North Carolina
Court Vision: Why UConn went 0-3 in Maui and North Carolina’s possible fatal flaw
LAHAINA, Hawaii — Before this week, I’d heard stories about “Maui magic,” how games inside the Lahaina Civic Center just somehow got good when the final buzzer neared.
Now I get it.
Consider this one last dispatch from Hawaii. One final disclaimer: Many thanks to the kind people of Maui, who so graciously hosted the college basketball community this week only 15 months after wildfires ravaged the island. Devastating to see the damage in person, but in speaking with several locals — many of whom lost their homes, or worse — it’s clear how glad they were that the Maui Invitational returned to its rightful home. Me too.
Now, back to basketball.
GO DEEPER
As Maui Invitational marks 40 years, it returns to a home forever changed
1. Auburn deserves to be No. 1, a ranking befitting the country’s best team
And Johni Broome — the closest thing we’ll have to Zach Edey this season — is the current front-runner for National Player of the Year. Long season, I know. But after Feast Week, the dust always settles somewhat, and right now? Broome is the barometer for every other player in the country.
GO DEEPER
Marks: After winning Maui, Auburn and Johni Broome look like college basketball’s best
The same should be said of his team. As of this writing, Auburn is the only team in the country with a top-five adjusted offensive and defensive efficiency ranking, per KenPom. It has beaten three top-12 teams, plus Memphis, which is probably going to be in that range come Monday’s new AP poll. (If it isn’t, and UConn, which shockingly went 0-3 this week, is ranked higher, then the poll is more of a farce than normal.) Broome deserves so much of the spotlight behind Auburn’s incredible start, but frankly, Bruce Pearl’s team has all the pieces necessary to win a national title.
This is clearly a defensive miss by Memphis big Moussa Cisse, but what a find by Chad Baker-Mazara, one of the more underrated utility players in the country:
After Auburn blew out North Carolina and Memphis, a lot of the conversation is going to be offensively oriented, not wrongly so. But the reason I’m so high on the Tigers? Don’t forget they trailed by 18 vs. No. 5 Iowa State and clawed all the way back to beat a team with a top-five offense in its own right — mostly by getting stops. Check out the first few possessions of the second half, when Auburn started to mount its comeback. First, Baker-Mazara recovers with his length and pokes it away from Keshon Gilbert, maybe the best guard I saw in Maui:
A few possessions later, Denver Jones denies Tamin Lipsey near the sideline, Broome forces Joshua Jefferson back to the center of the court — and Dylan Cardwell is there waiting with timely help. Only, it’s not timely; it’s calculated. Watch how Cardwell steps up as soon as Broome puts a foot out to block Jefferson’s initial read to Lipsey:
And then, the game-deciding defensive stand. This is just really good stuff from Denver Jones. Miles Kelly overplays Gilbert once he receives the handoff, and Jones takes a step to his right to fake like he’s going to stay with Cyclones guard Curtis Jones — but it’s actually a stunt, which is effective enough to force Gilbert ever so slightly back into Kelly, who pokes it away for the game-saving steal:
Auburn’s offense deserves its love, too. But its defense is the reason it picked up its best win this week, over a Cyclones team that should challenge Kansas for the Big 12 title.
2. UConn goes 0-3. Time to panic?
There won’t be a more shocking result this Feast Week than the two-time defending national champs going winless in Hawaii, including a one-point loss to Colorado in which it led by double digits, and then a blowout loss to feisty Dayton. Clearly, these aren’t the same Huskies of the past two years — but why?
Because defensively, UConn is pretty “dreadful” right now, to use Dan Hurley’s own words. In three games, UConn allowed 1.34, 1.20 and 1.31 points per possession to Memphis, Colorado and Dayton, respectively; it accordingly dropped all the way to 84th in adjusted defensive efficiency, per KenPom. As of this writing, the Huskies are one of the worst teams nationally in terms of 3-point defense — and plays like this are why. Solo Ball either miscommunicates or loses track of his man on the weak side, takes a gamble to try doubling Dayton big Zed Key and winds up wildly out of whack, which just wrecks UConn’s defensive rotations:
Not to belabor the point, but c’mon. Samson Johnson lifts to hedge, isn’t quick enough getting back, Alex Karaban covers for him — but then Johnson doubles again, rather than assuming Karaban’s man. That prevents Ball from staying with Colorado guard RJ Smith in the corner, and eventually Hassan Diarra is left in no man’s land trying to cover two guys. As soon as he commits to Smith, boom, there’s the pass and open 3 for Julian Hammond III (who had 16 points and four 3s this game):
These sorts of rotational errors simply didn’t happen the past two seasons with UConn’s continuity. And while they’ll get better — Hurley and his staff are too good for them not to — the Huskies’ long-term upside probably isn’t what we thought it was. Still almost certainly an NCAA Tournament team, but any dreams of a three-peat seem like just that right now: dreams.
