• How can Looky Looky Pictures help your film's impact and what is the Guided Campaign Accelerator?
    Oct 9 2024

    🎬 If you’re a small doc team looking to move forward with your film’s impact with clarity, ease, and joy, then this episode is designed for you!

    ✅ Be inspired to craft your impact campaign
    ✅ Explore real-world success stories

    ✅ Get a behind-the-scenes insights about the Guided Campaign Accelerator!
    ✅ Hear about a very special scholarship opportunity!

    ➡️ Don’t miss this opportunity to take your doc to the next level in this replay of our live Q&A with filmmakers all about how we help small doc teams! 🎥✨

    👋🏽 Please help us spread the word about this helpful resource—share this with a filmmaker friend who may find it helpful! Thank you!!🙏🏽

    Your host is Ani Mercedes, Impact Producer and Founder of Looky Looky Pictures (https://www.lookylookypictures.com/), where they help small doc teams make a big impact with their films and they have served over 1,000 filmmakers since 2016. Their most popular service is the Guided Campaign Accelerator program, a 6-month program that helps filmmakers move forward with impact campaigns with clarity, ease, and joy.

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    1 hr and 20 mins
  • Q&A with Filmmakers: Behind the Scenes of Successful Impact Campaigns | Part 2
    Sep 26 2024

    Your host: Ani Mercedes, Impact Producer and Founder of Looky Looky Pictures (https://www.lookylookypictures.com/), they have served over 1,000 filmmakers, and now serve filmmakers in their Guided Campaign impact accelerator program.

    In this episode you’ll here from four filmmakers:
    Francisco Alcala - He is not only the proud father of Alejandra Alcala, the talented director of The Neighborhood Storyteller, but he is also deeply involved in the project as a producer, second camera, still photographer, and co-impact producer. In 2013, he made a bold decision to leave his well-paid job as VP of Kellogg's Latin-America Supply Chain to co-found the non-profit HOME Storytellers. Although some may consider his decision crazy, Francisco believes that money isn't everything, and he has gained invaluable experiences that he wouldn't trade for anything. Despite living in different countries, Francisco and Alejandra talk every day and work closely together. Above all, Francisco feels privileged to be making a positive impact on the lives of refugees, women, and girls in vulnerable situations, which brings him immense happiness.

    Emily Branham is a filmmaker who specializes in unexpected, intimate, and deeply human stories about artists. Her first feature documentary, BEING BEBE, premiered at Tribeca Festival, was a New York Times Critic’s Pick, and won Jury & Audience Awards on its festival tour across 5 continents. She directs and produces short documentaries for clients, and is launching her new podcast this spring. The podcast is called You Can Fly Too, and is about how creative people build their lives around their art. Originally from Minneapolis, Emily studied Radio/TV/Film at Northwestern University and is based in New York City.

    • Link Emily shared in the chat during the live event: https://beingbebemovie.com/impact-partnerships/

    Lance Kramer is a DC-based filmmaker and co-founder of Meridian Hill Pictures. Lance produced THE FIRST STEP (Tribeca, AFI DOCS); CITY OF TREES (Full Frame, PBS, Netflix); and the Webby Award-winning documentary series THE MESSY TRUTH. Lance was selected to the 2018 Sundance Creative Producers Summit, the 2017 Impact Partners Documentary Producers Fellowship and was named to the DOC NYC “40 Under 40” list in 2021. Lance was awarded four Individual Arts Fellowships by the DC Commission on the Arts and Humanities between 2014-2022. In 2014, Lance received the DC Mayor’s Arts Award, the highest honor given to working artists in the city. Lance has served two terms as Board Member of Docs in Progress, and has been an active member of the Documentary Producers Alliance (DPA) since 2016. Lance holds a bachelor’s degree in history and film from Dartmouth College.

    Mae Thornton Mehra is an oral historian and filmmaker who has collaborated with her husband and filmmaker, Atin Mehra on social justice and impact driven films for over 15 years at Orange Kite Productions. Mae serves as Producer on the award-winning BEING MICHELLE which premiered at Big Sky Documentary Film Festival in 2022 and continues to screen to sold-out audiences across the US. Mae prides herself on openly creative collaboration between film participants and diverse production teams, where she believes that impact begins within the filmmaking process itself. In 2020 Mae and Atin co-founded the nonprofit Thriving Roots Initiative to further their work of social impact documentary filmmaking.

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    38 mins
  • Q&A with Filmmakers: Behind the Scenes of Successful Impact Campaigns | Part 1
    Sep 26 2024

    Your host: Ani Mercedes, Impact Producer and Founder of Looky Looky Pictures (https://www.lookylookypictures.com/), they have served over 1,000 filmmakers, and now serve filmmakers in their Guided Campaign impact accelerator program.

