
Producing Precarity
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Producing Precarity is a long-overdue examination of the television industry's practice of "offshoring" production to impoverished sites within the US. The author, Curtis Marez, focuses on state efforts to attract film and TV producers to poor places with tax incentives, discounted public lands, and subsidized infrastructures. He argues that these efforts result in the redistribution of wealth from poor people of color, Indigenous people, and other taxpayers to Los Angeles-based media makers, while also diverting money that could be used for education and health care to the wealthy.
The popular series produced in these places, such as Breaking Bad, The Watchmen, Lovecraft County, The Walking Dead, and Vida, are praised by critics and awards organizations and highlighted by streaming services for challenging genre, casting, and narrative conventions. However, many of these shows rely on racialized and gendered low-wage labor for production, and diversity, equity, and inclusion representations can sometimes perpetuate repression, such as depicting police as diversity champions.
Producing Precarity examines how contemporary streaming shows from these areas promote racial inequality in ideology and content, as well as materially through their local production methods, and perceptually through streaming distribution modes that discourage viewers from understanding how TV is made. Marez also provides examples of local resistance, including movements against a police training center and a film studio in Atlanta, as well as anti-gentrification movements in Latinx neighborhoods of LA.
Reviews / Votes
"Compellingly illustrates the relationship between racial capitalism and place-making, resource extraction and transfer, and the politics of representation. Curtis Marez reveals how the hidden costs of television production are born by poor, disadvantaged Black, Brown, and Native people. In richly detailed examples from shoots in Georgia and New Mexico, Producing Precarity shows how site-specific production practices and relationships facilitate resource extraction - in short, representation and celebration of difference are really expressions of racial capitalism at work." - Herman Grey, University of California, Santa Cruz"Building on Cedric Robinson's groundbreaking work, Producing Precarity offers a brilliant theory of 'TV racial capitalism in place.' Curtis Marez deftly analyzes how relations of racialized extraction, settler colonial occupation, and 'the police and prison televisual complex' saturate the material conditions of production and the content of popular, often superficially progressive, streaming television series. A vital, invaluable contribution to key discussions in American studies, media studies, studies of racial capitalism, and settler colonial studies, and a work of demystification we all urgently need." - Laurie Ouellette, author of Lifestyle TV
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