Lastly, Hurley also sorely misses Donovan Clingan, whose ability to defend physically without fouling — not to mention his rim protection — was so integral to UConn’s run last season. Both of UConn’s primary bigs, Samson Johnson and Tarris Reed Jr., fouled out vs. Memphis and Colorado. That was especially critical down the stretch vs. Colorado, when the 6-foot-8 Karaban got stuck as UConn’s de facto center. Reed’s foul tendencies date back to Michigan — he had 12 games with the Wolverines with four or five personal fouls — but I might consider starting him over Johnson if I were Hurley. It’s a slight drop-off in terms of rim protection, but Reed is fouling at just under half Sampson’s rate through seven games, per KenPom — 4.9 vs. 8.4 percent of possessions — while offering a major upgrade as a rebounder. Reed is a top-15 offensive and defensive rebounder on a per-possession basis, per KenPom. But in the wake of this week’s nightmare, those are the sorts of thought experiments UConn’s staff will be toying with.
3. Memphis guard Tyrese Hunter, a transfer portal All-American?
Wisconsin guard John Tonje — who has two 30-point-plus games vs. high-majors already this season — is my front-runner for “Best Transfer Portal Pickup” through November. He’s been sensational, and the reason why the Badgers are 7-0 with the best offense of Greg Gard’s head coaching tenure. But if I were picking the five best transfers so far this season nationwide, Hunter — the former Iowa State and Texas guard — would easily be one of my picks. He’s been awesome and is experiencing the sort of late-career shooting renaissance that Penny Hardaway last authored with David Jones.
Jones, Memphis’ leading scorer last season, never shot above 30 percent from 3 in his first three seasons at DePaul and St. John’s. But in one season at Memphis, he canned 38 percent of his triples — and took 6.5 per game, so a decently high volume — and earned first-team All-AAC honors. Hunter is on a similar trajectory. Unlike Jones, he’s steadily improved as a 3-point shooter throughout his career — from 27.4 percent as a freshman to 34.2 percent last season — but doing this? Becoming a top-60 shooter nationally, at 52.4 percent from 3? Hunter made 12 3s (!!) in Memphis’ consecutive wins over UConn and Michigan State, and three of his seven career games with four-plus made 3s have now come in his first month at Memphis. He’s had some fortuitous bounces — like this one — but he’s not afraid to let it rip if he gets an inch of daylight as a pick-and-roll handler; he’s made seven of nine 3s in those situations, per Synergy:
And playing alongside PJ Haggerty and Colby Rogers, who can also both shoot and handle, Hunter is going to get more than his fair share of open kickouts, too:
Do I expect Hunter to shoot that well all season? No. The rims in Maui were certainly kind to him, and I counted at least three 3s that he either banked in or got a favorable roll, including the one above. But Hunter’s confidence is legitimate, and he’s going to have the green light in Hardaway’s offense. Memphis is the nation’s best 3-point shooting team through November, making just under 47 percent from deep.
More generally, beating both UConn and Michigan State is huge for the Tigers’ NCAA Tournament resume, since their conference schedule in the American is so lackluster. Now they need to take advantage of their four upcoming high-major nonconference games vs. Clemson, Virginia, Ole Miss and Mississippi State. This is clearly the team to beat in the AAC and should be ranked in the top 20 at minimum.
4. North Carolina’s frontcourt might be a fatal flaw
I’m not really a “take” guy — unless we’re talking about the New York Jets — and I especially try to stay away from bold proclamations early. But I’ve now seen North Carolina play five times in person, and, well, let’s say this stat kind of says it all:
North Carolina has now allowed 50 points in the paint twice in seven games this season (also versus Kansas). They allowed 50 points in the paint just twice combined over the previous 2 seasons.
