Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Netflix executive touts ‘golden era’ of streaming service

- By Susan Montoya Bryan

ALBUQUERQU­E, N.M. » An executive with Netflix says the streaming giant has boosted its original content exponentia­lly over the last several years and that will mean more action for its production hub in New Mexico, where state officials have been busy trying to woo more big partners in the industry.

Nick Maniatis, who ran the state’s film office before going to work for Netflix, spoke to a group of hundreds of business leaders and elected officials who were gathered Thursday in Albuquerqu­e. He described it as a “golden era,” saying the amount of content that’s out there is amazing.

“A year ago you could say all the major studios — take Disney, Warner Bros., Paramount, Fox, all of them combined — would do about 300 or 400 projects a year. This year, we will do 1,000 projects, just Netflix,” he said.

The pace of production is showing no signs of slowing down as Disney and others are planning new products. Maniatis said that will surely lead to a dearth of sound stages.

That’s where New Mexico

is hoping to fill the void.

It’s already home to Netflix’s first U.S. production hub. The company partnered with the state and the city of Albuquerqu­e in purchasing a studio complex on the city’s southern edge, pledging to invest $1 billion in production in the state over the next decade. It has put more than $2 million into renovating the studios so far and its offices there are expected to be complete by the end of the month.

“We have a lot more to bring to New Mexico,” Maniastis said, teasing about some new developmen­ts. “I can’t really tell you about it other than to say we’re really pushing forward into the future with how production will be done. We’ve got some really innovate ways to do it and we’re going to do a lot of that here in New Mexico.”

The company also says it’s on track with meeting spending and employment benchmarks promised as part of the partnershi­p with the state. Netflix and state officials are planning to announce the progress in the coming weeks.

NBC Universal is in midst of turning a warehouse near downtown Albuquerqu­e into a state-ofthe art television and film studio. It has committed to spending $500 million on production­s in the state over the next decade.

Both NBC Universal and Netflix also plan to put money each year toward film industry training initiative­s.

Alicia J. Keyes, secretary of the New Mexico Economic Developmen­t Department, is just back from Los Angeles where she met with another company interested in coming to New Mexico. She said the state has shifted the conversati­on from one-off shows to partnershi­ps with studios that can make longterm commitment­s to being in the state and keeping the establishe­d crew base working.

“Hollywood is finally like, ‘Wow, what’s going on here and how are they doing this?’ So we are on the map I think in a way that we never have been before,” she said Friday in an interview.

State officials tout changes in the film incentive program for the uptick in production­s and interest over the past six months. Netflix is among those to benefit from the program, though Keyes said it will take some time for the state to calculate the total amount of incentives and the economic impact of the work done since the legislatio­n took effect in July.

In all, there have been about 80 to 85 production­s in 2019, according to the state film office.

The state is projecting direct spending by the industry of about $530 million for the current fiscal year.

 ?? SUSAN MONTOYA BRYAN, FILE - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? This 2018 file photo shows the entrance to ABQ Studios in Albuquerqu­e, N.M., where Netflix announced at the studio complex that it chose Albuquerqu­e as a new production hub. An executive with Netflix says the streaming giant has boosted its original content exponentia­lly over the last several years and that will mean more action for its production hub in New Mexico. The head of North American production policy for Netflix spoke Thursday, Dec. 5, to hundreds of business leaders who were gathered in Albuquerqu­e, saying that Netflix alone had 1,000project­s going this year, with many based in New Mexico.
SUSAN MONTOYA BRYAN, FILE - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS This 2018 file photo shows the entrance to ABQ Studios in Albuquerqu­e, N.M., where Netflix announced at the studio complex that it chose Albuquerqu­e as a new production hub. An executive with Netflix says the streaming giant has boosted its original content exponentia­lly over the last several years and that will mean more action for its production hub in New Mexico. The head of North American production policy for Netflix spoke Thursday, Dec. 5, to hundreds of business leaders who were gathered in Albuquerqu­e, saying that Netflix alone had 1,000project­s going this year, with many based in New Mexico.

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