Talent mobility, such as actors shifting across platforms like streaming services and traditional TV, can indeed exacerbate talent shortages in the film and TV industry. Fierce competition for elite performers leads to scheduling overlaps, higher costs, and limited availability for smaller projects, as top talent flocks to lucrative deals from giants like Netflix or Disney+. This fragmentation strains the overall pool, especially amid post-strike production drops of 40%, intensifying demand-supply imbalances. While it fosters innovation and diversity, it disadvantages emerging markets and local industries. Mitigating this requires robust training programs to build deeper talent pipelines and reduce reliance on a few stars.
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The first time I saw "The Wire", I was shocked all over my face. Over the years, I have actually been very eager to take a course centered on "The Frontline", but my ability in sociology is not strong enough. This drama has the structure of a novel, with one chapter per season, namely drug trafficking, the port system, the bureaucratic system, the education system and the news media. As a result, Harvard University, Johns Hopkins University and Brown University have all offered sociology and law courses centered around this drama. Obama also invited producers to The White House for a rare twelve-minute meeting, during which he said many times: "I'm a huge fan of The Wir
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