Newport starring on producers’ maps
- Share via
Alicia Robinson
A bevy of movies, commercials and TV shows, including hit show “The
O.C.,” are finding this city by the sea an ideal place to shoot.
Newport’s booming film business has produced a windfall for local
business, with hotels and stores among the beneficiaries.
“We are the No. 1 city in Orange County to film in, that’s easy,”
said Joseph Cleary, a consultant who is essentially the city’s film
guru. “We do more filming in a month than the rest of the county does
in a year.”
For 20 years, Cleary and business partner Marty Capune have been
liaisons for the city, helping media crews scout locations, get
filming permits and go anywhere in Newport Beach.
And the media have come in increasing numbers since at least 1987,
when the city began tracking film permits. City records show the
growth, with just 27 productions filming here in 1987 compared with
197 productions in 2003, city revenue manager Glen Everroad said.
In April alone, crews filmed segments for the Colorado-based Love
Stories Network, a British Broadcasting Corp. program and an MTV
reality show.
Ads were also shot here for the Long Beach Aquarium and the
Monterey Bay and Anthropologie clothing companies.
“I find that people come here because this is a very opportunist
city for filming,” Cleary said. “Newport is able to respond instantly
to your needs film-wise, and that is a big plus.”
Hotels have reaped the benefits of the city’s photogenic
qualities. Newport Beach hotel room occupancy increased 12% from
January to March, and the March occupancy rate was 13.2% higher than
the same month in 2003, according to statistics given by PKF
Consulting.
“We’ve had two or three [production] groups come in within the
last two or three months, and what we give them is a combination of
rooms and our conference room,” said Michel Pourmussa, owner and
manager of the Balboa Inn.
The city’s conference and visitors bureau has latched on to
interest generated by “The O.C.” and other shows featuring Newport
Beach and turned it into a marketing plan, offering tourist packages
with entertainment as seen on TV.
“This is what people are going to request and we want to make it
real easy for them to buy,” said Marta Hayden, executive director of
the Newport Beach Conference and Visitors Bureau.
“When both ‘The Bachelorette’ and ‘The Bachelor’ aired shows where
couples went on dates here, people called asking where the shows
filmed and how they could visit those places,” she said.
The city gets its share of film-related dollars in the form of
sales taxes, hotel taxes and other income, Everroad said.
“As a city that depends heavily on tourist dollars, we know there
is a direct correlation between Newport Beach’s appearance in the
media ... and the decision that some people have [made] to come to
Newport Beach,” Everroad said.
Experts say it’s difficult to tell which came first.
Everroad traces it directly to Cleary’s efforts, and Cleary said
marketing is easy when you have a good product.
“I think we’re the busiest we’ve ever been, and it’s probably
[because of] ‘The O.C.,’” Cleary said. “The reason why ‘The O.C.’ is
a hit is because we are a hit place to live.”
* ALICIA ROBINSON covers business, politics and the environment.
She may be reached at (949) 764-4330 or by e-mail at
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.