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Should renewal come, ABC has to deal with the concern that the "1-8-7" soundstage built in the Detroit enclave of Highland Park and other expenses associated with the show's production will lose state tax credits that are among the most generous in the country and have lured many film productions to Michigan. The new Republican governor, Rick Snyder, has proposed scrapping or limiting those credits, arguing the state can't afford them. Snyder's first budget proposal calls for eliminating the film tax incentive program and ordering a $25 million cap on credits starting later this year. Current commitments would be honored. Michigan Film Office spokeswoman Michelle Begnoche says it appears that "Detroit 1-8-7" wouldn't be eligible for additional credits, since next season would be for new applications. Zabel, who also was an executive producer and show runner on "ER," said Detroit has offered an authentic setting that can't be replicated, but he could see being forced to follow the example of his former show, where they filmed in California but shot exteriors several times a year in Chicago. Even without the financial incentive, he said there's an artistic argument to shoot in the city that the show is about. "We certainly would fight for it, creatively," Zabel said. "The show would lose so much of what it is if it were not shot in Detroit." McDaniel, an early advocate for filming in Detroit, said he can't imagine the show being filmed elsewhere. "This show not in Detroit? I don't know what that other show is," he said. Still, that's a case they will have the luxury of making only if the show can survive. McDaniel said "Detroit 1-8-7" deserves a second chance because each episode has revealed more about each character, and the show possesses "the best writing I've seen on national network television." On the last day of shooting, McDaniel said he called his colleagues into the "squad room" to share his praise for them and the show, all unsure if it was the end of the season or series. "I just (talked) to them about out how good we were this year -- how this experiment actually worked," he said. "I wanted to remind them the fact that I was good and Michael was good and all this
-- it wasn't just us. It was a crew that gave us complete, loving license to be brave and to have fun without judgment, and all with a hell of a lot of hard work."
[Associated
Press;
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