Playlist: Vision Maker Media's Portfolio

Featured
The Red Road
From Vision Maker Media | Part of the Native Radio Theater series | 58:50
Written and performed by Arigon Starr (Kickapoo/Creek), this one-woman show takes audiences straight to the heart of Indian Country by stepping back to the summer of 1977.
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- The Red Road
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- Vision Maker Media
Verna Yahola's All Nation's Café in Sapulpa, Okla., is where the all magic-and mayhem-happens. Legendary Choctaw country music star Patty Jones has asked Verna if she can do her 10th anniversary TV special at the eatery. Add a punk rock star from England, mix in a Navajo fry cook, stir in an Indian activist and fold in six more characters to let one of the most energetic productions from actress / singer / songwriter Arigon Starr and you'll have the makings of a smorgasbord filled with laughter, original music and fun.
Raven's Radio Hour
From Vision Maker Media | Part of the Native Radio Theater series | 58:49
Raven's Radio Hour celebrates the vast diversity of Alaska Native cultures with this heart warmingly funny radio show that features timeless stories, traditional songs and jokes.
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- Raven's Radio Hour
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- Vision Maker Media
Written by Jack Dalton and Ed Bourgeois. This hour-long Native Radio Theater Production celebrates the vast diversity of Alaska Native cultures with this heartwarmingly funny radio show. Hosted by Raven-the trickster/creator character in all Alaska Native traditions-this homage to the radio variety shows of the 1940s features timeless stories, traditional songs ... and jokes that'll make you blow moose milk through your nose!
The Bullfrog Lover
From Vision Maker Media | Part of the Native Radio Theater series | 28:46
A sweet and fun story about young love, determination and finding the best in people.
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- The Bullfrog Lover
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- Vision Maker Media
A play based on stories of the Eastern Band of Cherokee in North Carolina, adapted for radio by Robert Vestal (Cherokee) and performed by the Cherokee Youth before a live audience, recorded on location in Cherokee North Carolina.
Why Opossum's Tail is Bare
From Vision Maker Media | Part of the Native Radio Theater series | 28:50
An old Cherokee tale performed by the Cherokee High School Theater Arts class from Cherokee, North Carolina.
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- Why Opossum's Tail is Bare
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- Vision Maker Media
Why Opossum's Tail is Bare is an old Cherokee tale which was one of many traditional stories recorded by James Mooney in the 1800s. This story was adapted for radio theatre by Kevin Norris, Shawn Crowe (Cherokee), and the Cherokee High School Theatre Arts class. The story is about the vanity of Opossum and his beautiful furry tail, and tells how Opossum lost all that beautiful fur.
Boozhoo and Waste Yahi from Minneapolis
From Vision Maker Media | Part of the Native Radio Theater series | 01:27:36
A Native Radio Theater variety show. There is an hour version and a half hour version that can be used together or separately.
These programs feature some of the most outstanding talent from the Twin Cities' Native American community from writers and poets to singers and traditional storytellers. An exciting cross pollination of Native humor and the old variety show form, this show delivers a "wish you were here" postcard from Minnesota.
The show features:
Really Real News from Native America by Rhiana Yazzie & Clara NiiSka
North Spirit, a powwow drum group led by John Oakgrove
Traditional storytellers Faith Bad Moccasin and Gary Ten Bear
Singer/songwriter Raphael singing a song about powwow food and health
Cochise Anderson's monologue Billy Sky from his play The Only Good Poet is a Read Poet
Poems from Ardie Medina
Kohl Miner's humorous and poignant story Native Fruit - The Race
Shinob Jeopardy, a play by Ojibwe Humorist Jim Northrup
And Ojibwe Elvis impersonator Howie Atherton
Producer Profile: Milt Lee
From Vision Maker Media | Part of the Native Producer Profile series | 26:47
Reporter Nancy Kelsey speaks with multimedia producer Milt Lee about his most recent film, Video Letters from Prison.
