The story is part of Deadline’s Reopening Hollywood series.
After months of brainstorming and negotiations, the Hollywood studios and unions adopted rigorous safety protocols to get TV production going again. And, with fits and starts, it has been going, churning out fresh content with original episodes hitting the air first with the soaps in daytime followed by unscripted and then scripted series in primetime.
Bit has not been easy. And it has been expensive.
So far, the safety procedures are largely working. There have been many positive COVID tests — both real positives and false positives. There also have been production shutdowns, though no reports of fatalities or seriously ill cast or crew members. (The Good Doctor‘s Richard Schiff is the only known main series cast member to be hospitalized with COVID, and he is on the mend.)
At least in part as recognition for the entertainment industry’s efforts, it was given an exemption from California Gov. Gavin Newsom’s new limited stay-at-home order that takes effect Saturday night as the state grapples with record number of COVID cases. (Film and TV production was not exempt from the sweeping stay-at-home orders in March.) On the list of exemptions for the upcoming restrictions, under “Industrial, Commercial, Residential, and Sheltering Facilities and Services,” there is essential worker designation 15 that reads, “Workers supporting the entertainment industries, studios, and other related establishments, provided they follow COVID-19 public health guidance around physical distancing.”
Crucial to deeming the protocols a success is the fact there have been virtually no cases of on-set transmission, in which a production member is infected by another production member. The COVID infections have originated in staffers’ homes or during their off-work activities and caught by the productions’ extensive and frequent rounds of testing, with mandatory masks and social distancing on set further minimizing spread.
A rising number of Infections among casts and crew amid a third COVID wave across the U.S. is unavoidable unless the entire production team is put in a quarantine bubble, which is difficult to do with dozens of series, each employing hundreds of people. Tyler Perry was able to pull it off at his studio in Atlanta, filming one series at a time over the summer.
Sources attribute the relative success in keeping sets safe to a so-called “Swiss cheese approach” — multiple layers of safeguards, so even if a hole appears in each of them, as a whole, the layers stacked together make for a solid block. With production staff split into zones per industry COVID safety protocols, shows are able to isolate getting more successful in isolating individuals who have tested positive without having to pause production.
ABC’s The Rookie, CBS’ The Young and the Restless and The Bold and the Beautiful, Netflix’s Stranger Things and NBCUniversal’s The Kelly Clarkson Show are among of many series that have continued filming after positive COVID tests. The upcoming American Music Awards also continued rehearsals and pre-production after a handful of crew members tested positive late last week.
Meanwhile, scripted series that have paused production due to positive COVID-19 tests for different periods of time — from one day to two weeks — include CBS All Access’ Why Women Kill, Apple TV+’s Mythic Quest, ABC’s Call Your Mother, Amazon’s Bosch, TNT’s Claws, HBO’s The Gilded Age, Nat Geo’s Genius: Aretha, Netflix’s The Witcher and Vikings: Valhalla, NBC’s Chicago Fire and Chicago Med, Fox’s The Resident, Peacock’s Rutherford Falls, ABC’s For Life, CBS’ Young Sheldon, Disney+’s Big Shot, the CW’s All American and daytime drama Days of Our Lives.
The course of action taken by a production in case of positive COVID tests is informed by science advisors employed by the studios. The decision whether to shut down production also varies based on local regulation: New York, where For Life films, has some of the strictest quarantine guidelines, while Georgia, where Stranger Things is being shot, has less restrictive rules. While it’s made based on the wellbeing of the production team members, that decision has significant financial consequences.
Between the thousands of COVID tests performed each week, adapting the sets to comply with strict safety protocols — including frequent deep cleaning and adjusting all other areas from transportation and location scouting to costume fitting and hair & makeup — reducing work hours and quarantining people, production costs are skyrocketing.
I hear on average, implementing COVID safety protocols adds about $200,000-$300,000 an episode to the budget of a multi-camera comedy series, $300,000-$400,000 an episode for single-camera comedy and $400,000-$500,000 and beyond for a drama. That represents about 10% on top of already hefty production budgets for high-end series, making otherwise profitable shows less profitable and pushing modest performers to break-even or even into the red to turn them into cancellation targets.
Add to that the cost of shutting down production. Each day a production is idle carries a price tag of as much as $100,000, I hear. Any unplanned stoppage also jeopardizes a show’s delivery, disrupts its post-production, and increases the chances of losing episodic directors who have to move on to the next gig. In addition to the production shutdowns due to positive COVID cases, most Vancouver-based series had to pause filming for about a week in late September-early October because of a backlog at the local lab processing tests, incurring additional costs.
Because of the huge additional expense, along with the scheduling logjam caused by the lengthy pandemic-related shutdown, some networks and streamers opted not to proceed with previously greenlighted seasons, including the fourth and final season of GLOW and second seasons of The Society and I Am Not Okay With This at Netflix, the third season of the comedy I’m Sorry at TBS and second season of Showtime’s On Becoming a God in Central Florida.
There are also risks. It’s hard to come up with a safe way to produce a show about wrestling like GLOW, for example, during a pandemic. Many series also employ cast and crew members who are in vulnerable categories due to age, or underlying conditions, or both. It is not surprising that Netflix has yet to set a production restart date for its comedy Grace and Frankie, one of the first series to shut down at the onset of the pandemic in March, whose lead acting quartet are all in their 80s.
A number of companies opted to produce shorter seasons during the pandemic. CBS last month trimmed the orders of its scripted series from CBS Studios from full-season 22 episodes to 16-18. In addition to scheduling — the late production restart led to later premieres, meaning networks will need fewer episodes to get through the end of the broadcast season in May — the increased cost of production also is believed to have played a role in the decision, which is not limited to CBS.
With the nation in the grips of a massive new wave of infections and a widely available COVID vaccine still months away, productions are facing another challenge: the upcoming holiday season.
TV series traditionally shut down for Thanksgiving week and then about three weeks around Christmas and New Year’s. Because of the risks associated with large gatherings and travel, I hear production teams are discouraged from traveling home for Thanksgiving. For shows based in Canada, where there is a two-week mandatory quarantine upon arrival, casts and crews will stay put as a trip to the U.S. will derail plans to resume filming the week after Thanksgiving. (I hear some Vancouver-based series were given Canadian Thanksgiving off last month and will work through the U.S. holiday next week.)
There will be fewer restrictions for the December holiday production hiatus, which allows time for quarantine. Still, studios are worried about potential outbreaks when filming resumes after each of the two holiday breaks.
“I really hope that everyone’s really being safe right now and avoiding big get-togethers,” one producer on a show currently in production said. “Because everyone’s going to go away for Thanksgiving and then come home and bring COVID to wherever they were.”
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How The “Swiss Cheese” Is Made: The Difficult And Expensive Reality Of Filming TV Series Amid The Pandemic - Deadline
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