— Jared Berson (@JaredBerson) November 28, 2024
Here’s another that will make UNC fans want to avert their eyes: Per KenPom, UNC is offensive rebounding under 30 percent of its missed shots for the first time since … 2002-03, Matt Doherty’s last season. Gulp.
North Carolina fans will berate Hubert Davis for not signing a starting-caliber center this summer, but none of the bigs UNC flirted with — Aaron Bradshaw (currently not with Ohio State’s program), Jonas Aidoo (injured, has played 20 minutes all season), and Cliff Omoruyi (averaging 5.8 points and four rebounds in under 20 minutes per game vs. high-major opponents) — have been awesome at their new schools. The fact of the matter is, the Tar Heels were never going to be able to replace Armando Bacot and Harrison Ingram’s productivity in one offseason, especially not while also retaining first-team All-American RJ Davis. UNC’s staff clearly overestimated what junior center Jalen Washington and graduate forward Jae’Lyn Withers were capable of — and whiffing on 6-foot-7 Belmont transfer Cade Tyson, who has played three minutes or less vs. UNC’s four “real” opponents, doesn’t help, either. It’s early, but with the Tar Heels now 0-3 vs. high-major opponents, it’s at least fair to question whether Davis can coach his way around this suboptimal roster construction.
Just watch what Michigan State big Jaxon Kohler, a fine but hardly special player, does to Washington. Washington’s lack of strength is apparent as Kohler backs him down, and then he cooks Washington with his footwork, getting the UNC junior to leave his feet completely going for the recovery block. Stay down, man!
Withers is more of a tweener at the four, but if I were Hubert Davis, I’d instead consider starting five-star freshman Drake Powell, whose confidence and role grew mightily in Maui. Powell — a projected lottery pick, and arguably the team’s best defensive player — had the game-deciding 3 vs. Dayton, then dropped a career-high 18 vs. Michigan State, including four made 3s. He’s still relatively raw, but his upside is so high, and his willingness to stick his nose in for rebounds, and the athleticism to get them, despite only being 6-foot-6, is encouraging. Maybe Davis doesn’t pull that rip cord before Alabama comes to town next week, but it feels like a matter of time leaving Maui.
5. On Michigan State and Iowa State
Two more things before we all pig out on Thanksgiving leftovers:
• Michigan State’s shooting woes are well-documented. After going 4-of-16 from 3 vs. UNC, the Spartans are now 361st nationally (out of 364 Division-I teams) from behind the arc, making just 22.4 percent of their triples. But dare I say, I’m cautiously optimistic about Tom Izzo’s team long term in spite of them? Sparty’s defense is legit (17th in adjusted defensive efficiency, per KenPom, and top 20 in defensive rebounding rate). But on top of that, Xavier Booker, the former five-star big, finally seemed to realize he’s 6-foot-11 with pogo sticks for legs against North Carolina. His 12 points and seven rebounds came at the expense of UNC’s complete dearth of size, but a win is a win. If Izzo can get Booker going a little and keep Tre Holloman (four 3s in Maui) ascending, MSU might end up being a top three or four team in the Big Ten. My not-so-hot take: Freshman guard Jase Richardson, who missed the UNC game due to an elbow to the head suffered against Memphis, is this team’s clear best player by February.
• Iowa State deserves better than to be relegated this deep in a column. The Cyclones were a possession away from beating Auburn, and building an 18-point lead against that type of wagon is one of the more impressive halves I’ve watched a team play this month.
GO DEEPER
Iowa State basketball’s uncommon top-10 recipe: ‘We have to Moneyball this’
Sure, T.J. Otzelberger’s defense is turning teams over like normal — but can we talk about his offense? Iowa State is top five in adjusted offensive efficiency right now, per KenPom, and has scored at least 82 points in every game this season. Otzelberger has never had a team finish in the top 30 of adjusted offensive efficiency in eight seasons as a head coach, but he’s also never had guards that can go like his quartet of Gilbert — the best guard in Maui this weekend — Lipsey, Jones, and Milan Momcilovic, who had 24 points and six 3s vs. Colorado on Wednesday. Per Synergy, Iowa State is in the 99th percentile nationally in transition offense, shooting a blistering 80 percent on 2s and 41.7 percent on 3s in the fast break. Will be fascinating to see if that keeps up in Big 12 play, but if so? Why can’t the Cyclones win the conference?
