoys are typically chosen to respond to troubled hotspots like the Middle East, not California.
Gibson said in a statement that he got the news “at the same time as all of you and was just as surprised. Nevertheless, I heed the call. My duty as a citizen is to give any help and insight I can”.
Gibson, who lost his home in the Palisades fire, added, “Any chance the position comes with an ambassador’s residence?”
US film and television production has been hampered in recent years, with setbacks from the COVID-19 pandemic, the Hollywood guild strikes of 2023 and, in the past week, the ongoing wildfires in the Los Angeles area. Overall production in the US was down 26 per cent from 2021, according to data from ProdPro.
In the greater Los Angeles area, productions were down 5.6 per cent from 2023, according to FilmLA, the lowest since 2020. This past October, Governor Gavin Newsom proposed expanding California’s Film & Television Tax Credit programme to $750 million annually (up from $330 million). Other US cities like Atlanta, New York, Chicago and San Francisco have used tax incentives to lure film and TV productions to their cities. Actor Mark Wahlberg is even making plans for a Las Vegas production hub.
“I’m old enough to have touched some years of the Golden Age of Hollywood, and I’ve seen its slow deterioration since. Today, we are in pretty bad shape,” Voight said. “Very few films are made here now, but we are fortunate to have an incoming president who wants to restore Hollywood to its former glory, and with his help, I feel we can get done.”
It’s unclear what exactly Gibson, Voight and Stallone will be doing in this effort to bring productions back to the US Representatives, for Stallone did not immediately respond to request for comment. Trump’s decision to select the actors as his chosen “ambassadors” underscores his preoccupations with the 1980s and ‘90s, when he was a rising tabloid star in New York, and Gibson and Stallone were among the biggest movie stars in the world.