Jeremy Boreing, one of the owner/founders of The Daily Wire worked as a writer/producer in Hollywood, starting in the early 2000's. I haven't heard explicitly that he left because as a political conservative he couldn't find much work, but it's probably a safe bet. Andrew Klavan was a very successful novelist, who also found success as a screenwriter in Hollywood -- and in his case I have heard that he left Hollywood because he couldn't get work in that town anymore once he openly expressed conservative political views.
Both of these men have enough experience to know how to tell a good story, and I've also heard Ben Shapiro echo their view: that if you try to make "a conservative movie," it's going to suck just like an overtly woke movie sucks. The problem will be exactly the same, just coming from the other end of the political spectrum: whenever you make pushing a message the primary goal of the project, it's going to skew the whole thing, and the creators will end up preaching to the audience, making their protagonists overly idealized, making their antagonists cartoonishly villainous, etc. etc. That won't work with a conservative agenda anymore than it does with a woke agenda.
What you have to focus on, above all, is telling a good story, featuring interesting, relatable characters. You just make it so that it reflects more traditional, non-woke values. But conveying the values is not the primary goal; it's just what you do in the course of pursuing the primary goal. And you don't even have to think about values as you write. Think about it: if you're a good writer, who happens to be conservative, how hard do you find it to just let your own values reflect in what you write. It will just naturally happen. So focus on writing a good story. Concentrate on that. If you aren't trying to be consciously political, and you're not promoting an agenda, not pushing a message on a polarizing social issue, you'll write a story that appeals to a large audience, who just want to be entertained.
In a recent interview with The Critical Drinker, I heard Shapiro sum it up by saying "by being apolitical, that's how we're being political."
So far, they seem to be having success with that approach, and making decent films. I hope they keep it up. The more success they have, the more their studio will grow, and they'll be able to make bigger and better films, and hopefully create an actual alternative to the stuff being churned out by an entertainment industry that has been completely captured by the left.
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