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Dean Cain, Michael Miller on Trump’s plan to make Hollywood great again

Two people who know everything about Hollywood’s iconic film and internal labor in the television industry detail the very, very, very “difficult” tasks that President Donald Trump has to look back at La La Land’s legacy.

“It’s one of the things we export most from our country. It’s our culture. And that’s what we make, and the films we make.” “The fact that they made it very difficult for them to work in California is the biggest problem there,” the actor said.

“It’s very difficult and sad to see so many jobs leave there,” sounded Michael Miller, producer and production manager in the industry.

Shortly before Trump’s inauguration in January, he elected three envoys, John Voight, Mel Gibson and Sylvester Stallone, with the aim of promoting business in Hollywood.

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Actor Dean Kane and production manager Michael Miller have expressed support for Trump’s plan to turn Hollywood around. (Getty Images/Photo illustration)

“They will serve as special envoys to me with the aim of bringing Hollywood, which has lost so many business abroad in the past four years. Trump wrote about the true society at the time.

Now one of the Hollywood ambassadors, John Voight is preparing to bring his first pitch to the Trump administration, hoping to give towns and industries a “Maga” transformation. Voight’s manager Steven Paul told NBC News that the plan includes infrastructure investment incentives, vocational training and tax code operations, which will help bring back businesses that have gone abroad.

“Regulations and ridiculous policies make it almost impossible to film there, so everyone is running away,” Cain said. “All three legends on this advisory board, Jon Voight, Mel Gibson and Sylvester Stallone, will give cash to those who have otherwise been banished for being conservatives in Hollywood. I think that’s a great first step.”

“It’s going to be interesting,” the actor continued. “But I think it’s a tall job.”

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“Overregulation in California is wild, and now, when all of these states offer 30% incentives to capture and film industry in Georgia, Connecticut and other states, I was asking the governor four months ago to enact something simple.

“Now in California, four months in [is] Still talking about it, the very complicated formulas aren’t working on the many kinds of shows I’m doing. The producers revealed “unscripted alternative programming that makes up a large part of Hollywood’s output.”

A New York Times report released last month found that around 18,000 film and television jobs had “evaporated” from Hollywood over two years from 2022 to 2024.

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“It’s business,” Cain replied. “If your budget is very limited, it’s impossible to make a movie with numbers X, Y, Z. So look for the best deal.”

“I’ve filmed one film in California over the past five years, and I wrote, produced and directed it. It came out in ‘Little Angels’ by the way,” he said. “That’s exactly what it is. So they’re driving people out…it’s all about monetary policy and regulation.”

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Tracy Wright from Fox News contributed to this report.

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