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Be part of M3 Studios, we are looking for a studio film Intern / Apprentice to join us.

M3 Studios is looking for a studio film Intern / Apprentice to join our team in Miami, FL

The ideal candidate is highly-organized with a genuine interest and love for storytelling, film, photography and overall content development.

Our team looks forward to giving the ideal candidate hands-on experience in the realm of the inner workings of a real film production facility.

This is an opportunity for the right candidate to gain insight into the industry, both traditional and digital. As well as gaining access to the biggest players in the South Florida film industry.

This can lead to a permanent position for the right candidate as you progress through the various stages:

Intern —-> Apprentice —–> Probationary —–> Full Time

Responsibilities:

    • Assist in all aspects of video and photographic communications and contribute to planning and storyboarding 
    • Assist in the end-to-end process from storyboarding to logistics to shooting to editing and publishing 
    • Film video and shoot photographs in studio and field environments 
    • Maintaining and archiving video files
    • Use existing original and stock footage to produce new videos 
    • Contribute to mixing and editing to create polished and engaging videos 
    • Standard administration duties in the operation of a film studio facility
    • Helping on live production film sets to set up cameras, lights, mics, software

What we require:

    • Must have strong verbal, written and presentation communication skills; understanding of film/TV process
    • Demonstrates extensive experience in all phases of video production, from concept through delivery, you do not need to have a degree in digital cinema or a related field, but if you don’t than you must have a portfolio of work as example of your capabilities. (Understand there’s talented creators that couldn’t attend a degree program)
    • Knowledge of digital videography and photography cameras and equipment
    • Having a strong foundation in motion graphics skills including sensitivity to typography, color, and composition is preferred but not mandatory
    • Demonstrates experience and the ability to merge fun storytelling and interesting visual delivery.
    • Has excellent communication skills and experience presenting himself professionally (after all we are a working professional film studio)
    • Works both collaboratively and independently on projects of all scales and types.
    • Proficiency with some or all of the following is preferred: Apple applications, iOS, Microsoft Office suite, Adobe Premiere, Final Cut Pro, Adobe Photoshop
    • Bilingual (Spanish, English) ideal

 

Please send in your resume as well as a 1-5 minute long video on what makes you a great candidate for this position.

Must already be located in South Florida to apply

Reflects a good attitude and a willingness to work hard while still keeping it loose and having fun.

 

About M3 Studios:

M3 Studios is the largest multimedia television and film production studio facility in South Florida, accessible from all major highways, just minutes from the Miami International Airport and a 10-minute ride from some of the most pristine beaches in the world, Downtown Miami & Coconut Grove, this versatile film/television studio offers something unlike any other competitors with 7 production studios, 3 CYC walls, green screen studios, 6 editing bays, and over 122,000 Sq. Ft. of state-of-the-art studios that include full-service production staff and equipment, editing suites, office/conference rooms as well as a full-service limo company on-site.

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DO NOT ATTACH VIDEO FILES, SEND LINK FROM INSTAGRAM, YOUTUBE, OR VIMEO ETC.

    Miami’s film industry is on life support. Can it survive?

    Ben Kanegson remembers the good old days of the Miami film industry — and by good old days he means 2015, when production on the second seasons of the HBO sports-comedy series “Ballers” and the dark Netflix drama “Bloodline” overlapped and he was forced to choose between them.

    Kanegson, a veteran camera and crane operator who also runs his own equipment rental company, went with “Bloodline.” He’s currently working on the third and final season of the show, which will wrap production in the Florida Keys in March.

    “One of the things thats keeping me in Miami is I have seven more weeks of solid work here, working on the last show that’s filming in the state,” he says. “But this is the end of the line. The No. 1 topic of conversation among the crew as we go back and forth to the set every day is ‘Where are you moving to?’”

    “A lot of them have already relocated to Georgia and have advanced their careers. When there’s demand for the work that you do, there’s room to move up in your field.”

    But in Miami, as in the rest of Florida, the film and television industry is on life support, unable to compete with other states with generous tax incentives that help studios defray the ballooning budgets of filmed entertainment. At risk in Miami-Dade alone are the 4,900 jobs, $249 million in personal income and $20 million in tax revenues created over the past five years, according to the county’s Regulatory and Economic Resources Department.

     

    Without state tax incentives, however, the film and TV industry is flat-lining. “Ballers” left South Florida after two seasons, lured to Los Angeles by an aggressive tax incentive aimed specifically at relocating TV series that had previously filmed elsewhere. “Bloodline” will end after its shortened 10-episode third season, even though the show’s creators are rumored to have planned enough story for five.

    High-profile Hollywood studio movies such as the upcoming Dwayne Johnson-Zac Efron “Baywatch” and the Owen Wilson-Ed Helms comedy “Bastards” spent only a few days filming in Miami-Dade and Broward Counties. That’s a dramatic change from 20 years ago, when an average of 15 feature-length films were shot here from start to finish each year between 1994-1996.

    That number went down in the early 2000s, when Canada lured Hollywood away from the U.S. with incentives and a favorable currency exchange rate. Since then, most states have drawn productions back, but Florida is no longer able to compete. Recent and upcoming movies that are set in Florida, such as Ben Affleck’s “Live By Night” and the Chris Pine-Octavia Spencer drama “Gifted,” were shot in Georgia. According to Gus Corbella, the chairman of the Florida Film and Entertainment Advisory Council, the state has lost out on $650 million in film and TV expenditures since 2013.

