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Featured in the BITTER SOUTHERNER

The Bitter Southerner’s recent all-women issue, shares essays, stories, poetry, illustrations, and photography about what it’s like to live right now as women. They reached out to me to be part of a roundup of women in media weighing in with a quick answer to the question: WHAT WOULD BE THE TITLE OF YOUR THEORETICAL BOOK ABOUT BEING A WOMAN IN 2024?

My response: QUIET POWER

If anyone would actually like me to write that book…let’s do it!

Check out all the great responses in the latest issue of BS and sneak peeks on their instagram

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I just signed my first book deal!

I’m so excited to announce that I am writing a book with West Virginia University Press!

We’re pleased to announce that we’ve signed up Academy Award-nominated, Peabody-winning, and two-time Emmy-winning documentary filmmaker Elaine McMillion Sheldon to write a book for us! This work, a reflection on her career as a documentary filmmaker, will blend personal essays with practical knowledge and is inspired by the queries that the director of King Coal receives from aspiring filmmakers.
— WVU Press

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New Academy Member

This year, the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences extended invitations to 487 artists and executives who have distinguished themselves by their contributions to motion pictures. And I’m so excited and honored to announce I have been invited to join the Academy's Documentary Branch

As someone who has paved a non-traditional career path, living and working as a filmmaker in the U.S. South and Appalachia, I am excited to learn from others, and share the obstacles we face as filmmakers outside the tight-knit circles of our industry in New York City and Los Angeles. I look forward to supporting my colleagues as they make work that challenges our ideas — both creatively and ethically — of nonfiction art. Being part of The Academy at this exciting yet precarious time in our field is a huge honor and I look forward to discussions about our evolving role as nonfiction artists in society. As I continue down my path, I hope to lift up new artists and voices so that they also feel empowered to tell stories from their own communities.

Learn more here

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VCCA Residency

I am so excited to have been granted a two week artist residency at Virginia College of Creative Arts this fall. It will be such a luxury and privilege to have two weeks set aside for my personal projects.

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In Memory of Julia Reichert

I am so deeply saddened to learn about Julia Reichert's (far left) passing. Julia was an Oscar-winning documentarian, who leaves behind a legacy filled with powerful reflections on the working class, and the role of filmmaking in activism. I was privileged to spend quite a bit of time with Julia in 2016, when we were both awarded the Chicken & Egg Breakthrough Filmmaker Award. Read about Julia's legacy here  and take the time to watch some of her and Steve Bognar's incredible work, including American Factory on Netflix. 

Julia and I bonded over the fact that we both chose, and derive great joy, from being rooted in "a place." She, in Ohio - me, in Appalachia. We spoke a lot about ethics, representation, and our responsibility to our communities and the documentary field, as a whole. She was a tough critic, which today I am very thankful for, but more importantly an advocate and cheerleader for us filmmakers, who are based outside of our industry's center. 

I will carry Julia's spirit with me.
Thank you Julia, for all that you contributed to our world.


Memorable quotes from Julia Reichert, reflecting her core principles around storytelling and activism

"I want to make films about people that are ignored, people who are invisible, people who have been left out of history."

“The idea of fairness, that’s very deep in me. And that’s why I became a filmmaker — to be part of the process of telling untold stories, of people who don’t get a fair shake."

"I love the idea that filmmakers are organizers, because the job of an organizer is to help bring about change and to help people see the world in a new way."

"I believe in the power of ordinary people. I believe that’s where the change has to come from, not from the top."

READ more here on IDA and here on MoMA.

I am honored to have been in the presence of these two greats who have since departed - D. A. Pennebaker and Julia Reichert.

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Filming for "11-8-16"

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Filming for "11-8-16"

I'm excited to be one of many filmmakers who will be documenting America this Election Day for a new documentary tentatively titled, "11-8-16." We're spread across the country filming in all corners with Americans from all walks of life. I will spend my day (starting at 4:30 am) with a coal miner named Eric. I'll go underground with him all day, then follow him to the voting booth and back home to see the results.

