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Chris Dodd

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When It Comes to Jobs: Movies Matter

Posted: 09/08/11 05:37 PM ET

When President Obama speaks tonight, America's creative community will, like all Americans, watch and listen and hope that our leaders will come together, help correct the course, and set our economy back on the right track. And, like workers and businesses in every sector, the creative community knows the importance of putting this nation's economy back on its feet and Americans back to work.

We have a long and storied history of promoting and practicing what is great -- and what is possible -- in our nation, and we are confident that the men and women who make American movies, television shows, and other creations will be part of the ultimate solution.

While people are familiar with the big screen and the red carpet; the Oscars and the Hollywood sign, they might not be aware of what the American creative film and television community means in terms of jobs. In a struggling economy that has 9% unemployment, the U.S. film and television industry stands out as a unique and worthy asset to the American economy. We have weathered hard times and grown while keeping our products affordable and creating new jobs in every region of the country.

Over 2.2 million Americans are employed as a result of film and television production. Those jobs result in $137 billion dollars in wages to hard working, mostly middle class, men and women each year. These jobs are not just in California and New York. Motion picture and television production occurs in ALL 50 states; states such as Louisiana, Pennsylvania, Georgia, New Mexico, Utah and my home state of Connecticut. In many of these states, infrastructure is being built to support production and local workforces of skilled technicians are developing.

And when production comes to a local community it means business not only for those whose work centers on film and TV, but for caterers, hotels, dry cleaners, and lumber yards too. These businesses are local and, time and time again, plow the money they make directly back into their communities, generating even more returns from local production. Vendors and suppliers, predominantly small businesses, earn over $38 billion in payments annually from the film and television industry.

Films and television series produced in America are also a leading export and help the United States remain competitive around the globe. For the three-year period of 2007 to 2009, the production industry generated a $36.4 billion trade surplus.

The coming year will bring a great debate about the best, most cost-effective way to produce new jobs and protect those we now have. Our voice in this debate will be clear: the craft of making films and television series is clearly worthy of our efforts to protect jobs here at home and to grow even more as the economy recovers. While America's creative film and television community is indeed thriving, the global economic downturn remains a serious challenge today -- and an inescapable threat in the future -- to us, as it does to most American businesses.

Further, the threat posed by theft of the products we create, by thieves both foreign and domestic, is real and has a direct impact on the millions of jobs created by our community. When people steal film or television, it is these workers that suffer.

Fewer jobs are created and health and pension benefits are harmed. Strong protections for intellectual property will help sustain a craft that historically and consistently makes such a valued contribution to America's economy.

So while our leaders in Washington spar over how best to resolve this crisis, we can never lose sight of the enormous good film and television production brings to our country and to our people -- a source of well-paying jobs for hardworking men and women, of valuable trading opportunities, of astonishing technological innovation, and of stories that endure forever.

 
 
 

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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Ohin Gaston
01:27 PM on 09/09/2011
Really the TV and Movie industry need to be saved. Before public workers.Teachers, police, firefighters, on and on and on. But the 2.2 mil people and 137 billion that go to them needs to be saved!?

I think your gonna be ok! I think the rest of the occupations in America deserve the SuperStar status now!
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MikeDu
Both salubrious and lugubrious concurrently.
11:59 AM on 09/09/2011
Lets hope Dodd isn't lobbying for tax breaks for the movie industry. Boston give tax breaks for movie production. Production companies import their own crews, import the actors, tie up street trafic and disrupt 'real' business then leave. Thats a lot of disruption fo a few extra minimum wage food catering jobs.
03:30 AM on 09/10/2011
Importing actors is for selling the movie overseas. One French actor sells it to the audience in France, a German for the German market and so on. If there wer only American actors in a movie most overseas audiences would not relate to it, because most people do not ask what the movie is about but who's in it. I personally don't like that, but that is irrelevant.