    Even “Moonlight,” the Oscar-nominated drama about the coming-of-age of a young man growing up in Liberty City, was almost shot outside of Miami.

    “I had to face my producers and say, ‘Look, I know we could maybe set this movie in New Orleans or Atlanta, because those states have tax incentives, and the budget would go a lot further,’ ” says “Moonlight” writer-director Barry Jenkins. “For a movie of this size [$5 million], that would have made a meaningful difference. But we stuck to our guns and took the hit and decided to make it in Miami. I’m glad we did, because that was the only place to make it. But if we’d had those tax incentives, the movie could be even a little bit stronger aesthetically than it is.”

    Financial squeeze

    According to the Miami-Dade Office of Film & TV Entertainment, permitted movie and television productions spent $410 million in 2010-11 on public properties in Miami-Dade County, the city of Miami and the city of Miami Beach, accounting for 70-80 percent of total expenditures. In 2015-16, that number dropped almost 60 percent, to $175 million. The figure is expected to continue to plummet.

    Year-round production of scripted series at Telemundo Studios and TV shows at Viacom International, which currently occupies an 88,000-square-foot studio facility in downtown Miami, aren’t big enough to sustain an industry that relies on larger productions to maintain a steady infrastructure.

    EVERYBODY I KNOW THAT’S TRIED AND TRUE AND ARE REAL ARTISTS IN THE INDUSTRY HAVE RELOCATED. WE’VE LOST SUCH A DEAR INDUSTRY HERE.

    “Moonlight” production manager Jennifer Radzikowski

    The dearth of work has reached a critical point. Locals who make a living as electricians, carpenters, decorators, technicians, location scouts and other below-the-line jobs — anyone who is not an actor, writer, producer or director working on a movie or TV show — are being forced either to move out of state or change careers altogether, because family obligations keep them here.

    The Florida Entertainment Incentive Program, which was launched in 2010, established a pool of $296 million in tax credits for film, TV and video productions that required 60% of the cast and crew of any eligible project to be based in Florida. The program was supposed to last five years, but there were so many takers that the money ran out in three.

    Since then, Florida legislators have repeatedly voted not to replenish the funds. The program officially ended on June 30, leaving the state unable to compete with Georgia, Louisiana, California and other states that offer as much as 30% in tax credits.

    Florida isn’t the only state to turn away from tax incentives. Texas and Michigan have also recently cut back or ended the rebates altogether, because it’s difficult to prove a direct return on investment.

    Tourism and economic benefits are undeniable. For example, a 2015 study by the Monroe County Tourist Development Council on the economic impact of the first season of “Bloodline” revealed a combined film production and tourist spending of $95.4 million, the creation of 1,738 jobs and an economic output of $158.7 million.

    There are also casual, unpredictable benefits. Edna Cadigal, the manager of Jimmy’s Eastside Diner in Miami, the restaurant where the climactic sequence of “Moonlight” takes place, says business has increased by 5 percent since the release of the movie in October — mostly from locals who want to sit in the same booth where the actors sat and take photos there.

    $650 million

    Florida’s estimated loss on film and TV work over the last three years

    But despite the perks, government isn’t budging. According to a study by Film Florida , a non-profit association that represents Florida’s entertainment industry, the state has lost out on more than $650 million in projects, 110,000+ hotel rooms and $1.8 billion in economic impact over the last three years, due to the shrinkage of production work here.

    In October, the production equipment camera/lighting company ARRI Rental closed its Fort Lauderdale office after 14 years serving the South Florida film and TV industry — and opened a new one in Atlanta. Cineworks Digital Studios, a post-production outfit in Miami that became the first U.S. film laboratory to be certified by Kodak ImageCare in 2009, relocated its Miami office to Louisiana in 2015.

    Small businesses are being squeezed, too.

    Juan Carlos Alvarez is the owner of Trade Audio, a 27-year-old Miami company that sells, rents and repairs walkie-talkies. Alvarez says business was booming from 1994-2005, when he provided on-set communication gear for the crews of the movies “True Lies,” “Ace Ventura: Pet Detective,” “There’s Something About Mary” and “Any Given Sunday.”

    Today, he’s had to get creative in order to keep his doors open, since his business has dropped more than 50%. “If I only relied on film work, I’d be closed right now,” he says. “We’ve had to adopt other strategies outside of movies and become more aggressive in doing repairs for other companies and working with other vendors.”

    Gary Ackerman founded his security company G-Force Protective Services and Training Academy in Miami in 2009 and was hired soon after by a small crew shooting a low-budget film in Fort Lauderdale.

    “I was told when you do a good job in the movie industry, your name gets passed around and you’ll be the person everyone relies on,” Ackerman says.

    It proved to be true. Security gigs on movies and TV shows such as “Rock of Ages,” “Pain and Gain,” “Magic City,” “The Glades” and “Graceland” brought in so much work that in 2013, Ackerman had a staff of 200 full-time security guards billing 4,000-5,000 work hours per week.

    Today he’s down to 20 part-time guards. “I’m hard-pressed just to get them 40-hour work weeks.”

