# Hollywood's Existential Crisis: Is America's Dream Factory Becoming the Next Detroit? > Published on ADIN (https://adin.chat/world/hollywoods-existential-crisis-is-americas-dream-factory-becoming-the-next-detroit) > Author: Priyanka > Date: 2026-04-01 An Oscar-winning sound mixer who hasn't worked since April 2023. A 30-year animation veteran teaching part-time for $350 a week. A cookie shop that catered to movie sets for a decade -- shuttered. These aren't characters in a prestige drama about economic collapse. They're real people, profiled in the Wall Street Journal's report this week titled "L.A.'s Entertainment Economy Is Looking Like a Disaster Movie." It reads less like industry journalism and more like the early chapters of a rust belt autopsy. Which raises the question everyone in entertainment is now asking out loud: **Is Hollywood dying? Is LA becoming the next Detroit?** Meanwhile, in a brick-walled office in Venice Beach, the two most anarchic creators in television history think they have the answer. ## 142,000 to 83,000 Los Angeles County employed 142,000 people in the motion picture industry at the end of 2022. By the end of 2024: 100,000. By the end of 2025, after another [17,000 jobs were cut](https://develop.thewrap.com/hollywood-industry-contraction-2026/): roughly 83,000. That's a **42% decline in three years.** Production is cratering alongside it. Thirty percent fewer movies and TV shows with budgets above $40 million began shooting in the U.S. in 2024 compared to 2022. LA-specific production [fell 14% in 2024](https://deadline.com/2025/11/la-film-tv-production-fell-2024-filmla-report-1236628729/) and [another 22% in Q1 2025](https://preprod.thewrap.com/los-angeles-q1-production-days-2025/). The domestic box office limped to $8.9 billion last year -- still deeply below the $11.4 billion pre-pandemic benchmark. Health and pension fund members in LA worked 18% fewer hours year-over-year. Hollywood's mantra through 2024 was "Survive 'Til 25." Then 2025 came and it got worse. [Fortune declared a "death spiral"](https://fortune.com/2026/03/13/hollywood-netflix-paramount-wbd-jobs-industry-cluster/) in March. Bloomberg released a mini-documentary asking whether Hollywood faces "a very unhappy ending." David Spade went on his podcast and said what everyone was thinking: "The Hollywood industry is dying." ## The Detroit Analogy -- And Where It Breaks Detroit in the mid-20th century was a one-industry town with an unchallengeable geographic monopoly on American automaking. Then, over decades, a series of compounding forces -- foreign competition, automation, mismanagement, and cheaper production elsewhere -- hollowed out the core until the city filed for bankruptcy in 2013. Los Angeles in 2026 shares uncomfortable parallels. Production is fleeing to Georgia, British Columbia, London, and Eastern Europe. Three major studios have built or are building headquarters outside LA. The entertainment ecosystem is collapsing into what one retired executive told The Wrap are "three or three-and-a-half companies." Netflix's proposed acquisition of Warner Bros. would accelerate this into oligopoly territory. The LA County Board of Supervisors voted *this week* to study the merger's economic impact. When the government starts doing triage, you know it's bad. But the analogy breaks in one critical place. Detroit's product was a commodity. A Chevy is a Chevy whether it's assembled in Michigan or Mexico. Hollywood's product is *meaning* -- story, myth, aspiration. The institutional infrastructure that turns raw talent into globally distributed culture is not easily replicated. Atlanta can build soundstages. London can offer tax breaks. Neither has the agents, the writers' rooms, the craft guilds, or the century of institutional memory. The economic moat is collapsing. The cultural moat still holds. The question is how long one can survive without the other. ## Streaming Broke the Feedback Loop Streaming didn't kill Hollywood. It broke the economic circulatory system that kept it alive. The old model: studios make content, distribute through theaters and TV windows, profits flow back to fund more content, agents negotiate backend deals, writers get residuals. Money circulates through LA like oxygen through a body. The streaming model: Netflix sets the price, owns the content, pays flat fees, shares no data. One executive told The Wrap: "They only have 8% of viewing time, but they dictate the roadmap for how the whole industry is functioning." The 2010s spending boom -- every legacy company launching a platform and burning cash to fill it -- temporarily inflated Hollywood. Peak TV peaked. Then investors noticed the math didn't work, and the correction was savage. The 2023 strikes were the match. The kindling had been stacking for years. And while Hollywood was arguing about residuals, YouTube -- a platform that doesn't make scripted content -- became bigger in revenue and audience than any TV competitor. The creator economy didn't grow alongside Hollywood. It grew *at Hollywood's expense.* ## The Fork: Sora vs. Deep Voodoo If streaming broke the economics, AI threatens to break the labor model. But what's happened so far tells you more about the future than any prediction could. **Path One: Tech-first.** OpenAI's Sora was supposed to be the instrument of Hollywood's AI reckoning. Text-to-video that would let anyone generate broadcast-quality footage from a prompt. It [flamed out spectacularly](https://theankler.com/p/sora-is-dead-the-ai-that-ransacked) -- burning through Hollywood relationships, overpromising on capability, and pivoting away from entertainment entirely. A Disney partnership collapsed. The model was good enough to terrify people but not good enough to replace them. Sora embodied the Silicon Valley assumption that entertainment is a production problem. Make it cheaper and faster and you win. But entertainment isn't manufacturing. It's alchemy. The value chain depends on trust, taste, and relationships that can't be API'd. **Path Two: Creator-first.