paxys a day ago

They are going to produce 20 films and TV series in Mexico annually, so 80 total over 4 years, at an average cost of $12.5 million per piece of content. The same production in the USA would easily run 10x that, maybe more. No brainer to move more production overseas.

  • crazygringo a day ago

    This doesn't say anything about moving US production there.

    It's presumably mostly Spanish-speaking content for Spanish-speaking audiences.

    Yes you can get Vancouver to stand in for New York City. No, you can't get Mexico to stand in for the US in most scenarios.

    • alephnerd a day ago

      > No, you can't get Mexico to stand in for the US in most scenarios

      I'd disagree. A lot of CDMX, Guadalajara, Monterrey, and Leon looks like a similar if slightly dated version of LA, San Jose, or flatland parts of SF and Oakland - sort of like a 1980s or 1990s kind of aesthetic because of Mexico's economic boom back then.

      But this is absolutely about Spanish language content for the Hispanoblante world.

    • silisili 20 hours ago

      Or even Toronto. I was surprised to learn Suits was filmed there, despite depicting NYC.

      That said, I'm not sure Netflix cares from that regard. They've been pushing me increasingly foreign content that I don't particularly care for, because it's usually dubbed horribly or not at all.

      I'm of course not against it existing in their library, but I'd have thought their recommendation engine would realize I'm not at all interested in it by now.

      • wkat4242 20 hours ago

        I think the different countries pushing Netflix to make local content has really paid off. Some real good stuff has come out. Like DARK from Germany. Casa de Papel from Spain (though they dragged it out too long). Squid Game from Korea. It's become a lot better since it isn't just Hollywood stuff.

        Here in mainland Europe we're more open to content from all kinds of places. I think part of it is because we're used to not being able to understand every language. There's so many here we can never speak them all. Thus subs or dubbing are common things and don't ruin the immersion for us. In English speaking countries (even in Europe) those are often considered weird, alternative or "arthouse".

        • silisili 17 hours ago

          That's a fair point. As an American, we kinda just expect English by the default. But for the rare movie or show worth watching, I can set that aside. I loved Squid Game. Shame they never made a second season(/s, don't remind me!)

          That said most of the time I have the TV on I'm doing something else, and watch/listen in passing, so audio is really important. The dubbing on most movies is so, so bad. 60 year old gruff men sounding like a kid, everyone having the same weird enthusiastic tone, etc. The worst is the distancing, everyone sounds like they're talking directly into a mic despite where the camera is.

          I really wish they'd invest more into the dubbing process, a well dubbed movie or show is completely watchable to me. And given the growing corpus of foreign content, I think it's a necessity. It's just so rare I usually don't even bother trying anymore.

          • inemesitaffia 17 hours ago

            Squid game has a second season

            • xethos 11 hours ago

              Next you'll try to tell us they made more than on Matrix movie

          • wkat4242 15 hours ago

            Yeah that's why I prefer subtitles. Dubs are usually very substandard. Though I think AI might change that soon.

            Some people find subtitles distracting but where I grew up all foreign content had them (including all English content) and they're just natural to me. I prefer this over dubbing because it never sounds as good as the original voice track.

            • soco 14 hours ago

              And keeping the original voice track keeps the original feeling - if something is Japanese it should also sound Japanese to properly immerse you in it, right? But if the TV just runs in the background it doesn't even matter what is running, you won't actually pay attention, don't actually need immersion, so any garbage will do.

          • trilbyglens 14 hours ago

            That always on-passive TV consumption thing is also not something that most Europeans do.

        • Fire-Dragon-DoL 19 hours ago

          I'm ok with foreign content, but you mentioned 3 exceptions in an ocean of garbage

        • soco 14 hours ago

          The streamers were forced by law [0] to run European productions, so they had to. However the way they do it varies wildly. I appreciate the way Netflix does it - proper subtitles, and absolutely loathe the garbage dubbing Amazon Prime prefers. But to each their own right? And for the content itself, I also find refreshing to watch something less infested with the usual US common places (barfing in comedies, Texans in action flicks...) and maybe also with a closer-to-home flair and themes, so for me as a consumer it's a definite win.