    Dominoes falling

    The erosion of Miami’s film industry carries another troubling side-effect: The irreplaceable loss of crews and talent with deep experience.

    Molly Rogers, the Emmy-award winning costume designer who worked on “The Devil Wears Prada,” HBO’s “Sex and the City” and its two spin-off movies and “Ballers,” was relaxing at her apartment on the Venetian Causeway when she got a call from the Atlanta crew of the two “The Hunger Games: Mockingjay” pictures. They needed 1,000 fur coats to dress extras for a big crowd scene and asked if she could fly to New York to buy them.

    “I told them there was no point in going to New York and that I could do it from here,” says Rogers, who hopped on U.S. 1 and drove north from Miami to Palm Beach. “I stopped at every vintage and consignment shop that was on my little map I took off the Internet.” The film producers were so happy, they hired her for a nine-week gig to help out with the shoot.

    But although she says she longs to be home in Miami, Rogers has been working in Atlanta since August on the FOX TV series “Star” by “Empire” producer Lee Daniels.

    “The entertainment industry is all about relationships and connections,” she says. “You get work from recommendations by people you’ve worked with. And you’re starving if you’re trying to stay in South Florida. You have to be like a migrant worker — go where the work is. And that means being away from your family and missing your kid’s school play.”

    FLORIDA IS LOSING SOMETHING INCREDIBLE BY KILLING A MAJOR INDUSTRY.

    Veteran sound mixer Mark Weber

    Chris Ranung, president of the Florida film-technician union IATSE Local 477, says the current number of his members who are Miami Dade County residents is at 198 — down from 245 two years ago — and continuing to fall.

    “We have a serious talent drain happening,” he says. “We’re not just losing workers; we’re also losing top talent who can teach and mentor and bring the next generation along, so when people come here to film, we have crews. To work in this industry requires a long apprenticeship, and when we lose the production designers and coordinators, that’s going to hurt our industry for years to come.”

    Ranung is also the chair of the Congress of Motion Picture Associations of Florida (COMPASS), which is preparing a bill that would establish a direct investment program for Florida film production that doesn’t rely on tax incentives of any kind.

    Miami-Dade Office of Film and Entertainment commissioner Sandy Lighterman is also working on a program, which she hopes to have before the city commission by summer, to attract movie and TV productions to the city.

    But even productions in which Miami plays a starring role can’t film here, because financiers won’t sign off on the higher costs..

    Take “Deep City,” a new music-heavy dramatic series announced at the NATPE convention in Miami Beach last month. The show, which is being developed by Tandem Productions and sold internationally by StudioCanal, would be created and written by former Miami Herald staff writer Juan Carlos Coto, who currently oversees El Rey Network’s horror-western “From Dusk Till Dawn.” and executive-produced by two Oscar winners, screenwriter Callie Khouri (of the 1991 film “Thelma & Louise”) and music producer/songwriter T Bone Burnett.

    Tandem CEO Rola Bauer told the Herald at the time of the announcement that the show, which was inspired by her visits to Miami to attend NATPE, would be filmed on location here. But Lighterman says that probably won’t happen.

    “They will shoot some stuff here, because they have to, but it will be second-unit [exteriors and establishing shots],” she says. “The rest is going to be done in Georgia. [The producers] even asked me to introduce them to the Savannah film commissioner, which of course I did because you want to build those relationships. They will do the interiors and some of the exteriors there. They said ‘If you get something, we want to come here, but if you don’t, we can’t make the dollars work, especially when the studios are saying go where the incentives are.’”

    Big-budget film producer Randall Emmett (“Silence,” “Lone Survivor”), a Miami native and New World School of the Arts graduate, says what is happening to Florida’s film industry is a “tragedy.”

    “I always tell people you can make almost any kind of movie in Florida, because it’s a great location state — it can look like 30 different places,” he says. “But my investors don’t allow us to shoot in non-incentive driven states.

    “If you have a $20 million budget and you go to the proper place, your budget becomes $15 million. Then you sell off foreign rights. If you don’t have incentives, then the financiers have to recoup the difference.”

      “Vandal” director Jose Daniel “Jaydee” Freixas and cinematographer Caleb Heyman shoot a scene in Little Havana in December 2016.Jayme Gershen

    Low-budget productions such as “Moonlight” are still trickling in. Writer-director Jose Daniel Freixas and producer Tony Gonzalez shot “Vandal,” a drama about a Miami graffiti artist, in December and January, using Art Basel events as a backdrop. A lot of the crew members who worked on the film, which was not a union production, have already moved out of Miami but came back for the sake of the movie.

    Gonzalez says that despite the limited budget, it was important to shoot “Vandal” in Miami.

    “We really wanted to show the city from a side that’s never been shown,” he says. “We have an unwritten rule in this movie that we’ll have no shots of the ocean. And we wanted to capture the true grit and soul of Miami. We wouldn’t have the performances we got if the actors weren’t being exposed to the hodgepodge of personalities here.”

    For their follow-up project, Freixas and Gonzalez are developing a drama with Paramount Pictures about the Cuban Mafia, with Benicio Del Toro in talks to star. The budget could be as high as $100 million. They already know they won’t be shooting it in Miami.