** In a [recent interview with The Hollywood Reporter](https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/tv/tv-news/matt-stone-trey-parker-deep-voodoo-ai-south-park-trump-1236552586/), Matt Stone laid out an AI philosophy so sensible it's almost radical: "What we're trying to do is something no amount of humans can do." Not cheaper. Not faster. **Impossible without the tool.** Deep Voodoo, the AI effects company Stone and Trey Parker founded, started because they wanted to make a deepfake movie about Donald Trump and "a couple effects houses in LA just kind of gave us the runaround." So they built their own. Raised $20 million from CAA's Connect Ventures. And did something almost nobody else in AI entertainment has done: they shipped. The face-morphing in Kendrick Lamar's "The Heart Part 5" -- Deep Voodoo. De-aging in a Billy Joel music video. A Bill Clinton deepfake in *Ted*. Ben Affleck in a Dunkin' Donuts Super Bowl spot. Trump in full frontal in South Park. Not tech demos. Cultural artifacts that millions of people watched and talked about. The operating model is the opposite of Sora in every dimension that matters: **Bespoke, not general-purpose.** They build custom AI models for each project using a nine-camera rig that captures 300,000 images per subject. Every model is purpose-built. **Licensed, not scraped.** Every face is permissioned. They turn down jobs if the rights aren't locked. In an industry where AI's biggest liability is its relationship with talent, they solved the trust problem by simply asking first. **Creator-controlled, not platform-controlled.** Parker and Stone aren't building a product for Hollywood to license. They're building a tool for creators to wield. When AI is a platform, the platform captures value. When AI is a tool in a creator's hand, the creator captures value. Stone told THR that Deep Voodoo could enable something like a weekly satirical show -- "a Daily Show meets South Park" -- using AI-generated performances of public figures. The technology for "performance transfer," putting one actor's movements onto another actor's face, is close. This is the future that should keep executives up at night. Not because AI will make movies without humans. It won't, not well, not soon. But because AI will let a small team of brilliant people do what previously required a studio, a lot, and a crew of hundreds. Parker and Stone already make South Park with a skeleton crew in days, not months. Deep Voodoo is the logical extension: fewer people, more creative leverage, no permission needed from the gatekeepers. ## What Comes Next The Ankler's Richard Rushfield captured it best in February: ["Hollywood Is Dead. Long Live Hollywood."](https://theankler.com/p/state-of-the-showbiz-union-hollywood) The corporate era is over. Here's what replaces it: **The creator class forks into two tiers.** A small number of creator-operators -- Parker and Stone, MrBeast, the Duffer Brothers -- control their own production infrastructure, distribution, and AI tools. They function as mini-studios. Everyone else fights for a shrinking pool of traditional gigs. The entertainment middle class doesn't come back. **AI becomes a craft, not a commodity.** The Deep Voodoo model -- bespoke, licensed, creator-controlled -- wins over the Sora model. The companies that survive AI in entertainment will treat it like a camera (a tool requiring a human eye) not like a factory (a system replacing the human). **Live experiences become the moat.** Concerts, theme parks, immersive events, sports -- entertainment that can't be streamed, can't be AI-generated, can't be offshored. LA's future may depend more on SoFi Stadium than on its soundstages. **Hollywood becomes a genre, not a geography.** "Hollywood" already means something beyond Los Angeles -- a style of storytelling, a level of production value. That brand survives even if the zip codes that created it don't. ## Not a Death. A Metamorphosis. Hollywood isn't becoming Detroit. Detroit lost its industry to competitors who made the same product cheaper. Hollywood is losing its *structure* while demand for what it produces -- stories, meaning, escape -- is at an all-time high. What's dying is the hundred-year-old system that concentrated wealth, power, and creative opportunity in a strip of land between Burbank and Culver City. What's being born is something Parker and Stone are already building from Venice Beach: a world where a small team with the right tools and the right ideas can do what used to require a studio, a lot, and a small army. The Oscar-winning sound mixer, the cookie shop owner, the 30-year animator applying to grocery stores -- they aren't casualties of a dying industry. They're casualties of a metamorphosis. The caterpillar is dissolving. And somewhere in Venice Beach, two guys who've spent 30 years making fun of absolutely everything are quietly building one version of the butterfly. **Sources**: Wall Street Journal | [Hollywood Reporter](https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/tv/tv-news/matt-stone-trey-parker-deep-voodoo-ai-south-park-trump-1236552586/) | [The Wrap](https://develop.thewrap.com/hollywood-industry-contraction-2026/) | [Fortune](https://fortune.com/2026/03/13/hollywood-netflix-paramount-wbd-jobs-industry-cluster/) | Bloomberg | [The Ankler](https://theankler.com/p/state-of-the-showbiz-union-hollywood) | [Deadline / FilmLA](https://deadline.com/2025/11/la-film-tv-production-fell-2024-filmla-report-1236628729/) ## Charts ```chart { "type": "line", "chartType": "line", "title": "LA County Entertainment Employment (2019-2025)", "data": [ { "jobs": 130000, "year": "2019" }, { "jobs": 95000, "year": "2020" }, { "jobs": 120000, "year": "2021" }, { "jobs": 142000, "year": "2022" }, { "jobs": 125000, "year": "2023" }, { "jobs": 100000, "year": "2024" }, { "jobs": 83000, "year": "2025" } ], "xKey": "year", "yKeys": [ "jobs" ] } ```