Check out the film's website and this article about it.

Also, we will be Periscoping during the day. So follow that here.

 

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TEDWomen Short Film

A still from my latest short film, "The Experience of Time," which premieres at the 2016 TEDWomen conference in San Francisco.

A still from my latest short film, "The Experience of Time," which premieres at the 2016 TEDWomen conference in San Francisco.

I'm honored to have made a short film for the TEDWomen Conference. My 2-minute short film centers around human's obsession with controlling, tracking and using time "wisely" throughout history. It's a mix of doc footage, archival video, animation by Coat Of Arms Post production, and music by Colleen. Lifetime will distribute the films online after the TEDWomen conference.  

READ MORE:

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Changing the narrative of the news in the Mountain State

Dave Mistich, digital editor at West Virginia Public Broadcasting, and Elaine McMillion Sheldon, a documentarian and media artist, sit in a “Readership ReMixed” session focused on the way new generations find and consume news at WVU Reed College of …

Dave Mistich, digital editor at West Virginia Public Broadcasting, and Elaine McMillion Sheldon, a documentarian and media artist, sit in a “Readership ReMixed” session focused on the way new generations find and consume news at WVU Reed College of Media Innovation Center. 

Read this great article about the #NewStoryWV event. Thanks to the Charleston Gazette-Mail for quoting my thoughts on long-form and "positive" and "negative" coverage in the media:

Asked what she was doing currently to “change the narrative” and what new stories she was working on, she outlined her new project inspired by West Virginia’s opioid epidemic.

“Right now, I am producing a film about four guys in recovery from heroin,” she said. “When I say I’m making a film about the opioid epidemic, I get a lot of eye rolls. And that’s unfortunate because I actually think these guys can teach everyone in this room a lot. They’re a lot like the state — they’ve hit rock bottom in a lot of ways, and they’ve seen a lot of hard times and now they are building themselves back up and becoming a new person.

“So, I hope that that story is one that will bring a different type of conversation around addiction and how we got ourselves into this problem. Let’s stop saying this is purely negative because when we say that’s a purely negative story, we’re quantifying those stories as unimportant, that we shouldn’t be telling those stories and those people already feel silenced. So let’s not do that.”

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Pressing Pause: Elaine Sheldon and Sarah Ginsburg Take a She Does Podcast Break

One of the best podcasts to launch last year was She Does, a series of audio portraits of women creators across film, music, new media, journalism and more. But in early April, She Does stopped their weekly production of new episodes and, last week, posted what they called “a bit of a different episode.” In “It’s Been a Great Year” (embedded below), Sheldon and Ginsburg discuss their great run of episodes and their decision to step back from their weekly release schedule in order to re-concentrate on their own filmmaking practices. 

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"Rescue Breath" chosen for BritDoc's Good Pitch NYC event

We're so excited to take "Rescue Breath" to BritDoc's Good Pitch NYC! Read more here.

Logline: When his son holds up a bank while high on heroin, a successful doctor who re-invented the urgent care system is forced out of retirement to battle the opioid epidemic that has swept through his home state of West Virginia. Now with his son's future in the balance, can he save hundreds of lives and families from a similar fate and change how we treat addiction in America?

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Jonathan Franzen on social media, the Internet and smartphones

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Jonathan Franzen on social media, the Internet and smartphones

You gotta LISTEN to Jonathan Franzen on BBC World's Hard Talk

On social media:

"It's rewarding extremism and divisiveness. People find themselves in their own little echo chamber getting ever more extreme versions of what they already believe. It is not fostering complex discourse between opposing views on middle ground."

On smartphones:

"I would feel it somewhat of a failure, as a writer who has some a public stature, if I were not generating criticism. If I were not trying to call attention to things that no one else wants to talk about. And one of the things people don't want to talk about is how incredibly, compulsively addictive the stimulation by our devices is. When you simply mention that fact people, who are spending a lot of time and are more of less captive to their smartphones, they don't enjoy having that pointed out. They will react negatively. They will want to shoot the messenger. So be it. It doesn't mean that I shouldn't say how the world looks to me. I don't see people being happy about these devices in their lives, but they can't get away from them."