    Bleeding talent

    Mark Weber, 68, has been on film sets since the early 1980s, working his way up from running cables and handling boom mics on “Days of Thunder” and “Cocoon: The Return” to being the sound mixer on the 2005 Wes Craven airplane thriller “Red Eye,” the Jim Carrey-Ewan McGregor 2009 comedy “I Love You Philip Morris,” the 2012 musical “Step Up Revolution” and TV’s “The Vampire Diaries,” which is currently airing its final season.

    But after his current gig as sound mixer on “Bloodline” is done, he’s considering relocating from his current home in Palmetto Bay.

    “My wife keeps asking me why I don’t retire and find a hobby — something I like doing,” he says. “But I’m already doing that! I’m probably more adaptable than most, because I don’t have to worry about making a lot of money. But my wife is looking at houses in Savannah, because there’s a $2,000 incentive for film crews to move there. Florida is losing something incredible by killing a major industry.”

    Gregory Shepherd, the dean of the school of communication at the University of Miami, says he was forced to launch a Semester in Los Angeles program in order to allow film students the opportunity to spend time on film and TV sets, because the opportunities in Miami have dried up.

    “I wish we had the opportunity to access those out-of-classroom experiences here locally, but it’s so hard,” he says. “The loss of the industry here means educational opportunities are lost too, becauss students can’t get internships on productions or develop collaborative relationships.

    “The state worries all the time about the loss of tech talent to Boston and Silicon Valley. But we don’t seem to worry about losing these amazing writers, producers, and directors. I have students who, if they had a choice, would stay and work here after graduation. Now they have to move elsewhere to practice their craft.”

    WE HAVE PEOPLE HERE WHO HAVE WORKED ON MOVIES FOR MORE THAN 30 YEARS. BUT ALL THIS KNOW-HOW IS SLOWLY TRICKLING AWAY AND WE’RE GOING TO BE LEFT WITH NOTHING.

    Makeup artist Claudia Pascual

    Graham Winick, film and event production manager for the City of Miami Beach, is helping Film Florida develop a proposal, called the Education Retention Bill, that would offer a 5-20 percent reimbursement to any film, TV or digital media project in which one of the key primary roles — actor, writer, director, producer — was filled by a graduate of a Florida university.

    The modest program would have a cap of $500,000 per project. But Winick, who served as president of Film Florida in 2010 when the state tax incentive program was approved, believes it’s enough to lure smaller projects to the state.

    “When they do their balance sheets, most producers ultimately aren’t looking for the best incentive,” he says. “It’s about having something, so they don’t look bad to their investors. We have more film and digital media education programs than any other state. We have two of the top 20-ranked film schools in the country, Florida State University and Ringling College of Art and Design. We collectively invest $500 million a year in Florida Prepaid programs and Bright Futures Scholarships.

    “But we’re effectively investing to educate and fine-tune another state’s work force, because when these students graduate, there are no incubator jobs for them to start with, so they move to California or Georgia to start their careers. That makes no economic sense. This is a high-paying, future economy workforce that we should be cultivating and retaining.”

    Back in the day

    Jennifer Radzikowski, a longtime Miami location scout who served as production manager for “Moonlight,” says she was lucky that when she graduated from UM in the 1990s, the local film industry was thriving. She worked with director Mike Nichols on “The Birdcage,” Sydney Pollack on “Random Hearts” and Bob Rafelson on “Blood and Wine,” among others.

    “I had my choice of A-list directors to work with,” she says. “They were coming to Miami and shooting full-length feature films, which is different than the trend today. Everybody I know that’s tried and true and are real artists in the industry have relocated. We’ve lost such a dear industry here.”

    Although she keeps a home in Miami, Radzikowski says at least 60 percent of her work in the last three years has been out of town.

    And not all of Miami’s film industry workers can move to where the work is. Makeup artist Claudia Pascual, who graduated from music videos and commercials into feature films, has been in the industry for 28 years. She says she is able to travel for work — such as two months in Boston and Detroit working on director Kathryn Bigelow’s still-untitled drama about the 1967 riots, or Hawaii for last year’s comedy “Mike and Dave Need Wedding Dates” — because her husband holds down the fort while she’s away.

    But she’s unable to relocate permanently because her son is attending college here and her mother and handicapped sister, who live five blocks away, rely on her assistance.

    “Every time a crew comes here from New York and L.A., they are surprised by how professional we are,” she says. “We have people here who have worked on movies for more than 30 years. We know how to work with the elements here. We know how to handle humidity. We know which products work here. You can’t used a water-based foundation in Miami. But all this know-how is slowly trickling away and we’re going to be left with nothing.”

      Director Michael Bay and actor Mark Wahlberg on the set of “Pain and Gain,” a $26 million production shot in Miami in 2013.Robert Zuckerman

    Filmmaker Brett Ratner, a Miami Beach native whose RatPac Entertainment has co-produced movies such as “Sully,” “Suicide Squad” and “The Revenant,” says he might have never pursued a Hollywood career if there hadn’t been film production in town when he was growing up.

    “When I was a kid I would skip school and go to the sets of ‘Scarface’ and ‘Miami Vice,’” he says. “Watching them filming made me feel like that was something I could do, because I saw it happening with my own eyes. I probably would have ended up becoming a radiologist like my grandfather instead.

    “Florida is one of the greatest states for filming and production, not only because of the scenic nature of the state but because of the quality of below-the-line talent that is very experienced and lives there. Once you take that away, it eliminates the possibility of other young people being influenced and inspired.”

