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Hollywood Work Was Already Drying Up. Then the Fires Hit.


“Is this our get-out-of-jail-free card?,” the cinematographer Gabriel Patay, 40, said he wondered after he and his wife, a documentary producer, lost the home they spent nine years restoring.

“We are tied to this property, we are stuck in L.A.,” he has thought. “Should we leave?”

Patay is cleareyed that his insurance will not cover the cost of rebuilding. He and his wife are looking into mortgage deferment and recently applied for hardship status with their bank.

Job opportunities have not been robust either. Patay recently finished work on a documentary for Hulu, but described current job prospects as “bleak.” Now the couple is considering rebuilding their home, slowly over time, if they can somehow make the economics work.

Some have rethought their futures in other ways.

Madeline Power, a 32-year-old producer, had been just about ready to leave Los Angeles before the diaster.

With no work, the past 12 months had been “the worst financial year of my life,” she said, noting that she took odd jobs babysitting and cleaning. She felt, at times, like the city itself was rejecting her.

Then her house burned down. She found purpose using her skills as a producer to help raise money for her neighbors, and when people heard of her situation, some came to her with job leads. Now she, too, has $30,000 in donations — more money than she says she has ever had.

There is no question in Power’s mind. She is staying.

“L.A. caught me,” she said. “L.A. came and just showed up.”

John Koblin contributed reporting from New York and Alyce McFadden from Los Angeles.



As if things couldn’t get any worse, Hollywood work was already drying up for many in the entertainment industry. With productions halted, theaters closed, and events canceled, actors, crew members, and other industry professionals were left scrambling to find work.

And then, the fires hit.

As wildfires ravage through California, destroying homes, businesses, and natural landscapes, the effects on the entertainment industry are devastating. Studios and production companies are forced to evacuate, sets are destroyed, and filming locations are rendered unsafe.

For those who were already struggling to make ends meet, the fires have only added to the uncertainty and fear of an uncertain future. With no end in sight to the destruction, many in Hollywood are left wondering when – and if – they will ever be able to return to work.

As we come together to support those affected by the fires, let’s not forget the countless individuals in the entertainment industry who are facing yet another obstacle in an already challenging year. Our thoughts are with them as they navigate this difficult time.

Tags:

  1. Hollywood work
  2. Fires in Hollywood
  3. Entertainment industry
  4. California wildfires
  5. Hollywood job market
  6. Hollywood production
  7. Hollywood crisis
  8. Wildfires impact on Hollywood
  9. Hollywood employment
  10. Hollywood fires aftermath

#Hollywood #Work #Drying #Fires #Hit

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