Alhonna Resort and Marina is a 60-unit waterfront resort at Lake of the Ozarks. It offers both hotel and apartment-style lodging.

Guests can swim in the pool, rent boats or hang out at the bar.

Alhonna isn't the most fancy or expensive resort at the lake — but it might soon become the most famous.

The owner says Alhonna helped inspire a new show coming to Netflix from Golden Globe-winning movie star Jason Bateman and the studio that made "House of Cards."

Shirley Gross-Russel, whose family has owned Alhonna since the 1980s, said the resort will be the setting for the TV series called "Ozark," in which Bateman will reportedly play a money launderer.

Some Hollywood types, including Bateman, have been visiting Alhonna — as well as area restaurants, attractions and police officials — this spring and summer scouting locations, taking photos and measuring dimensions.

Several show-business news outlets have reported that "Ozark" is a drama that deals with drugs and money laundering.

Gross-Russel said she was a little apprehensive about having her resort connected to a gritty crime drama, but she trusts people will realize it's just a TV show.

The reason Alhonna was picked, Gross-Russel said, is because the show's writer — Bill Dubuque — worked as a dock hand at the resort while he was in school in the late ‘80s.

Dubuque made a name for himself in Hollywood after co-writing the 2014 movie "The Judge," starring Robert Downey, Jr. But back in his Alhonna days, he was simply known as Tall Paul's brother.

"He was a good employee," Gross-Russel said. "I think it's pretty awesome that he would take his teenage experience and turn it into something."

Although the studio won't answer questions about the show, Gross-Russel said the filming for the show will mostly be done in the Atlanta, Georgia area, with her resort serving as the inspiration. She said the crew has constructed an Alhonna-like set in Georgia after extensively studying her property.

"We showed them around, showed them our rooms, our amenities," Gross-Russel said. "I guess they will have a miniature Alhonna down there."

The bar at Alhonna — a relatively small operation with a few tables and eight stools at the counter — has been a major focus of the TV crew's scouting efforts, according to the owner.

Gross-Russel said it has been a normal summer at Alhonna since word of their involvement hasn't really spread. But everything could change if the show is a hit.

"That would certainly be a good advertiser," she said with a smile.

Tim Jacobsen, executive director of the Lake of the Ozarks Convention and Visitors Bureau, probably knows more about the show than just about anyone at the lake.

But he's been sworn to secrecy, and a News-Leader reporter couldn't crack his resolve in an interview last month.

Jacobsen can't say much about the 10-episode series, but he did admit to taking Bateman and others out on the lake during a scouting trip a couple of months ago.

He said at that time the crew was thinking of doing some of the filming at the Lake of the Ozarks, but the bulk of the filming will likely be done in Georgia because of the tax breaks offered there.

Jacobsen didn't offer many plot secrets, but he did say he's been told the show will not be about drug dealing in the Ozarks — although there is a money-laundering component.

Many news outlets have reported, however, that drugs are a big part of the plot.

Deadline.com said the show will take place "in the dark and dangerous world of drug-money laundering."

The Hollywood Reporter said Bateman will "star in the show as a family man who moves from the city to the Lake of the Ozarks to begin repaying a debt to a ruthless drug lord."

The sources interviewed by the News-Leader said they don't know when the show is scheduled to start airing (though some industry speculation points to late 2017).

Lake Ozark Police Chief Gary Launderville said some people associated with the show contacted him in June to see if his officers could help with traffic control later this summer if the crew decides to shoot some scenes at the lake.

Launderville has been the police chief in Lake Ozark for almost two years after retiring from a sheriff position in Iowa.

He said his 12 sworn officers deal with some drug crime at the lake, but the real-life problems wouldn't make for much of a TV show.

"We have drugs here like any other community, but I don't believe our lake area is a hub by any means," Launderville said.

As for money laundering, Launderville said the department hasn't worked any of those cases in his time as chief.

Launderville said the biggest challenge for policing the lake is dealing with the huge population increase during the summer.