(Photo of UConn coach Dan Hurley: Marco Garcia / Imagn Images)
North Carolina
Virginia signee Hamrick leads Shelby Crest to its 7th North Carolina high school football title by beating Hunt
Wilson J.B. Hunt and Shelby Crest will battle for the Class 5A North Carolina High School Athletic Association title at 8 p.m. at Durham County Memorial Stadium in Durham.
Both teams enter with 12-2 records in this contest.
Crest has won 6 state titles, the most recent came in 2015 in Class 3AA.
The Crest Chargers have won five in a row since a 21-14 loss to Ashbrook on Oct. 24. During the playoff run, the Chargers have knocked off Concord, 69-6; East Lincoln, 31-14; South Point, 28-14 and Hickory, 39-21.
East Lincoln and Hickory were both ranked ahead of the Chargers in the state.
The Hunt Warriors carry a 6-game winning streak into the finals. One of the two losses came against fellow finalist Tarboro, which is in the 2A finals.
The postseason run has included a pair of close wins for the Warriors, 30-28 against Eastern Alamance in the first round and then 32-29 over Croatan in the quarterfinals. Last week, Hunt beat Northside-Jacksonville, 20-7, to punch the ticket to the finals.
According to MaxPreps, dating back to 2004, these teams have not played.
Crest
QB Ely Hamrick, sr. — 2,686 yards passing and 29 TDs; 706 yards rushing and 17 TDs; signed with Virginia; once played at IMG Academy
RB Malachi Gamble, jr. — 501 yards rushing and 9 TDs
WR Michael Edwards, sr. — 48 catches for 801 yards and 8 TDs; 24 carries for 248 yards and 10 TDs
WR Namjay Thompson, jr. — Has 47 catches for 804 yards and 13 TDs
LB Chris Gunter, sr. — Leads team with 81 tackles; has 10 TFL
S D’Various Surratt, sr. — Team-high 4 interceptions; signed with North Carolina State
S Lyrick Pettis, sr. — 3 interceptions; Duke signee
Hunt
LB Judah Harris, jr. — 184 tackles, 49 TFL, 6 sacks, 56 QB hurries, 2 FF, 2 FR
DT CJ Dickerson, jr. — 174 tackles, 46 TFL, 15 sacks, 40 QB hurries
WR/CB Isaiah Chadwick, sr. — 6 interceptions; 23 catches, 361 yards, 2 TDs
WR/CB Jamauris Howard, sr. — 16 catches for 307 yards, 3 TDs; 8 interceptions
LB Trevorous Cooper, fr. — 127 tackles, 2 sacks, 2 FR
QB Mez Harris, jr. — 1,435 yards passing and 8 TDs; 122 carries for 1,271 yards and 16 TDs rushing
RB Doryan Jones, so. — 243 carries for 1,754 yards and 21 TDS
Tell us who you think will win the game with High School On SI’s Pick ‘Em Challenge
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The 5A @NCFarmBureau Sportsmanship Award recipients, presented by NCHSAA Board members Eddie Doll and Chris Blanton. Congrats!