    In this episode you’ll here from four filmmakers:
    Francisco Alcala - He is not only the proud father of Alejandra Alcala, the talented director of The Neighborhood Storyteller, but he is also deeply involved in the project as a producer, second camera, still photographer, and co-impact producer. In 2013, he made a bold decision to leave his well-paid job as VP of Kellogg's Latin-America Supply Chain to co-found the non-profit HOME Storytellers. Although some may consider his decision crazy, Francisco believes that money isn't everything, and he has gained invaluable experiences that he wouldn't trade for anything. Despite living in different countries, Francisco and Alejandra talk every day and work closely together. Above all, Francisco feels privileged to be making a positive impact on the lives of refugees, women, and girls in vulnerable situations, which brings him immense happiness.

    Emily Branham is a filmmaker who specializes in unexpected, intimate, and deeply human stories about artists. Her first feature documentary, BEING BEBE, premiered at Tribeca Festival, was a New York Times Critic’s Pick, and won Jury & Audience Awards on its festival tour across 5 continents. She directs and produces short documentaries for clients, and is launching her new podcast this spring. The podcast is called You Can Fly Too, and is about how creative people build their lives around their art. Originally from Minneapolis, Emily studied Radio/TV/Film at Northwestern University and is based in New York City.

    • Link Emily shared in the chat during the live event: https://beingbebemovie.com/impact-partnerships/

    Lance Kramer is a DC-based filmmaker and co-founder of Meridian Hill Pictures. Lance produced THE FIRST STEP (Tribeca, AFI DOCS); CITY OF TREES (Full Frame, PBS, Netflix); and the Webby Award-winning documentary series THE MESSY TRUTH. Lance was selected to the 2018 Sundance Creative Producers Summit, the 2017 Impact Partners Documentary Producers Fellowship and was named to the DOC NYC “40 Under 40” list in 2021. Lance was awarded four Individual Arts Fellowships by the DC Commission on the Arts and Humanities between 2014-2022. In 2014, Lance received the DC Mayor’s Arts Award, the highest honor given to working artists in the city. Lance has served two terms as Board Member of Docs in Progress, and has been an active member of the Documentary Producers Alliance (DPA) since 2016. Lance holds a bachelor’s degree in history and film from Dartmouth College.

    Mae Thornton Mehra is an oral historian and filmmaker who has collaborated with her husband and filmmaker, Atin Mehra on social justice and impact driven films for over 15 years at Orange Kite Productions. Mae serves as Producer on the award-winning BEING MICHELLE which premiered at Big Sky Documentary Film Festival in 2022 and continues to screen to sold-out audiences across the US. Mae prides herself on openly creative collaboration between film participants and diverse production teams, where she believes that impact begins within the filmmaking process itself. In 2020 Mae and Atin co-founded the nonprofit Thriving Roots Initiative to further their work of social impact documentary filmmaking.

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    58 mins
  • Impact Filmmaker Show Episode 1: How to Screen Your Film In Prisons
    Jun 19 2024

    In this episode, you’ll go behind the scenes to learn how to screen your film in prisons from a Chaplain, a film participant, filmmaker, and campaign manager.

    You'll hear from:

    Maurice Clifton is a Chaplain with the United States Chaplaincy Corps (USCC), and served twenty three years of incarceration in Federal Prison. Since being home, Maurice served as a Chaplain with the Mississippi Department of Corrections. Maurice is a loving father, husband and champion for his people.

    Malika Kidd was released from the Ohio Department of Corrections, after serving 14 years for drug trafficking, in 2015. Upon her release she faced many obstacles, from employment to housing because of having a felony record. Because of the barriers she faced reentering society, she wants to make the road easier for those coming behind her than it was for her and her advocacy in higher education, housing discrimination, and employment barriers is doing just that.

    Lance Kramer is a Washington, DC-based filmmaker and co-founder of Meridian Hill Pictures. Lance produced THE FIRST STEP (Tribeca, AFI DOCS); CITY OF TREES (Full Frame, PBS, Netflix); and the Webby Award-winning documentary series THE MESSY TRUTH. Lance was selected to the 2018 Sundance Creative Producers Summit, the 2017 Impact Partners Documentary Producers Fellowship, was named to the DOC NYC “40 Under 40” list in 2021, and received the Washington DC Mayor’s Arts Award in 2014, the highest honor given to working artists in the city.

    Lillie Fleshler is the Films and Series Campaign Manager for Represent Justice, an organization that turns stories into action by building narrative power within system-impacted communities and mobilizing audiences to transform the legal system. Previously, she was an Impact Distribution Manager at Picture Motion where she managed community screening tours for 15 documentary films, including True Justice: Bryan Stevenson’s Fight for Equality (HBO), Public Trust (Patagonia) and Athlete A (Netflix). She got her start at the intersection of impact and film during her time at the boutique distribution firm, Film Sprout.

    Your host: Ani Mercedes, Impact Producer and Founder of Looky Looky Pictures (https://www.lookylookypictures.com/), they have served over 1,000 filmmakers, and now serve filmmakers in their Guided Campaign impact accelerator program.

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    1 hr and 11 mins
  • Behind the Scenes of a National Film Impact Campaign: Through the Night
    1 hr and 28 mins