    Read more here: http://www.miamiherald.com/news/business/biz-monday/article130883349.html#storylink=cpy

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    Youtube Spaces Creator Workshops Comes To M3 Studios

    Youtube Spaces Miami was held at M3 Studios!

     

    When Youtube Spaces, Google’s creators outreach initiative was searching for a Miami location to hold a pop-up version of their permanent spaces they turned to us to accommodate them. Naturally, we were eager to open our doors to them, as we’ve been a staple in the South Florida filming community since 2003 and know the market very well.

     

    YouTube: Learn; Share and Create.

    To accommodate all the activities that took place for Youtube Space Miami, three studios facilitated the action throughout the 3-day workshop.

     

    Allowing content creators full use of M3 Studios filming facilities, which included professional television sets in which Youtube content creators had full use of to film their own content on. Our large Stage C production studio, with its giant white cyclorama, was the perfect backdrop to host a suite of panels and workshops ranging from maximizing video engagement on the content platform to learning best practices while using the Youtube platform for your content. Our four-corner giant cyclorama studio was perfect for filming music performances for Youtube music.

    Panels included:

    • Live Recording Sessions
    • Red Camera Workshops
    • Artist / Label Music Workshops
    • Songwriters Workshop
    • Songwriters Masterclass

     

    The 3-day panels ended the only way a Miami event could end, with a wrap party of course.

    The perfect place for guest to mingle, network with music artist, managers, record label executives, content networks, and digital advertising executives. Food trucks, popsicles, and drinks made the rounds throughout the party.

    Enjoy the pictures:[/sm_column_text][/vc_column][/vc_row]

    Florida’s Film and TV Industry Is In A Free-Fall, & Why This Matters

    KOCH BROTHERS & LOBBYIST KILLING FLORIDA FILM BUSINESS

    The following is an extremely eye-opening article by Deadline that explains exactly why the Florida Film & Television industry is cratering. This matters not only to those that work in the entertainment industry but all Floridians’s as there are numerous consequences as a result. From jobs being depleted, the downturn in expenditure in ancillary services the film businesss used ie. craft services, lumber, hotel rentals, paint, car rentals, etc……all the way to new film graduates moving to other states and re-contributing into the state that used tax dollars to send them to college in the first place! It’s a dizzying display of a ripple effect this will have for years to come! It will take years to recover and recoup from the loss of professionals and infrastructure the state is bleeding out!

    READ and prepare to pull your hair out in disgust!

    _______________

    Florida’s film and TV industry is in a free-fall after the state scrapped its film incentives program earlier this year. Productions are leaving, vendors are fleeing, and workers are moving to Georgia in the wake of a concerted and well-financed campaign by the billionaire Koch brothers and their conservative allies in the state legislature to kill the Sunshine State’s incentives. It’s an exodus of epic proportions, but if a movie were ever to be made about it, it would probably have to be shot in Georgia.

    “The industry here is one step away from dead,” said Fred Moyse, business manager of IATSE Local 477, which represents film crews in southern Florida. “We’ve lost a third of our members. It’s been devastating to the men and women who work in this industry, and crippling to the small businesses that support it.”

    “The loss of incentives has hurt everyone in the industry,” said Miami-based casting director Ellen Jacoby. “It’s hurt the casting directors, the talent agencies, the actors, and the vendors. It’s hurt people paying their mortgages, and so many support businesses. It’s hurt the local markets and gas stations and lumber stores. It’s hurt so many people.”

    In 2006, Florida’s film commission boasted that the state, once dubbed “Hollywood East,” was “the third-largest filmmaking state in the nation” – behind only California and New York. “We were always No. 3,” Jacoby lamented. “Everyone wanted to come to Florida to film. Now we’re not in the top 20.”

    ARRI Rental, one of the industry’s leading suppliers of camera, grip and lighting equipment, is closing its Florida office at the end of the month due to a lack of production in the state. “The continued lack of funding for the state’s film production tax incentive program and the subsequent decline in business creates a very challenging environment and unfortunately there is no alternative option,” the company told its customers recently. “As productions move freely to take advantage of the best economic environments, our rental business must likewise be flexible and responsive to remain successful. All subsequent ARRI Rental projects shooting in the state will be serviced by our Atlanta office.”

    “The office is closing because the business went away,” said ARRI VP Ed Stramm, who opened the company’s Florida outpost 14 years ago. “It’s gone dead. It just went away. It was a political move by the legislature to cancel all incentives, including the film incentives. It’s devastated the industry. Every technician I know is now in Atlanta. The entire infrastructure is moving out. Every one of my competitors in the camera world is affected. There’s nothing driving the business. It’s a bad time for the film industry in Florida right now.”

    The state’s incentives program was launched on July 1, 2010, and ended on June 30, 2016. The Florida legislature initially allocated $242 million in tax credits for the program; it added an additional $12 million in 2011, and another $42 million in 2012, for a total of $296 million – less than California spends in one year on film incentives.

    Since 2012, however, the state’s Republican-dominated House of Representatives – with the backing of the Koch brothers – refused to allocate any more money for the program, and it ran out of money last year.