The import must be in the cast, because that is what the audience sees. The crew is invisible. Without any import the film might not get any overseas sales at all and goes into a package that is sold at a discount.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ndem
04:16 AM on 09/09/2011
So this was what he was waiting for head of the MPAA...yikes.
US TV shows are NOT the best way to export US Culture.
We are better than that.
Supporting jobs IS a great thing.
But please do not go lowest common denominator on us fooling us that this is what we do best.
It's humiliating to America.
05:26 AM on 09/09/2011
ndem, I just read a comment about women filmmakers that you posted months ago & would love a chat if you have a minute. Have no idea how to contact you directly for a conversation, if you'd like to, so here's my Twitter address: @devt. Hoping to hear from you!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ndem
09:45 AM on 09/09/2011
Will be in touch. I draw the line between tv & film...but also think we need to be more honest about what "culture" means! Interesting recent article on fewer women writers in television:www.aoltv.com/2011/09/08/women-television-producers-decline/
The problem is the corporate part has taken over and what we claim in "culture" we are exporting is actually a product like any other.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
02:44 AM on 09/09/2011
Part of the connected elite as such I don't believe or care about anything he says.
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Hugo Stiglitz1
11:48 PM on 09/08/2011
Chris Dodd has now confirmed that he is a blatant liar and willing to sell out his principles for about a million bucks a year. Just months ago, he announced that he would not, under any condition, take a lobbying job. And here it is, just a month or so after he left the Senate and he's confirmed that he's taken the top job at the MPAA, an organization, who just a week ago admitted its number one priority was lobbying the government. Of course, Dodd is also using a loophole to get around the laws that forbid Senators from jumping to lobbying jobs so quickly after leaving the Senate. On top of that, in announcing this, he also talked up the importance of increasing our already draconian copyright laws, with views that appear to contrast to what he said back when he was a Senator and claimed he supported internet freedom. I guess that million dollar plus per year salary eases the conscience.
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muysuave41
Olive Oil Producer
01:29 AM on 09/09/2011
Excellent post. Believe it or not the movie industry could sell more movies if their copyright restrictions were not so onerous. Try to watch any American movies overseas that are streamed from US retailers (e.g. Netflix) and you can't because of the movie industries crazy ideas about copyright. They are losing a big share of revenue.
11:17 PM on 09/08/2011
Settling in nicely to your new lobbying I see. A crowd I'm sure you can feel comfortable with and you no longer need to pretend to be a democrat.
06:48 PM on 09/08/2011
Support returning copyright terms to less then the expected life of the creator of the work, stop supporting draconian protection measures that make legal content hard to play or hard to take fair use advantage of (region coding anyone?), and I'll be much more sympathetic to calls to protect media.

Foreign bootleggers are the real threat, not domestic consumers.
PaulArt
Under 50 and Screwed by the 65+
05:30 PM on 09/08/2011
Chris Dodd was Chairman of the Senate Committee on Banking 2007-11. The United States Senate Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs (formerly the Committee on Banking and Currency). has jurisdiction over matters related to: banks and banking. As Chairman Chris Dodd signed off, championed and supported TARP, was instrumental in watering down and weakening the Dodd-Frank bill named after him. Dodd-Frank was supposed to prevent another 2007 crash. The consensus opinion today is that it did nothing except set up a bunch of committees to go into issues we already know about. By handing off the actual writing of legislation to committees it enables the Banking Lobby to heavily influence the legislation under the cover of darkness.

Here is a quote from the Christian Science Monitor about Chris Dodd:"...Since 1989, 36 of Dodd's top 50 donors have been Wall Street investment firms or insurance companies, according to data from the Center for Responsive Politics. They gave almost $5 million in donations over that period "

We need to hear from Chris Dodd about movies producing jobs?
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aceshigh11
Nowhere is the dreamer or the misfit so alone
05:40 PM on 09/08/2011
Good post.

Dodd is a corporate h.a.c.k. who masqueraded as a liberal for decades. I'm glad he's no longer my Senator.