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- Producer Profile: Milt Lee
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- Vision Maker Media
Milt Lee (Cheyenne River Sioux), talks about his film Video Letters from Prison. In the film, Lee follows three young Lakota girls from the Pine Ridge Reservation as they establish communication with their incarcerated father.
Native Sounds: Casper Lomayesva
From Vision Maker Media | Part of the Native Sounds series | 12:56
Reporter Ben Kreimer speaks with Hopi/Diné reggae musician Casper Lomayesva.
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- Native Sounds: Casper Lomayesva
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Ben Kreimer speaks with Casper Lomayesva (Hopi, Diné) about his musical career. Lomayesva is a reggae musician from the Hopi Nation in Arizona. His music contains social and political themes that blend elements of traditional reggae and Hopi culture.
Native Sounds: Joy Harjo
From Vision Maker Media | Part of the Native Sounds series | 12:56
Reporter Ben Kreimer speaks with award winning musician, poet, author, and playwright Joy Harjo.
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- Native Sounds: Joy Harjo
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- Vision Maker Media
Ben Kreimer speaks with Joy Harjo (Mvskoke) about her musical career and many other talents. In 2009, Harjo won the Native American Music Award for Best Female Artist of the year for her album Winding Through the Milky Way. A saxophone player, Harjo performs solo, as a duo and with her group The Arrow Dynamics band.
Super Indian
From Vision Maker Media | Part of the Native Radio Theater series | 01:03:56
After eating tainted commodity cheese in a birthday party accident, a young Hubert Logan discovers he has amazing powers that transform him into “Super Indian.”
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- Super Indian
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- Vision Maker Media
Super Indian written by Arigon Starr (Kickapoo). Produced by Native Voices at the Autry, this story features the return of Turtle Island's favorite hero in 10 new episodes. Including the origin of Super Indian, his side kicks, and his foes. SI is joined by a zany cast of characters in these fast paced episodes, sprinkled with parody ads all along the way.
Producer Profile: Luke Griswold-Tergis and Cory Mann
From Vision Maker Media | Part of the Native Producer Profile series | 10:08
Reporter Ben Kreimer speaks with filmmakers Luke Griswold-Tergis and Cory Mann about their film Smokin' Fish.
Luke Griswold-Tergis met Cory Mann (Tlinget) while hitchhiking through Alaska—on a sailboat. “Luke and I became friends mainly because he was sleeping on my floor,” explains Mann. During his time spent in Alaska, Griswold-Tergis was struck by the recollection of Alaskan Native peoples’ history and traditions, but realized that the knowledge “is endangered, and people need to work on preserving it more.” As co-producers of the film Smokin’ Fish, Griswold-Tergis and Mann explore the Tlinget tradition of smoking fish from the perspective of Mann.
Producer Profile: Mary Hager and Arlie Neskahi
From Vision Maker Media | Part of the Native Producer Profile series | 15:22
Reporter Ben Kreimer speaks with filmmakers Mary Hager and Arlie Neskahi about their work on the film For the Generations: Native Story and Performance.
The new documentary, For the Generations: Native Story & Performance, offers viewers a unique look at today’s most progressive Native American music and dance performers. The film is a joint production of Mary Hager (French-Canadian Cree/Metis) and Arlie Neskahi (Navajo) of Painted Sky, and Sean Hutchinson of Oregon Public Broadcasting. This month’s Producer Profile features Hager and Neskahi of Painted Sky, an organization dedicated to building public awareness of Native American culture, music and dance through performance and education. For the Generations features performers from around North America, chosen for their unique and progressive attitudes toward Native American music and dance in the 21st century.
Producer Profile: Mary Hager and Arlie Neskahi
From Vision Maker Media | Part of the Native Producer Profile series | 15:22
Reporter Ben Kreimer speaks with filmmakers Mary Hager and Arlie Neskahi about their work on the film For the Generations: Native Story and Performance.