    “We were, by and large, the only organization in the state arguing against those incentives, and we’ve been doing it for the last four years,” said Andres Malave, communications director for the Florida branch of Americans for Prosperity, the Koch brothers’ ultra-conservative lobbying group, which is ideologically opposed to all forms of incentives that target specific industries. “It’s not the government’s role to pick winners and losers. The film industry is an important part of the economy, but the legislature should implement policies that benefit businesses across the board.”

    AFP was founded in 2004 with funding from David and o-owners of Koch Industries, and younger brother David serves as chairman of the AFP Foundation, a separate tax-exempt outreach organization.

    “The Kochs helped finance the organization from the early onset,” Malave told Deadline. “We’ve grown since we were founded in 2004, and more than 100,000 other individuals have donated, and the Kochs were certainly a big part of that.”

    A spokesman for Koch Industries did not respond to Deadline’s request for comments on this story.

    Data compiled by the Florida Secretary of State’s office shows that over the past three election cycles, Koch Industries has made the maximum allowable campaign contributions to more than 50 members of the Florida House who opposed the incentives, while Americans for Prosperity actively campaigns against those who support tax credits.

    In a heated Florida Senate hearing last year, Sen. Nancy Detert took AFP lobbyist Skyler Zander to task for targeting her because of her support of tax incentives. “I appreciate the mail-outs that you do against me on a monthly basis that say I give money to Hollywood moguls, which, of course, I don’t have any money to give, and neither does the state of Florida give money to Hollywood moguls,” she told him. “You’re all on the Koch brothers’ payroll. Good for you. I’m glad you’re all employed. I hope you’re getting paid a lot of money to show up to these meetings and say meaningless things. Obviously you’re for prosperity for yourself and not anyone else. You people serve absolutely no purpose.”

    There are currently no major feature films shooting in Florida. Two recent films –Gifted and Live By Night – that are set in the Tampa area were shot in Georgia to take advantage of that state’s generous incentives.

    “Those were two big ones we lost in the last year,” said Tony Armer, head of the St. Petersburg/Clearwater film commission. “They came multiple times to scout the area, but with no state tax incentives, it didn’t happen.”

    Gifted, starring Chris Evans and Octavia Spencer, is set in St. Petersburg but filmed in Savannah. And Ben Affleck’s Live By Night found it cheaper to re-create an entire Tampa neighborhood in Georgia rather than film in the actual Tampa neighborhood.

    That stands in sharp contrast to recent comments made by Richard Corcoran, speaker-designate of Florida’s Republican-dominated House of Representatives. Corcoran, who calls incentives “corporate welfare” and “de facto socialism,” is one of the leaders of the conservative legislature’s anti-incentives crusade. Up for re-election next month, he received the maximum $1,000 contribution from Koch Industries – out of the nearly $312,000 he’s raised so far – and another $1,000 in 2014.

    Last month, he and Jose Oliva, who’s already designated to succeed Corcoran as Florida House speaker in 2018, were awarded the Americans for Prosperity’s highest honor – the Washington Award, which is given to those “who not only stand for the group’s values, but make progress toward policies that spread economic freedom and prosperity.” Like Corcoran, Oliva’s election campaigns received the maximum $1,000 contribution from Koch Industries in 2014 and 2015.

    In August, Corcoran and Oliva were among the 46 Florida House members who the AFP named “Champions of Economic Freedom” – all but 10 of whom have received maximum campaign contributions from Koch Industries over the last three election cycles.

    Speaking last week at the Texas Public Policy Foundation, Corcoran described how the House Republicans stood firm against film incentives. “We said no to tax incentives for film. And guess what? Every Hollywood producer came and said, ‘We’ll pull our…’ ” he said, trailing off before he finished saying they threatened to pull productions out of the state. “They film in the Keys; they film in Miami,” he continued. “Haven’t lost one. Every single one of them said they’re staying, and the reason is because you can’t re-duplicate the Keys in Oklahoma.”

    Perhaps not in Oklahoma, but the setting of any film can be changed or re-created in another state, as the producers of Live By Night can attest. Or in the case of Netflix’s Bloodline, which is actually shooting in the Florida Keys, they can just call it quits after three seasons. HBO’s Ballers may soon be shooting elsewhere, although HBO said that expects that “some component” of the show’s third season will remain in the state.

    “The Florida film incentive was a key factor when deciding to set up the production ofBallers in Miami,” an HBO spokesperson told Deadline. “With the incentive no longer available, we have begun evaluating the best way to serve Season 3, including an option to remain in Miami. Whatever the final decision, we believe some component of the series will be shot in Florida.”

    The loss of those two shows – if it comes to that – would even further decimate the state’s film and TV industry.

    An analysis by Film Florida, a trade association that promotes the state’s entertainment industry, found that Florida has suffered $650 million in “known lost opportunities” and $1.8 billion in “potential positive impact on state GDP” because dozens films and TV shows that said they wanted to shoot in Florida went somewhere else because of the lack of incentives.

    “I’m a producer here in Florida, and I’ve always made a decent and fantastic living, but I’m no longer doing that here because we no longer have film incentives,” said Elayne Keratis, who produced the TV series South Beach and co-produced Burn Notice in the state.