          [0] https://digital-strategy.ec.europa.eu/en/policies/european-w...

    • nonethewiser 20 hours ago

      Point remains though, doesnt it? They should shoot more movies in Mexico because it's drastically cheaper.

      • hx8 20 hours ago

        I think you missed a point. It might be harder to sell Americans on films shot in Mexico because the filming location will not pass as US. So they likely cannot move projects targeting US audiences to Mexico.

        However, films targeting Latin + South America audiences might do really well if filmed in Mexico. So the expansion is probably mostly about catering to that market.

        To be honest, I don't envy Netflix's position. They release a show, it's culturally relevant for 2-8 weeks, and then they have to release another show to keep the subscriptions active. Traditional television has weekly releases that maintained relevance longer. Movies generate much more revenue per hour on content in theaters, and have long term licensing revenue. Their P/E ratio is higher than other content companies that offer similar streaming services, so shareholders expect revenue growth but their developed world marketshare doesn't have room for growth. So now they are going after new audiences, but they are targeting markets where their subscription fees are way lower, and they'll be on the same hamster wheel of keeping audiences engaged.

        • soco 14 hours ago

          How about they planning to sell those productions outside the US? Even for Netflix, not everybody is American and has those requirements. I'm watching a Senegalese police flick so I actually expect and appreciate it happening in Dakar - it's an important part of its world building.

        • trilbyglens 14 hours ago

          This is pretty simplistic though considering that a lot of TV work can be shot indoors on sound stages and outdoor shots where a recognizably American settings are needed can be shot in the US. There's no reason at all that a show needs to be filmed entirely in one location.

          I live in Prague and there's a huge movie industry with lots of American movies being shot on sound stages here. To give one example off the top of my head, all of the Narnia movies were shot here.

    • devindotcom 21 hours ago

      I would expect them to build and staff studios and soundstages down there. Location shooting is expensive wherever you go - this is about getting away from US labor and other costs. They're not the only ones doing it either.

    • golergka 21 hours ago

      Green screens are international

    • SmellTheGlove 19 hours ago

      What are you talking about? You just apply a yellow tinted filter.

      • blharr 17 hours ago

        Other way around. Mexico naturally has a yellow tint, so you apply a purple hue to cancel it out.

  • 0xTJ a day ago

    Ah yes, overseas, as in partially across the Gulf of Mexico.

    • osrec a day ago

      Gulf of where?! /s

      • nonethewiser 20 hours ago

        Partially across the Gulf of Mexico must mean Texas or something, since its the Gulf of America from the US perspective.

      • Rexxar 19 hours ago

        He means "Golfe de Louisiane", obviously.

ks2048 a day ago

Big day for the makers of sepia tone filters.

  • alephnerd a day ago

    It's Spanish language content.

    The whole sepia filter trope is only in American language content referring to Mexico

    • crazygringo a day ago

      I'm assuming that was the joke... ;)

      • BoiledCabbage 17 hours ago

        I don't get the joke then.

        The article is Netflix is making product X. OP replies "big day for people who make tools to produce product Y". What's the joke?

        If Netflix were making English language/targeted content filmed in Mexico the the sepia joke makes sense to me, but not for Spanish targeted. What am I missing?

      • alephnerd a day ago

        Fair enough XD

        You never know if someone is serious in their replies on here sometimes.

        • dgfitz 18 hours ago

          If it means anything, this whole exchange, both in the humor of it and the fantastic display of humanity at the end of it, made me laugh, and then smile.

          I appreciate this thread.

    • chneu a day ago

      Whoooooosh

thr0waway001 18 hours ago

Y'all need to get the rights to Chespirito and Chavo Del Ocho on Netflix and stream dat shit to Canada yo! Then I can enjoy my tamales and orchata watching dat shit!

lawgimenez 18 hours ago

I’m all for more Narcos series, reboot.

buckle8017 19 hours ago

But will they all have a sepia tint?

