While screen production is notoriously centralised, it is still found outside major media cities where the central problem for actors in these subordinate media cities is how to create sustainable levels of screen production capabilities in circumstances of increasing centralisation and globalisation in media production and its design. This article discusses how the screen production sectors of two subordinate media cities, Brisbane and the Gold Coast, are organised. Each city represents a different pathway for the sustainability of a media sector. The Gold Coast is a production location for globally and nationally dispersed high-budget feature film and TV drama production; while Brisbane is mostly a 'national production' location for domestically oriented news, documentary, infotainment and sports programming with a focus on lower budgeted feature filmmaking and occasionally, television drama. These different city pathways are the product of the creative resources and infrastructure evident in each city. © 2012 © 2012 Taylor & Francis.
CITATION STYLE
O’Regan, T., & Ward, S. (2014). Making screen production work at the margins: path-dependent development in Brisbane and the Gold Coast. International Journal of Cultural Policy, 20(2), 186–201. https://doi.org/10.1080/10286632.2012.745519
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