    Special-effects coordinator Bruce Merlin, whose Merlin Production Solutions created mechanical special effects in South Florida for more than 30 years, closed his shop in Dania Beach three months ago and moved to Atlanta. “I was born in Miami and started on Miami Vice – the TV show, not the movie,” he laughed. “But I gave up and moved to Georgia, sad to say.”

    “We’ve probably lost 90% of the stunt people here,” said veteran stuntwoman Rosie Bernhard. “Without the incentives, they’re just not going to shoot here. They really did a number on us. We went from No. 3 in the country, to I don’t know if we even have a number anymore.”

    The state still offers a sales tax exemption on the purchase or lease of certain items used exclusively in film and TV productions, and several local film commissions offer hotel discounts and grants to encourage filming there, which is how The Infiltrator, starring Bryan Cranston – which filmed mostly in London – and Tim Burton’s Miss Peregrine’s Home For Peculiar Children – which filmed mostly in England and Belgium – each ended up shooting for a week or two in the Tampa area.

    Almost everyone agrees that the state’s now-defunct film incentives program was seriously flawed. A 2015 report by the Florida Office of Economic & Demographic Research found that in its first three years, the incentives had a return on investment of only 43 cents for every tax-dollar spent to fund them – although notably, this did not take into account other economic and tourism benefits that filming brings with it. And because the incentives were doled out on a first-come-first-served basis, no preference was given to projects that might create the most jobs or produce the greatest economic impact.

    That’s how 20 video games got more than 17% of all the incentives – more than $50 million of the entire $296 million awarded over the five-year life of the program – while creating only 3.8% of the jobs, according to the OED report.

    In the last year of the program, five Madden NFL video games got more than $21 million in tax incentives – more than the feature film Dolphin Tale 2 ($5 million) and the entire first seasons of Bloodline ($8 million) and Ballers ($6.8 million) combined. Video game NBA Live got more than $7 million; PGA Golf Tour got $3.2 million;Tiger Woods PGA Tour got $2.2 million, and NCAA Live got $2.9. And like Madden NFL, they’re all produced by EA Sports out of its studios in Orlando.

    Interactive websites, meanwhile, got nearly 2% of all incentives ($5.8 million) but only created 0.15% of the jobs. All of that money went to one company – Orlando-based Golf Channel. Digital media projects also proved a waste of taxpayers’ dollars, creating less than 1% of the jobs but receiving 3.5% of all the incentives.

    Projects that created the most jobs – TV series and feature films – received a disproportionately lower percentage of the incentives. Nineteen “high impact” TV series like Ballers, Bloodline, Charlie’s Angels, and The Glades accounted for nearly 45% of the jobs created but received only 31% of the incentives. TV pilots, meanwhile, accounted for nearly 4% of the jobs created but received less than 1.3% of the tax subsidies. Forty-five theatrical motion pictures created 14.4% of the jobs but got only 11.2% of the incentives.

    But instead of trying to fix the incentives program, AFP, the Koch brothers and the Florida legislature decided to kill it, along with the thousands of jobs it created – not just for film industry veterans in the state, but for graduates of Florida’s film schools as well.

    “The loss of incentives has dried the business up,” said longtime South Florida marine coordinator Ricou Browning. “It’s dwindled down to next to nothing. A lot of the people in the industry have had to move to Georgia. I don’t know if the next generation of filmmakers from this state will be able to have the same advantages I had. It was pretty steady work and we had a great infrastructure for decades, but now that infrastructure is leaving for other states. Kids are graduating from film schools at Florida State and the University of Miami, but without the business here, they don’t have the internships or the jobs when they get out of school. It’s just a sad state of affairs.”

    The business, he said, “is gone and it’s gone due to politics. The work goes where the dollar is. All these politicians are more concerned with their office rather than the people of this state. All those politicians should be voted out of office.”

    “We have third-generation industry people here who are now leaving the state to find work,” said talent agent Kelly Paige, president of Film Florida. “But the really sad thing is that we have two of the best film schools in the country here, and when students graduate, they have to leave the state. We’re educating them with our tax-payer money and they’re graduating and fleeing to California and Georgia. They’re leaving as soon as they get out of school. They’re not buying homes here; they’re not buying cars here. I’m sure that [California] Gov. Jerry Brown must be thrilled that our best young filmmakers are coming to California. It’s really a shame.”

    Those who aren’t leaving aren’t giving up. “The top priority for our industry is to come up with a program that works for Florida,” said John Lux, executive director of Film Florida. “Our goal is to sit with legislative leadership and work together on a program that helps the state and the industry by bringing companies and projects to Florida that hire Floridians, spend money in our communities and highlights our state as a tourist destination. We would hope those legislators that are against us would be open to collaboratively working something that helps everyone.”

    “We live in a global economy,” he said. “We’re no longer competing against our neighbors. We’re competing against the rest of the world. To sit back and say we’re not going to compete and expect the economy to grow is outdated thinking.”

    Filming has always been an international business, but tax incentives greatly expanded the globalization of the industry. The 1994 North American Free Trade Agreement that gave Canada a “cultural exemption” to subsidize its film and TV industry set off a flood of American productions heading north of the boarder to take advantage of 35% tax credits there. Other countries followed suit, luring productions to all corners of the globe with generous subsidies in the hope of bringing jobs and American dollars to their shores. Just this week, China became the latest country to join the tax incentives game, with the Wanda Group announcing it will offer 40% rebates to productions that film at its facilities in eastern China – by far the most generous incentives in the world.