🏈 Mez Harris (#2) @Hunt_High_NC — NCHSAA (@NCHSAA) December 14, 2025
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|
1st |
2nd |
3rd |
4th |
||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
Hunt |
7 |
7 |
0 |
0 |
14 |
|
Crest |
7 |
17 |
7 |
0 |
31 |
Hunt gets the all first
Nehemiah Rayquan Parker nearly gets a pick for Crest. Bobbled it twice but it fell to the ground
Crest gets the ball
Hamrick to Edwards for a first down and the ball is near midfield
Big play! Cooper with a blocked punt with 8:02 left. The Warriors will have good field position
Jones with a first-down run. Ball at the 30-yard line; Pettis is hurt on the play
Jones with another big run off tackle. This time, going to the right; Ball at the 5-yard line
Jones with another carry and taken down at the 2 The ball pops out but he is ruled down by contact
TOUCHDOWN! Harris with a 2-yard run at 5:42. PAT is good. Hunt 7, Crest 0
Crest has to punt again. Hunt ball with 4:46 left but ball at the Crest 43-yard line
TURNVOER! Hunt goes deep and Javion Hopper hauls it in. Ball at the 5-yard line. 4:32 left
Ball at the 1-yard line after a TFL
Hamrick to Thompson for a 49-yard completion 2:58 left
Big play! Jason Black runs down to the 3-yard line but a horse collar tackle will make it closer. Crest ball at the 2
Flags on the play
Offsides on Crest
1st and goal at the 7
TOUCHDOWN! Edwards with TD no. 11 on the season. Hamrick ran ahead of Edwards toward the goal line. 1:29 left. Crest 7, Hunt 7
Touchdown by Michael Edwards for Crest. Crest 7 – Hunt 7. 1:29 left in the 1st. pic.twitter.com/QygPT3Dnt4
— What’s Up Shopper (@WhatsUpShopper) December 14, 2025
4th and 1 at the 35 now for Crest; Hunt jumped off sides to make it a little bit shorter
TOUCHDOWN! Edwards with 35-yard run and Hamrick is one of the lead blockers. Crest 14, Hunt 7, 9:17 left in 2nd
Touchdown by Michael Edwards for Crest. Crest 14 – Hunt 7. 9:17 left in the half. pic.twitter.com/YqroLPdlds
— What’s Up Shopper (@WhatsUpShopper) December 14, 2025
Hunt punts; Crest taking over with 5:57 left
TV timeout
Black with a 9-yard run on the first play for the Chargers
Hamrick keeps it and runs for a first down. Ball into Hunt territory; 6-foot-5 TE Romeo Sanders with a big block for the Chargers
Hunt calls a timeout with 3:52 left. Chargers are driving
Edwards in a QB in a Wildcat formation and gets down to the 5 but flags on the play
Holding on Chargers will move the ball back
On a draw, Jason Black runs up the middle and the ball is at the 6.
TOUCHDOWN! Hamrick on a tush-push play. 2:06 left. Crest 20, Hunt 7
Offsides on Hunt; offense coming out for 2 points now
A lineman jumps offsides and Crest is sending kicking unit out for the second time
PAT is good. Crest 21, Hunt 7
Television replay just saw the flag thrown on Crest prior to the game; don’t see that often
TOUCHDOWN! Harris tries to pass; finds no one and goes through a entire Crest defense for an 80-yard score. 1:42 left. Crest 21, Hunt 14
Crest calls timeout with 18 seconds left
Hamrick to Surratt — usually a defensive player — for a big gain. Ball at 10
Another timeout with 8 seconds left
incomplete pass; 4 seconds left
FIELD GOAL Carson Grier with a 27-yard FG. 0:00; Crest 24, Hunt 14
Crest gets the ball first
Hamrick to Brock Melton for a first down. WR got an extra 7 yards after initial tackle
Unsporstmanlike call against Crest; guessing for Melton’s celebration after catch, but no mic on ref that time to know who call was against and I can’t read lips that well
TOUCHDOWN! Hamrick with another TD run from the 24. 9:56 left Crest 31, Hunt 14
Jones gets the ball near midfield with a long run. He’s up to nearly 100 yards on the night. Ball is at the 48
Harris drops back and finds nothing. He runs for a first down and the ball is at the 32
Bad snap — high — turns into a TFL for Christian Stowe. 4th down coming up for Hunt with 5:37 left and rolling
TURNOVER! 38-yard FG goes wide right; 5:10 left
Crest ball coming out of Media timeout
Hamrick and Black with back-to-back first down runs. Ball at a midfield for the Chargers
Cooper is hurt for Hunt with 2:03 left. He looks to be favoring a shoulder injury
TURNVOER! Harris with an interception with 7 seconds left in third quarter
Incomplete pass; Hunt still doesn’t have any passing yards; Incomplete pass celebration gets a flag on Crest. 1 second left in the 3rd
Hunt calls a timeout with 11:53 left
Hunt punts the ball again; Crest ball with 10:45 left
Big play from Hamrick to Edwards and the ball is at the 13-yard line now.
Crest facing a 4th and 31
TOUCHDOWN! Hamrick to Thompson for a TD at 4:16.
Thompson did a backflip after TD and a flag followed, so … connect the dot
Unsportsmanlike call on Crest; so touchdown is off the board
TURNOVER! Harris fumbles and Gunter recovers with 3:22
North Carolina
Expectations for North Carolina Against USC Upstate
Sunday’s matchup will be a step down in competition, as the North Carolina Tar Heels’ recent schedule has featured Michigan State, Kentucky, and Georgetown in the last four weeks. With all due respect to the USC Upstate Spartans, they are not in the same class as any of the three teams mentioned above.
