News

From ‘Yellowstone’ to ‘The Chosen,’ boom times for small Texas towns

If the newly booming Texas film industry has a heart, it might be Fort Worth.

Eight years ago, tired of watching productions go to Dallas, the city created its own film commission. Since then, it’s driven $555 million in economic impact and supported over 18,000 jobs, according to head Jessica Christopherson.

Why We Wrote This

Texas knows how to put on a show, and Texan Taylor Sheridan is one of the producers bringing TV and film – and vital economic bump – to small towns around Fort Worth. Plus, say residents, it’s just fun when Hollywood comes to town.

“The requests and interest in filming, people coming to scout, has just increased year over year,” she says. “I’ve seen it grow from reality shows to independent films, to now [major] films and television series.” 

From Weatherford to Waxahachie, the past few years have seen a surge in film and television production in the Fort Worth area. And when you think about the Fort Worth screen scene, there is one dominant force: Taylor Sheridan. The Fort Worth-raised actor, writer, and producer has three shows airing, two shows filming, and four shows in development – many of them filming in Texas.

Beyond the economic activity, the increased production is helping show a Texas beyond the stereotypes, says Kim Owczarski, who is studying the Fort Worth film industry.

“The past has always been a fascination with Texas, the myths,” she continues. But “we [haven’t] seen a lot of what it’s like in modern times to be Texan.”

Venus doesn’t get a whole lot of visitors – just the occasional bank robber and Hollywood movie star.

The bank that Bonnie Parker and Clyde Barrow robbed a century ago is in this small town south of Fort Worth, and so, Venus residents insist, are the bullet holes. Faye Dunaway, Warren Beatty, and Tom Cruise have passed through, but that heist might have been the most exciting day in the town’s otherwise sleepy history.

That is until “Yellowstone” filmed here last November, flooding downtown with cast, crew, and hundreds of fans of the hit television show. The town is still talking about it – and feeling the bump in tourism.

Why We Wrote This

Texas knows how to put on a show, and Texan Taylor Sheridan is one of the producers bringing TV and film – and vital economic bump – to small towns around Fort Worth. Plus, say residents, it’s just fun when Hollywood comes to town.

If the newly booming Texas film industry has a heart, it might be Fort Worth.

Eight years ago, tired of watching productions go to Dallas, the city created its own film commission. Since then, it’s driven $555 million in economic impact and supported over 18,000 jobs, according to Jessica Christopherson, the head of the commission.

Previous ArticleNext Article