A Blog by Jonathan Low

 

Sep 17, 2011

Snookered? Jersey Shore Gets Tax Break: For Filming in New Jersey

Hey, it's about competition. They could film somewhere else. Really. Well, theoretically.

Let's see, they could film it on the Isle of Jersey, a little known tax haven in the English Channel. But most Americans cant find Europe on a map, let alone some island where they wear sweaters on the beach in July.

Or they could film it in states beginning with the word 'New" like New York, New Hampshire or New Mexico. NY's a little too well known and is right next door to NJ so, naaah. New Hampshire does have about 20 miles of shore but it's kinda far north. The summer season lasts from like July 8 to July 11 so that probably wont work. Now New Mexico doesnt have an ocean but it does have lots of sand and sunshine (cuz its a desert). And even better, that's where the US atom bomb was created. The Jersey Shore gang goes nuclear! Might be a little scarier to the US Air Force than to the Iranians, but that could work.

I mean, picky-picky on who deserves a tax break. You dont know what you got till it's gone. Come to think of it, I wonder if LA got a tax break for Joni Mitchell's song? JL

Jillian Rayfield reports in TPM:
A number of New Jersey lawmakers are outraged that the state has awarded a $420,000 production tax credit to the hit MTV reality show "Jersey Shore" because, as one GOPer put it, "I can't believe we are paying for fake tanning for 'Snooki' and 'The Situation', and I am not even sure $420,000 covers that."
On Wednesday, NJ.com reported that taxpayers would be paying the credit for the show's first season in 2009, as approved by the New Jersey Economic Development Authority.

"This is a great investment for the taxpayers, as if they can make a show called 'Jersey Shore' anywhere else." State Sen. Joe Vitale (D) called on Christie to veto the credit. "It is disparaging to Italian Americans. He should veto it," he said.

Christie himself has criticized "Jersey Shore" for misrepresenting the state (most of the cast members are from Staten Island or other parts of New York). "The Governor's opinions about Jersey Shore and its New Yorker cast are well-known," his office said in a statement Wednesday. "They are phonies and the show is a false portrayal of New Jersey and our shore communities."

But, Christie's office said, "the Governor cannot veto EDA action that is in compliance with non-discretionary, existing law....The bottom line is that the governor has not been in favor of this tax credit, and this and other applications were in the pipeline from the prior administration."

The summary of the show in the EDA application makes it sound almost clean-cut: "The film is about eight roommates. There is no screenplay. The roommates live in a house and are asked to work in a local establishment on the New Jersey Coast. The cameras capture the interaction among the roommates and how the roommates interact at work and at play in Seaside Heights."

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