Hawaii
Cancelation of ‘NCIS: Hawaii’ causes economic blow for Hawaii’s economy
HONOLULU (HawaiiNewsNow) – The recent news of the cancellation of “NCIS: Hawaii” is disappointing to fans and is dealing an economic blow to Hawaii’s economy.
Many are surprised by the cancellation.
Eugene Price, the owner of Honolulu design firm PD Technologies, says the show earned him $50,000 last year.
“Very good business. We are one of the few people they come to on a regular basis,” Eugene Price.
“We were very, very surprised. They are valuable to Hawaii; they employ so many people.”
Rachel Whitley was the Hawaii casting director for all three seasons and said she was shocked by the cancellation.
“It creates hundreds of hundreds of jobs. Not just actors, but stand-ins and stunt doubles,” Whitley said.
Hundreds of comments are pouring in online, with many confused since the show averaged more than five million viewers.
Longtime Casting director Katie Doyle says fan support and ratings are good, but more is needed.
“It’s no longer about the ratings. It’s about the money. It’s about what it costs to produce that show here,” Doyle said.
Whitley estimates CBS spent $75 million a season on ‘NCIS: Hawaii.’
It’s why other locations are competing for productions.
“We have several films that were filming already here, and all of a sudden it up and moved to New Zealand because it came too cost prohibitive,” Doyle said.
The state does offer tax incentives, but industry insiders say they still aren’t enough.
More than 15,000 fans have signed a petition calling on CBS to change its decision.
That is also likely not enough.
“It’s very sad for many of us, but it could be a wake-up call.”
Back in West Oahu, UH has selected a developer to build a state-of-the-art film studio, but it’s still years away from becoming a reality.
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