  • antoniojtorres 19 hours ago

    I’m not sure how this comment meets the rules of engaging in meaningful discussion

  • bxparks 18 hours ago

    I don't understand this sepia tint reference. What joke am I missing?

    • defrost 18 hours ago

      More of a trope about the styling and colour palatte of now classic films set in Mexican territories (but often filmed elsewhere):

        Spaghetti westerns were a series of western films pioneered by Sergio Leone in the 70’s mostly starring Clint Eastwood. They have a very specific style to them. Mostly shot on anamorphic widescreen, they developed a language using editing and framing for confrontations between the gunslingers as well as using and updating Akira Kurosawa’s style. A lot of them are straight up remakes of Kurosawa films (A fistful of dollars is Yojimbo, Magnificent 7 is 7 samurai).
      
        The films had a bit of a sepia look to them but that mostly came from the art direction and the wide open desert spaces they shot at. They would use a handful of shots from the west here and there but most of them were actually shot in southern Spain with Italian and Spanish crews.
      
        Widescreen aspect ratio, tight closeups (chin to eyebrows), quick cuts timed to the music (provided by the great Enio Moricone).
      
        The Good, the Bad and the Ugly is seen as the masterpiece of the series (known as the man with no name series). Another major one is Once Upon a Time in the West. Tareantino is heavily influenced by this stayle and pays direct homage to him on both Kill Bill Vol 2 and Hateful 8. This might be able to give you a slightly more modernized rendition of Leone’s style.
      
      from: https://old.reddit.com/r/colorists/comments/rs7igu/spaghetti...

      but you can find similar comments across many film boards.

tombert a day ago

...So, do they need any American software engineers to work in Mexico who want to spend about four years outside of the United States for reasons that will not be enumerated. Asking for a friend.

  • electriclove a day ago

    Only if your friend is willing to get paid a local salary ;)

    • tombert a day ago

      Oh he's not going to like that.

      • Mr-Frog a day ago

        Entry-level total comp at Google Mexico is about 80k USD, which is comparable to 180k in local purchasing power.

        [Edit] on second glance, my original datapoint for Google was questionable, but it looks like Lyft/Amazon definitely gives offers in the 50k-70k USD range.

        • satvikpendem a day ago

          But that's Google, they'd be hiring the top engineers there. What's the average for an average engineer, half that?

          • ghfhghg a day ago

            They offered me a job in the past so they definitely hire middling engineers.

          • saagarjha a day ago

            Netflix would also pay well, surely.

        • hombre_fatal 19 hours ago

          If that number is even real, so few people are making it that it's not even worth mentioning.

          Search "sueldo ingeniero Google Mexico" and you see wages like $30k USD which is already +$10k over the Mexico average for software, so way more realistic.

        • jjmarr a day ago

          wtf that's barely less than Canada? and significantly more on a purchasing power basis.

          How do I move to Mexico?

          • Mr-Frog a day ago

            This is the absolute top of the top, domestic tech in Mexico pays pretty poorly. Google (as of last year) also let people transfer from high COL to lower COL, reduce their base, but keep the original RSU contract, which will probably skew reported compensation.

            • jjmarr 21 hours ago

              Domestic tech in Canada also pays significantly less. Entry-level for some banks is like US$50-60k

            • wkat4242 20 hours ago

              Same here in Spain. You need to be with a multinational. Local companies pay shit.

              • FirmwareBurner 14 hours ago

                It's the same in all of Europe. You need to work for international big-tech to make decent money, which is also very competitive in terms of job applications. Domestic SW shops pay shit.

          • AlotOfReading a day ago

            That salary is actually below the minimum income for permanent residency (but above the 4 yr temporary residency threshold). If you want to stay beyond 4 years, you'll need to either pony up for a sufficiently expensive house or show $300k usd in a bank account over the past year.

            • jjmarr 21 hours ago

              Can you give an idea of how much I'd have to spend on a house? And also what I'd get for that money?