 

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You Should Read: Bending the Frame

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You Should Read: Bending the Frame

All photographs are accurate. None of them is the truth.
— Richard Avedon

Fred Ritchin asks "What do we want from this media revolution?" in "Bending The Frame: Photojournalism, Documentary, and the Citizen."

He takes us through the history of visual storytelling, and reflects on changes in media curation and distribution, including the 24 hours news cycle, the disappearance of the front page, the role of photo editing in dictating what photos get witnessed, stereotypes, and participatory content, among many other topics. 

"Bending The Frame" is a must-read for any media maker who wants to explore the role of images today. 

Below are some excerpts that I'm still thinking about:

Challenging the responsibility of editors: "Images that might provoke new thinking, or that might aid in the search for even a partial solution to societal problems, tend to be displaced by those that are more vividly exotic and render problems as somewhat remote, concerning 'others.'"

The role of journalism has shifted: "Journalistic expertise is disparaged by many as a manifestation more of corporate branding than of knowledge. With reduced budgets, journalism's role becomes increasingly reactive, waiting for the next eruptions; its responsibility as governmental watchdog and societal glue is diminished..." 

The craft of storytelling: "Anyone can write--amateurs and professionals alike--but very few can take us to visit worlds external and internal, tie them together, melding facts and suppositions while creating a narrative flow that functions like a great piece of fiction..."

The importance of having connection and perspective: "Although it is not really possible to see 'objectively,' the tension of being both insider and outsider simultaneously is potentially enormously productive, allowing the open-minded photographer to function along the translucent membrane where the two worlds overlap."

An idea for future media makers: "Why don't we have a more developed photography that explores in some depth the move from pain to it's resolution, creating reference points for those striving to more forward, rather than continually searching for, and dwelling on, the cataclysm--reminding us of traumatic moments for the sake of the visceral shock. Why do so many young photographers want to become photographers of war when nearly every one of them, I have little doubt, prefers peace?"

How small experiments can push an entire field forward: "Innovative visual journalists could be urged to experiment with new media strategies that may be of value not only to readers of this front page, but to the entire documentary field."

Where do we want to go with media? "As we consider where we want to go with our media, we need to think about what models will serve not only our needs but also our values, and then experiment to see how such models can be implemented."

Truly understanding the role of (multi)media: "...Innovators will undoubtedly discover that 'multimedia' is not a process of simply adding more media, but of implicit relationships made resonant among the most divergent of media..."


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Upcoming Events: February and March 2016

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Upcoming Events: February and March 2016

She Does Podcast- Live Recording in Miami

  • When: Feb. 27 at 4-6pm

  • What: Join us for a live recording of the podcast with Almudena Toral, a thought leader in digital journalism. In this intimate conversation, we'll explore Almudena's international multimedia reporting and her goals as the new Creative Visual Manager at Univision. We will also journey into her background, her lightbulb moments and turning points, her philosophies, and what makes her tick. The event will include live music by Inez Barlatier and audience interaction.

  • Where: Deauville Beach Resort: 6701 Collins Avenue Miami, FL

  • Get your ticket here

Lionfish Film Screening & Dinner: Film Gate Interactive

  • When: Feb. 27 at 7:30-9:30
  • What: Screenings of "Lionfish" and "Foraging" films by Elaine & Kerrin Sheldon, along with a lionfish dinner.
  • Where: Deauville Beach Resort: 6701 Collins Avenue Miami, FL
  • Get your ticket here

University of Knoxville: Digital Humanities Speaker Series

  • When: March 24 at 6:00pm
  • Where: Hodges Library Auditorium: 1015 Volunteer Blvd, Knoxville, TN
  • Details here

Appalachian State University: Digital Appalachia Lecture Series

  • When: March 30 at 5:30 pm
  • Where: App State University Library (Room 114 Lecture Hall): 218 College Street, Boone, NC
  • Calendar here

 

 

 

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