You think of Hollywood as being a major economic engine to Southern California.
But in the Inland Empire cities of Riverside, San Bernardino and others, some of the biggest industries to watch are health care and logistics (that's the business of moving imports and exports between other countries and the U.S.)
And they could take huge hits under the policies of Donald Trump.
"Health care's really been one of those sectors that have powered the region's economy," says economist John Husing, who recently published his economic outlook for 2017.
More than 27,300 health care jobs were created in the Inland Empire during 2011-2016, such as technicians that run MRI and ultrasound devices.
"It's a sector we are very worried about because of what could potentially happen with the Affordable Care Act," he says. "It would throw the sector and the insurance market into chaos."
Logistics workers are also a big part of the area's economy.
"It is by far our number one growing sector," says Husing. "It has added 54,000 jobs in 2011 - 2016, which is 23 percent of all of our job growth in the Inland Empire."
Workers in that field help move goods to and from overseas. That includes dockworkers at the Port of Los Angeles, to truck drivers, to warehouse workers who will store goods until they're bound for stores across the country.
Southern California has the biggest network of its kind in the United States.
But President Trump could have a major impact on this industry if he institutes tariffs on imports or exports.
Those jobs could be lost with fewer goods moving over our borders, and it would hurt consumers, too.
"It would have the effect of raising the prices of products we buy at major outlets," says Husing.