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The program is set to expire in 2013, but some state lawmakers are determined to keep it going. Among them is state Rep. Chris Tuck, an Anchorage Democrat who is a sponsor of bill that would extend the program by 10 years and another $200 million. He believes the program takes precedence over addressing such industry challenges as a limited number of experienced crews in the state and a lack of infrastructure like a soundstage. Keeping the incentives alive are a critical first step, he said. "We have to make sure that we have certainties for the movie industry so they can continue coming up here," he said. For producers of the Discovery Channel's "Deadliest Catch," the tax credit is just an added perk. Alaska itself is the draw, said Phil Segal, president of Original Productions. The Burbank, Calif.-based company also produces the History channel's "Ice Road Truckers," a popular reality show about Far North truck drivers. "Deadliest Catch," a documentary series about dangerous crab fishing in the Bering Sea, was already a hit when the incentive program began
-- and for good reason if you ask Segal. For many viewers, he said, the state represents the allure of the unknown, akin to Old West wagon trains heading to an uncharted destination. "We're in Alaska for one reason and one reason only. It is an amazing cultural den that has so many stories to be told," he said. "It is this incredibly rich final frontier that is an amazing backdrop for storytelling." "Alaska State Troopers" on the National Geographic Channel holds the same mystique. The series, which just completed production for a second season, features various troopers in multiple settings across the state, covering vast jurisdictions dotted with isolated villages, often in brutal weather and terrain. "Just the fact that they're asked to cover so much ground, often alone, in extreme conditions, I think, is very appealing and interesting to a viewer," said Dan Stern of Seattle-based PSG Films, producer of the series as well as a 2006 National Geographic Channel special, "Cowboys of the Sea," about salmon fishing in Alaska's Bristol Bay. "People have told me that they're fascinated by Alaska because of our shows and other shows they've watched."
[Associated
Press;
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