
Faysal Quraishi Urges Protection of Local Industry
Why the actor’s statement is getting attention in Pakistan
The recent comments from Faysal Quraishi about the entertainment industry have opened up a serious discussion in Pakistan’s media circles. In simple terms, he is worried about how policy decisions might slowly shift attention away from local productions and towards foreign content. This is not just a celebrity opinion, it connects with real economic pressure that many small production teams already feel on ground.
In many cases, when governments try to attract international productions, the intention is positive. More investment usually means more exposure. But from experience, one common mistake people make is ignoring the local ecosystem that is already struggling. If local drama producers cannot compete on equal footing, the gap becomes obvious very quickly.
In Pakistan, TV dramas are not just entertainment. They are a full employment chain. A single project supports writers, camera crews, editors, costume designers and dozens of technical workers. When fewer projects are approved locally, the impact is not abstract, it is direct income loss for hundreds of families.
Real-world pressure on local production houses
To understand this better, think of how independent filmmakers in the USA often complain on Quora about Netflix or large studios dominating budgets. A similar concern is slowly appearing in Pakistan’s entertainment industry.
Key concerns raised indirectly through industry discussions:
Rising competition from international content platforms
Budget pressure on local drama producers
Unequal policy support between local and foreign projects
Fear of reduced production slots in TV channels
Customer Testimonial Highlights (Industry Voice Style)
“We already struggle with rising production costs, even a small policy shift matters a lot”
“Local dramas are our identity, losing them would be a cultural loss”
“International collaboration is good, but not at the cost of local jobs”
From experience, industries like this survive best when balance is maintained, not when one side is suddenly prioritized.Impact on jobs, cultural export, and future of Pakistan’s entertainment industry
How local dramas support a wide employment network
Faysal Quraishi’s concerns about the entertainment industry are not only about actors or big producers. The real issue is much broader. In Pakistan, every drama project works like a small economy on its own. When one production starts, it activates a chain of jobs that most viewers never think about.
In many cases, people assume only actors are earning, but from experience in media discussions on platforms like Quora, it is clear that the backbone is actually behind the camera. If production slows down, the effect is immediate and visible in unemployment numbers within the creative sector.
A typical drama production includes multiple departments, such as writing, lighting, sound, editing, makeup, wardrobe, and logistics. Even small changes in policy can disturb this balance and reduce the number of active projects.
Breakdown of a single drama production ecosystem
Here is a simple view of how one drama supports jobs:
Department | Role in Production | Approx. People Involved |
|---|---|---|
Writing Team | Scripts and story development | 3–6 |
Direction Unit | Overall execution and shooting control | 5–10 |
Acting Cast | On-screen performance | 10–25 |
Technical Crew | Camera, lighting, sound | 20–40 |
Post Production | Editing, dubbing, visual effects | 10–20 |
Support Staff | Logistics, costumes, makeup | 30–50 |
Even one production can support more than 100 people directly and indirectly. That is why concerns about fewer production slots are not small issues, they are livelihood concerns.
Cultural export and AI disruption in creative work
Another important point raised in discussions around Faysal Quraishi entertainment industry concerns is the global reach of Pakistani dramas. Pakistani content is now watched in countries like India, Bangladesh, Turkey, and even parts of Europe and the Middle East. This makes the industry a soft cultural export.
In simple words, culture is being sold without even realizing it. That is why reducing local production capacity can also weaken Pakistan’s international cultural presence.
At the same time, AI is becoming a new challenge. Voice cloning, automated dubbing, and script generation tools are slowly entering creative industries worldwide. One common mistake people make is ignoring how quickly this shift is happening.
From experience, industries that fail to adapt early often lose skilled workers first, especially freelancers and junior-level creative professionals.
Customer Testimonial Highlights (Industry Perspective)
“Pakistani dramas gave me consistent work for years, now gaps are increasing”
“International exposure is great, but local jobs must come first”
“AI tools are useful, but they should not replace human creativity completely”
(Source:The Express Tribune)
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Article Details
Category: Entertainment
Published: 21 June 2026
Time: 6:21 pm
Author: Rabia
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