Taylor Sheridan, Paramount establish massive production hub in Texas

taylor sheridan

Taylor Sheridan, the creative force behind YellowstoneTulsa King, and Landman, has teamed up with Paramount Television and real estate developer Hillwood to launch Texas’s largest-ever film and TV production campus in Fort Worth. Developed within Hillwood’s expansive AllianceTexas project, the two-building, 450,000-square-foot facility marks a major boost for North Texas’ entertainment industry.

Nestled north of Fort Worth, the facility features six state-of-the-art soundstages and is designed to support four simultaneous large-scale productions. Filming is already underway—Paramount and 101 Studios are using the space for the second season of Landman, set to premiere on Paramount+ on November 16.

Sheridan framed the project as more than infrastructure—it’s about creative freedom. “SGS Studios isn’t just about sound stages or incentives—it’s about reclaiming the independence and grit that built this industry in the first place,” he said. “Texas offers something rare: the space to dream big, the freedom to build fast, and a community that still believes storytelling matters.”

This facility arrives amid a $300 million Texas incentive program aimed at attracting media production, positioning the state to compete with traditional industry heavyweights like Georgia and New Mexico. Hillwood President Mike Berry emphasized the region’s infrastructural advantages and workforce potential as key to cementing North Texas as a global production hub.

City leaders are equally optimistic. Fort Worth’s film commission noted the region has generated over $700 million in economic activity from more than 1,000 media projects—and the new studio promises to accelerate that impact by creating thousands of local jobs.

In short, this isn’t just a new studio—it’s a bold statement that Texas is ready to become a heavyweight player in the future of film and television.

“We never had any major issues like that. It’s just… because I was young and had only been in one real relationship before her.”


Production in California drops 6.2% during Q2


taylor sheridan

Taylor Sheridan, the creative force behind YellowstoneTulsa King, and Landman, has teamed up with Paramount Television and real estate developer Hillwood to launch Texas’s largest-ever film and TV production campus in Fort Worth. Developed within Hillwood’s expansive AllianceTexas project, the two-building, 450,000-square-foot facility marks a major boost for North Texas’ entertainment industry.

Nestled north of Fort Worth, the facility features six state-of-the-art soundstages and is designed to support four simultaneous large-scale productions. Filming is already underway—Paramount and 101 Studios are using the space for the second season of Landman, set to premiere on Paramount+ on November 16.

Sheridan framed the project as more than infrastructure—it’s about creative freedom. “SGS Studios isn’t just about sound stages or incentives—it’s about reclaiming the independence and grit that built this industry in the first place,” he said. “Texas offers something rare: the space to dream big, the freedom to build fast, and a community that still believes storytelling matters.”

This facility arrives amid a $300 million Texas incentive program aimed at attracting media production, positioning the state to compete with traditional industry heavyweights like Georgia and New Mexico. Hillwood President Mike Berry emphasized the region’s infrastructural advantages and workforce potential as key to cementing North Texas as a global production hub.

City leaders are equally optimistic. Fort Worth’s film commission noted the region has generated over $700 million in economic activity from more than 1,000 media projects—and the new studio promises to accelerate that impact by creating thousands of local jobs.

In short, this isn’t just a new studio—it’s a bold statement that Texas is ready to become a heavyweight player in the future of film and television.

“We never had any major issues like that. It’s just… because I was young and had only been in one real relationship before her.”


Production in California drops 6.2% during Q2