
 
		Netfl ix opening new East Williamsburg studio 
 RAMOS 
 think I have ever had an experience  
 where everything was  
 all about me. It gave me everything  
 I never knew I needed.” 
 COURIER L 24     IFE, JULY 23-29, 2021 
 In her new offi ce,  Ramos  
 surprised Steinweiss with  
 framed lyrics to his song “The  
 Good and the Bad,” which is  
 about their journey together. 
 Steinweiss said she hopes  
 the show, more than anything,  
 will  highlight  the  importance  
 of an arts education in city public  
 schools, where many of the  
 programs have been gutted. 
 “There were a lot of  
 changes in the Department of  
 Education,” said Steinweiss,  
 who taught within the agency  
 for over 13 years before resigning  
 in 2011. “And this program  
 that Anthony was a part of,  
 this beautiful program that I  
 built for 13 years, they closed  
 the program.”  
 After a brief stint in former  
 City Councilmember Vincent  
 Gentile’s  offi ce,  Steinweiss  
 went  back  to  her  roots,  opening  
 her own business in 2016  
 where she trains teachers and  
 students in arts education.  
 “It is a necessity,” she  
 said. “It shouldn’t be an afterthought, 
  it shouldn’t be an after 
 school program.” 
 BY BEN BRACHFELD 
 Lights, camera, Brooklyn! 
 Netfl ix  will  open  a  new  
 production  studio  in  Brooklyn  
 in September, Bloomberg  
 reports, in a massive space  
 where it will produce fi lms  
 and TV shows. 
 The  170,000-square-foot  facility  
 at 333 Johnson Ave., a  
 warehouse-laden section of  
 East Williamsburg, will boast  
 six sound stages, as well as editing  
 and meeting rooms. Two  
 shows are set to be fi lmed  at  
 the site to inaugurate its opening. 
 The streaming giant is  
 also in the process of opening  
 a new, 100,000-square-foot  
 Manhattan  offi ce  near  Union  
 Square. The company currently  
 subleases  offi ce  space  
 from Twitter in Chelsea. 
 Netfl ix  benefi tted  from  $4  
 million in state tax credits  
 over 10 years to build the new  
 offi ce and studio, conditioned  
 on their creating at least 127  
 jobs at the new offi ce by 2024,  
 in  addition  to  the  32  jobs  the  
 company already had in the  
 city  in  2019,  and  retaining  
 them for at least fi ve years after  
 that. When the project was  
 announced  in  2019,  Gov.  Andrew  
 Cuomo said it was expected  
 to bring $100 million of  
 investment and thousands of  
 jobs to the city. 
 Netfl ix has fi lmed plenty of  
 movies and shows in Brooklyn  
 in recent years, including “Unorthodox” 
  and “Grand Army.”  
 Netfl ix has received numerous  
 state tax credits for fi lm  and  
 TV production: just in the fi rst  
 quarter of 2021, the state issued  
 over $33 million of tax credits  
 to the streaming giant for one  
 fi lm and three TV series shot  
 in the Empire State, according  
 to a report from Empire State  
 Development, the state’s economic  
 development arm. 
 A spokesperson for ESD  
 could not provide details on the  
 present number of Netfl ix  employees  
 in the city, nor could a  
 rep for the Mayor’s Offi ce of Media  
 and Entertainment. Representatives  
 for Netfl ix did not respond  
 to requests for comment. 
 A rep told Bloomberg that  
 the company plans to hire locally  
 for production crews and  
 to patronize local businesses  
 for meals. 
 Red Hook-based indie fi lmmaker  
 Elias Plagianos, whose  
 works include “Distemper”  
 and “Sombra City” and who  
 fi lmed a TV pilot called “Hudson  
 Falls” during the pandemic, 
   says  that  he’s  excited  
 to see Netfl ix  set  up  shop  in  
 Brooklyn, and believes it’s a  
 sign of New York’s increasing  
 status as a fi lm hub. 
 “This Netfl ix Studio  is another  
 move in the right direction  
 and makes it even easier  
 for  me  to  tell  my  LA  based  
 friends that Brooklyn not only  
 inspires  creativity  in  a  very  
 unique way,  it  is  also  clearly  
 one of the best places to make  
 movies, and television in the  
 world,” Plagianos said. 
 Plagianos is planning on  
 pitching  projects  to  the  studio, 
  specifi cally indie fi lm and  
 TV  content  fi lmed and set in  
 Brooklyn, and created by locals. 
  “While there is a pledge  
 for overall jobs and spend, I  
 would like to see Netfl ix make  
 an informal pledge to support  
 Brooklyn fi lmmakers in some  
 substantial way,” he said. 
 The building, a former steel  
 factory,  is owned by commercial  
 real estate developer Steel  
 Equities, which purchased  
 the site for $52.5 million in  
 2019, city records show. Steel  
 Equities  also  purchased  a  
 28,000-square-foot  warehouse  
 down the road, at 375 Johnson  
 Ave., last year for $20 million. 
 BY BEN BRACHFELD 
 A century-old Flatbush  
 building, which once housed a  
 movie palace, is looking for a  
 new tenant to bring a renewed  
 lease on life to the joint. 
 The building, 1085 Flatbush  
 Ave., now houses the  
 Cortelyou  Road  Church  of  
 God, which owns the building  
 and wants to rent out most of  
 the  15,000-square-foot  space  
 and keep a sliver for itself. 
 For more than half a century, 
  the building was home to  
 the Rialto Theatre, from 1916 to  
 1976. Since then, it has been the  
 location of various churches. 
 The building has 1,400  
 seats in its main area, and still  
 boasts a screen at the back. Designed  
 by architect R. Thomas  
 Short and developed by impresario  
 A.H. Schwartz of Century  
 Circuit Theaters, the Rialto  
 opened  during  the  silent  era  
 of motion pictures, and had its  
 own orchestra and organist to  
 accompany the fl icks. 
 The era was also the golden  
 age of grand movie palaces in  
 Brooklyn, and specifi cally  in  
 Flatbush: the Rialto competed  
 with  the  Kings  Theatre,  the  
 Kenmore Theatre on Church  
 Avenue, the Flatbush Theatre  
 on Church east of Flatbush, the  
 Astor Theatre at the corner of  
 Snyder, and the Albemarle Theatre  
 at the corner of the street  
 with the same name. 
 All of those theaters have  
 long since closed and been taken  
 over by other establishments,  
 except for the Kings, which reopened  
 as  a  live  performance  
 venue in 2015 after sitting vacant  
 since closing in 1977. 
 The church has gotten inquiries  
 from theater operators  
 and from religious organizations  
 about taking over the  
 space, a representative of commercial  
 realtor TerraCRG told  
 Brooklyn  Paper.  Asking  rent  
 is $25,000 per month. 
 Full stream ahead 
 Flatbush church at  
 home in old Rialto  
 Theatre seeks new  
 tenant for building 
 BROOKLYN 
 Hot ticket 
 (Left) The Rialto Theatre, as seen in a 1930s postcard. (Right) The building now houses the Cortelyou Road Church of God.  File photos 
 Continued from page 23  
 Netfl ix has fi lmed in Brooklyn before (as in the cancelled “Grand Army,”  
 pictured) but now a dedicated studio is in the works.  Jasper Savage/Netfl ix