North Carolina’s coaching staff and personnel should not view this game as a pointless outing, as the Tar Heels can utilize this matchup to continue developing key features that will serve them well down the road.
With that being said, here are a couple of expectations for North Carolina in a home matchup against USC Upstate.
Caleb Wilson and Henri Veesaar Should Continue Dominance
The Tar Heels’ frontcourt, consisting of Veesaar and Wilson, has been the team’s driving force on both ends of the floor. That trend should continue on Saturday against USC Upstate, as the Spartans are an undersized team, with their tallest player at 6-foot-9.
This season, Wilson is averaging 19.3 points, 10.6 rebounds, 2.4 assists, 1.6 steals, and 1.2 blocks per game, while shooting 53.2 percent from the field. Meanwhile, Veesaar is averaging 16.2 points, 9.2 rebounds, and 1.6 blocks per game, while shooting 63.6 percent from the field.
Both players could total career highs in points and rebounds in this game, which could easily translate to 20+ in each category.
Another Steppingstone for the Backcourt
North Carolina’s backcourt produced a complete group effort against Georgetown on Sunday, with Kyan Evans and Derek Dixon having standout performances. Evans totaled seven points and four assists, which all occurred in the opening minutes, but it set the tone for the Tar Heels. Dixon scored 14 points, while shooting 5-of-7 from the field, including 3-of-5 from three-point range.
Head coach Hubert Davis highlighted both players’ performances against the Hoyas during his postgame press conference.
- “I thought the start that [Kyan Evans] had was huge for us,” Davis said. “I mean, it’s not just the shots that he made. He was confident, he was aggressive, he was on point. It’s been five out of eight games where he’s gotten into foul trouble, so we’ve [got to] find a way to keep him out there on the floor.”
- “I really like [Kyan] and Derek [Dixon] on the floor at the same time,” Davis continued. “I’ve always said that I love multiple ball handlers. You can’t take us out of our offense. And with those two, with the way that Georgetown was switching defenses, we always had somebody that can handle the basketball and get us into a set and get us organized.”
That was the first time in weeks where Evans was playing with complete confidence and was not hesitant shooting the ball from the perimeter. As for Dixon, it was the second straight game the freshman guard played a monumental role in the team’s win. Both players have an opportunity to replicate that level of production on Saturday.
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North Carolina
North Carolina film grants to create 4,900 jobs, boost economy
(WLOS) — North Carolina has approved film and entertainment grants for two television series and an independent feature-length film.
According to a release from Gov. Josh Stein, this is expected to create nearly 5,000 jobs and spend more than $113 million during production.
WESTERN NORTH CAROLINA: THE SURPRISINGLY GLAMOROUS STOMPING GROUND OF OSCAR FAVORITES!
The productions include season two of “The Hunting Wives,” approved for an award of up to $15 million, filming around Lake Norman and Charlotte, and the new series “RJ Decker” in New Hanover County, which was approved for an award of up to $11.6 million.
The independent thriller “Widow,” which was approved for an award of up to $1.8 million, also recently completed filming in Davidson, Forsyth, Stokes, and Yadkin counties.
DISTRICT 12 OF ‘THE HUNGER GAMES’ IS NOW A HISTORIC PLACE IN NORTH CAROLINA
“We are excited to have these new productions in North Carolina creating 4,900 jobs for our state’s crew and film-friendly businesses,” Stein said in the release. “North Carolina remains a top state for film, and these grants enable us to continue our strong tradition of TV and film production excellence.”
Additionally, the romantic comedy film “Merv,” which was filmed in New Hanover County and received a North Carolina Film grant, released on Amazon’s Prime Video on Dec. 10.
CELEBRATING 70 YEARS: MOVIE MAGIC IN THE MOUNTAINS
Other productions that were recently filmed in North Carolina include the films “Christy” and “Roofman,” as well as the popular series “The Summer I Turned Pretty.”
“These productions bring direct economic benefits and also raise the state’s visibility among audiences, leading to increased tourist activity and visitor spending over time,” said North Carolina Commerce Secretary Lee Lilley.
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