    In an attempt to stem the flow of runaway production, or to create film communities where none existed before, dozens of states began to offer their own subsidies – programs that helped states like California, New York and Florida hold onto their well-established film colonies, and that helped create new ones in Georgia, Louisiana and New Mexico.

    But the rapid demise of the film industry in Florida after incentives were abandoned there shows just how fickle the industry can be, and how quickly it can pivot to follow the incentives being offered in other states and countries.

    Many in the Florida film industry are pinning their hopes on David Yates, CEO of Clearwater Marine Aquarium and producer of the Dolphin Tale movies, who’s working on a “new approach” to revive the state’s moribund film industry. “We are exploring some new business-oriented ideas that might be more acceptable to the Florida legislature,” he told Deadline. Yates declined to discuss specifics, but if it involves the word “incentives,” it’s almost certainly doomed – and the Florida film and TV industry along with it.

    “Incentives is a difficult word to use in Florida,” said Mike Miller, a Republican member of the state legislature who was targeted by Americans for Prosperity for his support of film incentives. “Their organization does a lot of good things, but they were frustrated with my support of incentives.” Even so, he vowed “to do everything I can to help the film industry here in Florida.”

    If r-eelected in November, he will no doubt be one of the state legislators that a coalition of industry workers and businesses will be reaching out to in an effort to save the states film and TV business.

    “Without a common sense approach to rebuilding this industry, Florida motion picture production will continue to decline to the point where it will be almost impossible to rebuild because the workforce and infrastructure will have entirely left the Sunshine State,” said Chris Ranung, president of IATSE Local 477 and chairman of the Congress of Motion Picture Associations of Florida, a nonprofit group representing industry workers and support businesses. “In the absence of additional tax credits, which we know will never be restored under the current legislature, there’s a critical need to develop a new program based on pragmatic business sense to reinvigorate Florida motion picture and television production.”

    How The Power-Broker Koch Brothers Are Killing The Florida Film Business

    Why Florida May Lose “Ballers and ‘Bloodline’ to Other State’s

    As part of Florida’s entertainment industry, we know all to well how it feels to work in the sunshine state. If it isn’t the CRA using Miami taxpayer funds to fund your competition it’s the Florida legislature taking away incentives which pushes production companies to look elsewhere to produce their shows. It’s about cost cutting, and if the show can be produced cheaper in another state than that’s exactly what will happen.

    and with each show, movie, commercial, production project lost, we also lose infrastructure, people power in the process.

    Read more

    Disney sends warning shots to Georgia that would impact filming in the state

    This has been a major news story in the world of entertainment and specifically in the area of productions. Movies, television shows and commercials are big business, and can yield significant monetary gains to the states and cities that attract these projects on a consistent basis. For Georgia that is currently being threatened by one of the biggest film studios in the industry, Disney. This has major implications, as you have a commercial entity stepping up for the rights of individual’s against state legislature that would discriminate against individuals some which happen to work in the entertainment industry.

    It short, they have said, we will not spend out money in discriminatory states.

    You can read the full news story below from Deadline’s 

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    Florida Legislature Allows the Entertainment Industry Financial Program to Sunset

    We wanted to share this film industry report pertinent to the state of Florida as the “Florida Legislature Sunsets on Entertainment Industry Financial Program” , its significant enough that we wanted to highlight it in our own news section

    The following is an excerpt from Film Florida Entertaintment Production Association.

    “As the 2016 Legislative Session comes to a close, Film Florida confirms that the Florida Legislature allowed the existing Entertainment Industry Financial Program to sunset after all efforts failed to pass an extension or a new bill. This marks four straight years that members of the legislature have refused to support a program that has numerous benefits, including job creation, economic development, and proven increases to tourism.

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    Thanks to SHOK Entertainment for redeveloping our website

    We wanted to take a second to thank our friends over at SHOK Entertainment a full service entertainment marketing firm, talent management, and consulting company helping us launch our brand new website for M3 Studios. We highly encourage you to reach out to them if your in the market for a new website, redeveloping your site or any digital services. Very easy to work with and made the whole process truly painless. Their knowledge and experience in the entertainment industry helped a lot in them understanding what our needs were for a web presence, the types of clients our studio services and how to bring that information on display. Plus they are a tenant of the facility!  Which ties in to our mantra of being a one-stop shop for multi-media projects, all of our partners are tenants within our structure that help us create this one-stop shop that will provide everything you need to produce a piece of music, a TV show, commercial, film. So wether your shooting a: commercial, music video, informercial; and need the photography, vehicles, studio space, post production, website and marketing collateral we have everything in house within the facility to facilitate bringing your project to life.

    Check out there full list of services.                                                                                                                                                   https://m3studiosmiami.com

    Tell them we referred you for a 10% discount on services.

    Filmed at M3: Pitbull – Celebrate (from the Original Motion Picture Penguins of Madagascar)

    Mr. International, aka, Mr. 305, aka Pitbull was back at M3 Studios Miami, to shoot the music video for “Celebrate”  from the Dreamwork’s original motion picture “Penguins of Madagascar”.

    Pitbull has made M3 Studios his official production home. Over the last several years we’ve hosted countless music video shoots for the international star, he always brings the heat to our facility.

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