              • AlotOfReading 18 hours ago

                Twice the amount of the bank account, ~$600k USD. Here's a reasonable selection of houses for that price marketed to foreigners: https://www.sothebysrealty.com/eng/sales/mex/price-low-sort/...

                Mexico's immigration policies are deliberately designed to exclude most people who aren't wealthy retirees and don't have familial ties.

                • jjmarr 16 hours ago

                  Those properties are beautiful! I can get a beachfront villa for practically nothing. In Canada something that close to the water would be several million dollars despite not even having a tropical climate.

                  What is Mexico's visa policy w.r.t. NAFTA/CUSMA professionals? Can I just get in temporarily as a software engineer akin to TN-1 in the USA?

          • paxys a day ago

            Mexico City is more expensive than you think. Doubly so if you want to maintain the standard of living that you are used to in USA/Canada.

            • er4hn a day ago

              Polanco, a neighborhood in Mexico City, has homes that sell for prices that you'd expect from Malibu, CA or Atherton.

              • layman51 a day ago

                That’s really interesting to think about. I had seen a list of the most expensive streets and Polanco is home to one of those (the commercial Avenida Presidente Masaryk) and Atherton is on the list too (the residential Walsh Road).

                • Apocryphon 21 hours ago

                  It’s also the biggest city on the continent so it stands to region the range in CoL might be huge.

              • wkat4242 20 hours ago

                But that's also because the richest people aren't so affected by low cost of living. Prices temd to be based on what people can afford. And those neighbourhoods tend to be for the top 0.1%

              • hombre_fatal 19 hours ago

                Though that's not a good example since you're just pointing out where the richest people live in Mexico City.

                It reveals nothing about the CoL of the city.

    • almosthere a day ago

      What is the salary? I bet it's in my range but I'm in the USA.

      • speakfreely a day ago

        Average software dev salaries in major Mexican metros are around 30,000 to 45,000 MXN per month. So around $2,000 USD a month.

        • suavesito a day ago

          Which is a lot, at least in terms or how much you can buy. Mexico is really cheap, compared to USA.

          • wkat4242 20 hours ago

            The thing with purchasing power is that it doesn't apply to everything. In particular foreign goods.

            So while low cost of living countries offset their low wages with cheaper housing, food and local services, imported stuff still costs the same and is relatively expensive as a result. Basically in those countries it really sucks to buy a computer, camera, even cars.

            • tombert 20 hours ago

              I spent two weeks in Juarez a few years ago for my wife's visa stuff. The hotel was pretty cheap, the food was pretty cheap (and delicious!), but I was surprised to see that an Xbox was actually more expensive than it was in NYC.

              It makes enough sense, Microsoft isn't a charity, they're selling the console at a fairly competitive price already in the US, it's not going going to magically get cheaper just because it crossed a border, but it was still surprising to see that.

              • HDThoreaun 20 hours ago

                Microsoft also knows that if they sell xbox's for less overseas people will start buying those cheap ones and importing them to the US for resale.

                • tombert 19 hours ago

                  That makes sense, and not really theoretical; it's pretty easy to buy Blu-rays and DVDs from foreign markets, and they're often considerably cheaper than their American versions.

                  They of course are region encoded, but I suspect nearly anyone who frequents Hacker News knows how to get around that.

          • kevin_thibedeau 21 hours ago

            It is a hit on your retirement savings if you intend to return to a more expensive country.

          • hombre_fatal 19 hours ago

            The only thing that makes it "a lot" is how pathetic the wages are in Mexico compared to it. But you aren't living large in Guadalajara on $20k/year.

            Only some things are particularly cheap in Mexico like labor and anything where labor is the main input, like services.

            And some things that you'd think would be in reach of a Mexican software developer, like sending your kids to a decent private school, are not.

    • plagiarist a day ago

      What's the cost of living and healthcare like?

  • speakfreely a day ago

    If you're upset about the deterioration of rule of law under Trump, I have some bad news for you about Mexico.

  • zitterbewegung a day ago

    It doesn’t look like this is a software engineering play but instead they want to make more content instead in Mexico .