The year-round population for the city of Lake Ozark is about 1,600. But Launderville said that goes up to 35,000 people on a summer weekend.

"It's different," Launderville said. "We're busier than heck in the summer time. In the winter time, we take a deep breath.”

The Camden County Sheriff's Office has a staff about seven-times larger than Launderville's department that patrols a much larger portion of the lake area.

Sgt. Scott Hines with the sheriff's office echoed many of Launderville's comments, saying any "dark and dangerous world of drug money-laundering" at the lake would have to be a fictional one.

There have, however, been some recent federal drug investigations with Lake of the Ozarks connections.

In 2010, Lake-area police seized more than a quarter-pound of meth in two separate busts — one of which occurred at a hotel on the strip.

Court documents say large amounts of meth made its way to the lake area every week from a single source in Kansas City.

When news broke that Bateman was making a crime drama set at the Lake of the Ozarks, many people on social media assumed the show would be about meth — like Missouri's version of "Breaking Bad," the hit AMC show (now available on Netflix) about the meth trade in New Mexico.

That assumption is still out there, and a Drug Enforcement Agency spokesman interviewed by the News-Leader said it's a logical jump.

After all, Hollywood's last big venture to the Ozarks was for the gritty meth-centric movie "Winter's Bone" in 2010.

DEA spokesman Melvin Patterson said the Ozarks has a reputation nationwide for meth — particularly the homemade variety.

"Missouri has long been a place that is known for producing domestic meth," Patterson said. "I guess because the rural setting you have there."

Drug officials in southwest Missouri have told the News-Leader that domestic meth labs in the Ozarks have essentially gone away, but the market for meth has only grown as a cheaper and more potent product is being shipped here from Mexico.

Patterson said meth is the drug of choice in Missouri and many other states west of the Mississippi River. As you move east across the country, he said, that shifts to heroin.

Tommy Taylor, bar manager at Tucker's Shuckers in Lake Ozark, said his restaurant hosted a private party for members of the TV crew in March or April when they were in town scouting locations.

Taylor said the crew went a little overboard trying to stay secretive — he didn't recognize any of them.

A lifelong lake-area resident, Taylor said he doesn't understand why the show's creators have reportedly dreamed up a plot about the dangerous world of underground money laundering. After all, he said, there's enough crazy stuff that actually happens at the lake.

"I think it is just going to glamorize the lake, make it look more like California than it is," Taylor said. "Realistically, there is not really any drug cartels or money laundering going on."

Taylor said most of the year-round lake residents have gotten over the initial excitement about the show, but he said many of the tourists stopping by his bar still want to talk about it.

He said he hopes it will be a boost for businesses at the lake, and maybe bring more patrons to his restaurant during the winter.

The manager at the nearby Baxter's Lakeside Grille also told the News-Leader that the "Ozark" crew visited his restaurant in March or April. He said the crew discussed possibly using the restaurant's renowned lake view for the show.

Even though it appears not much filming will take place at the lake, Jacobsen with the Convention and Visitors Bureau, said the show could still be a boon for the economy at the lake.

"I think it could expose all of the great things that the Lake of the Ozarks has to offer to the millions of people who watch Netflix," Jacobsen said.

Amy Susan, director of marketing and communications for the Missouri Department of Economic Development, pointed to Albuquerque, New Mexico as a potential model for the Lake of the Ozarks if "Ozark" becomes a hit on the level of "Breaking Bad.”

"That city has capitalized on the show’s popularity, and sites depicted on the small screen became favorite haunts for tourists," Susan said. "There are themed bicycle and RV tours, hotel packages and specials at local businesses, all inspired by the show."

Alhonna seems most in line to profit if "Ozark" becomes a binge-watching sensation, but Gross-Russel — the owner — said she's not focused on that.

Gross-Russel said it was fun reconnecting with Dubuque, an old employee who is doing well for himself.

She said she's excited to watch the show and see how closely the set resembles her resort.

And if it helps fill some more rooms at Alhonna, all the better.