
By Ben Cooper
Capital News Service
After the Netflix series โHouse of Cardsโ had an economic impact of more than $700 million on Maryland while filming its six seasons in the state from 2012 to 2018, thereโs hope that a new television show can make its mark in 2020.
Gov. Larry Hogan announced in October that a pilot episode for a potential new Showtime series, โThe President is Missing,โ starring David Oyelowo, is set to begin filming in Maryland in early 2020. Maryland Film Office director Jack Gerbes is optimistic about its prospective influence on the stateโs economy.
โWeโre hoping that [โThe President is Missingโ] will be on the same scale as a โHouse of Cardsโ in regards to the number of hires, in regards to the number of businesses affected positively by the production,โ Gerbes said.
The potential series is based on the titular novel written by James Patterson and Bill Clinton. At the time of its debut, the novel reportedly sold more hardcover copies during its first weekโJune 4 to June 10, 2018โthan any other hardcover fiction work since 2016.
โWe are thrilled that Showtime will shoot the pilot for โThe President is Missingโ in Maryland, and we are hopeful that it will become another successful series for our state,โ Hogan said in an October press release. โMaryland offers an outstanding destination for filming, with a highly-skilled crew base, talented actors, and a variety of locations that can easily double as our nationโs capital.โ

Without Marylandโs tax credit program and rich film history, though, productions such as โHouse of Cardsโ and โThe President is Missingโ would have little reason to film in the state.
After the passage of Maryland Senate Bill 1154 in May 2018, the stateโs film industry was given long-term resources, providing more consistency for productions looking for stability over the course of multiple years and seasons.
The bill, passed by Hogan and put into effect in June 2018, ensured there would be a tax incentive program for at least five more years while also allocating funds for each of those years. Among the changes, 10 percent of the annual tax credit figure would be allocated toward Maryland small or independent films.
โWe have the most consistent program now that weโve ever had in the history of our incentive program,โ Gerbes said. โBecause of the consistency of the program, because of the legislation that the governor signed, we can go after a series that can be here 3, 4, 5, 6 years.โ
Before the legislationโs passage, funding would be determined on a short-term basis, Gerbes said, leaving potential productions skeptical about long-term filming in Maryland.
โVeep,โ an HBO series starring actress Julia Louis-Dreyfus, filmed in Baltimore for its first four seasonsโwhich ran from 2012 to 2015โbut moved its production to California for its final three seasons due in large part to Marylandโs unstable tax credit program.
โAt the time, we didnโt know whether there would be incentives,โ Gerbes said, โand California put incentives on the table for them.โ
The show had over $165 million worth of impact on Marylandโs economy before departing.
Meanwhile, despite uncertainty about Marylandโs tax incentives before SB 1154, โHouse of Cardsโโwhich once threatened to cut filming ties with the state over tax credit disputesโcontinued to film in Maryland. It generated over $245 million in economic impact in its final two seasons while employing more than 3,400 local actors and technicians and using the services of nearly 3,500 local businesses in that time span.
The ability to attract such large-scale, economically significant productions wasnโt always so heavily reliant on incentives.
โThe first half of my career here, a studio, a producer, a network director would call, they would say โฆ weโre looking for beaches, weโre looking for, in the case of โWedding Crashers,โ a beautiful mansion on the water,โ said Gerbes, who is entering his 29th year with the Maryland Film Office. โIn the case of โRunaway Bride,โ weโre looking for small towns and bucolic, rolling hills.โ
With Marylandโs introduction of a film rebate program in 2005, in addition to other states developing their own programs, the focus shifted.
โThen the first question became, โWhatโs your incentive program like?’โ Gerbes said. โโDo you have enough incentives to justify me coming to Maryland to shoot?’โ
Other states began to employ more tempting programs. Georgia, which has no cap and allows films to earn up to 30 percent in tax credits, provided more than $800 million in credits in fiscal year 2017. Maryland had only $11.51 million in funding for that period.
Since replacing its rebate program with a tax incentive program, Maryland has provided credits to a handful of filmsโincluding โJamesy Boy,โ โBetter Living Through Chemistryโ and โPing Pong Summerโโand the aforementioned series โHouse of Cardsโ and โVeep.โ
While Maryland is unable to stack up to states like Georgia in how much it can award in tax credits, the goal remains the same: stimulate the economy. And thereโs belief that โThe President is Missingโ will do just that.
โWhen it boils down to it, it means it creates jobs in the creative economy, and it creates revenue for thousands of businessesโMaryland businessesโthat support the industry,โ Gerbes said. โAnd thatโs really important.โ

My daughter is in the film industry and had to move to Georgia, where the jobs are. Film productions provide jobs that are specific to the industry and therefore, if the industry leaves a state, the people leave with it. The revenue generated by the people who work in film (rent, groceries, state income tax, etc) benefits the state economy. In addition, most film productions have a policy to purchase elements for the set & wardrobe from local small businesses whenever they can. It just makes good economic sense for Maryland to attract the film industry back again, any way we can.