  • xyst a day ago

    You might not return after a 4 yr extended stay, to be honest.

    Or NFLX ends up going bottom of the barrel contractors to replace

  • WheatMillington 21 hours ago

    Aah yes the treasured American pastime of pretending you're going to leave when the Other Team wins the presidency.

    • tombert 21 hours ago

      My wife is a Mexican immigrant. I was joking a bit, but not completely, I do have to think about the possibility that this stupid administration decides to ramp up their deportation efforts even more.

  • giancarlostoro a day ago

    I mean there are plenty of US embassies in Mexico, so not impossible to do.

    • speakfreely a day ago

      I'm not sure what point you're trying to make. Also, there one US embassy in Mexico, and multiple local consulates.

  • aboardRat4 a day ago

    [flagged]

    • IncreasePosts a day ago

      Pretty sure if women find you gross in America, they will find you gross in Mexico.

      • aboardRat4 a day ago

        Maybe, but I don't live in the USA and have no idea whether women there find me gross.

        • IncreasePosts 21 hours ago

          Pretty sure if women find you gross in the country you live in, they will find you gross in Mexico

  • yieldcrv a day ago

    There’s about to be drone strikes out there so thats a no for me dawg

    Maybe Roma Norte will be cool but thats it

    • dmix 21 hours ago

      US drones/aircraft have been flying over Mexico for ~15yrs and CIA also started flying them there under Biden admin at the request of Mexican gov. I'm skeptical Mexico would start using offensive drones though, they prefer helicopters for operations.

      • yieldcrv 21 hours ago

        But these will be drones with missiles launched by DoD unilaterally

        • dmix 20 hours ago

          Not without Mexico's consent. Unless you think they would commit an act a war against Mexico... to fight cartels or something? Even Obama's drone strikes in Yemen was under approval of the Yemen gov, it's a very serious thing to do.

          • yieldcrv 20 hours ago

            the new list just dropped, all the cartels are on it and listed as terror organizations

            the US also has a history of ignoring sovereignty and saying the strikes weren't against the government, just the non-state terror organization

            I also believe the US can coerce "consent" from a sovereign, if its more convenient to check that box

            so like I wrote earlier, the gentrified parts of CDMX will be fine

    • theultdev a day ago

      [flagged]

      • ceejayoz 21 hours ago

        Do you really think we didn’t hit civilians during Trump’s presidency?

        He did loads more drone strikes than Obama. We just stopped counting the civilians. https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-47480207.amp

        > During Mr Obama's eight years in office, 1,878 drone strikes were carried out, according to researchers. Since Mr Trump was elected in 2016, there have been 2,243 drone strikes. The Republican president has also made some of the operations, the ones outside of war zones, more secretive. As a result, things have different today: under Mr Trump, there are more drone strikes - and less transparency.

        • theultdev 20 hours ago

          It matters what you hit, not how much.

          Note how you didn't have any specific events of Trump hitting civilians to cite.

          https://www.hrw.org/report/2014/02/19/wedding-became-funeral...

          • ceejayoz 20 hours ago

            It does, indeed.

            https://www.businessinsider.com/trump-afghanistan-airstrikes...

            > Civilian deaths skyrocketed in Afghanistan under President Donald Trump, whose administration relaxed the rules of engagement for airstrikes in 2017, according to a new study from the Costs of War Project at Brown University.

            > Airstrikes killed 700 civilians in Afghanistan in 2019 alone, more than any other year since the early days of the war in 2002, according to the study. "There were more weapons dropped from the air in 2018 and 2019 than at the height of US presence in Afghanistan in 2011," the report stated.

            • theultdev 18 hours ago

              [flagged]

              • ceejayoz 4 hours ago

                So by "It matters what you hit, not how much" you actually meant "it matters how publicly covered by the American media (which I also call 'fake news' when they do)", not "it matters what you hit"?

                I'm sure the thousands of civilians killed by Trump's strikes are grateful they didn't make the New York Times.

MaxGripe a day ago

“Hmm, who else should we demoralise? Let’s go for the Mexicans!”