The new documentary, For the Generations: Native Story & Performance, offers viewers a unique look at today’s most progressive Native American music and dance performers. The film is a joint production of Mary Hager (French-Canadian Cree/Metis) and Arlie Neskahi (Navajo) of Painted Sky, and Sean Hutchinson of Oregon Public Broadcasting. This month’s Producer Profile features Hager and Neskahi of Painted Sky, an organization dedicated to building public awareness of Native American culture, music and dance through performance and education. For the Generations features performers from around North America, chosen for their unique and progressive attitudes toward Native American music and dance in the 21st century.
Producer Profile: Sean Hutchinson
From Vision Maker Media | Part of the Native Producer Profile series | 12:58
Reporter Ben Kreimer speaks with producer Sean Hutchinson about his work on the new documentary For the Generations: Native Story and Performance.
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- Producer Profile: Sean Hutchinson
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- Vision Maker Media
The film For the Generations: Native Story and Performance is a collaborative effort between Painted Sky and Oregon Public Broadcasting. Reporter Ben Kreimer spoke with the co-producer Sean Hutchinson, about his work on For the Generations. The film offers viewers a unique look at today's most progressive Native American music and dance performers.
Native Sounds: Buffy Sainte-Marie
From Vision Maker Media | Part of the Native Sounds series | 17:33
Reporter Ben Kreimer speaks with Native media and music icon Buffy Sainte-Marie.
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- Native Sounds: Buffy Sainte-Marie
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- Vision Maker Media
Listen to our exclusive interview with Buffy Sainte-Marie (Cree). Buffy is an icon with Native media and music. In 1975, she joined Sesame Street for five years. Buffy's first release was in 1964 and since then, she has been recognized for her music and many accomplishments. She recieved a Golden Globe and an Academy Award for "Up Where We Belong." AIROS talked with Buffy about her career and her great accomplishments.
Producer Profile: Sterlin Harjo
From Vision Maker Media | Part of the Native Producer Profile series | 10:33
Reporter Ben Kreimer speaks with filmmaker Sterlin Harjo about his feature film Barking Water.
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- Producer Profile: Sterlin Harjo
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- Vision Maker Media
Sterlin Harjo (Seminole/Creek) is the director of the award-winning film Barking Water. The film is about Frankie and Irene, an older couple with on-and-off relationship of 40 years. With Frankie in the hospital suffering from a terminal illness, Irene comes back to him one last time to take him home to see his family. In this month's Producer Profile, Harjo talks about Barking Water and his film career.
Producer Profile: Ivy Vainio & Nate Maydole
From Vision Maker Media | Part of the Native Producer Profile series | 14:21
Reporter Ben Kreimer speaks with filmmakers Ivy Vainio & Nate Maydole.
The new Emmy-nominated men’s health documentary Walking into the Unknown tells the story of Dr. Vainio, as he undergoes a series of medical examinations that will change his life, and the lives of those around him. Directed by Nate Maydole and produced by Ivy Vainio (Grand Portage Band of Ojibwe), Walking into the Unknown takes the viewer into the doctor’s office as Dr. Vainio undergoes health screenings recommended for all men approaching their fiftieth birthday.
Native Word: Arne Vainio
From Vision Maker Media | Part of the Native Word series | 09:06
Reporter Ben Kreimer speaks with Dr. Arne Vainio from the film Walking into the Unknown.
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- Native Word: Arne Vainio
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- Vision Maker Media
Reporter Ben Kreimer speaks with Dr. Arne Vainio about his central role in the new Emmy-nominated American Indian health documentary Walking into the Unknown. Dr. Vainio is an Ojibwe physician on the Fond du Lac Reservation in northern Minnesota. In the film, Dr. Vainio, who is approaching the age of fifty, undergoes a series of medical examinations to determine his risk for health conditions such as diabetes, colon cancer and other health problems that have a tendency to appear during midlife. Be sure to check out the AIROS Producer Profile featuring Ivy Vainio and Nate Maydole, the producer and director of the film, available here.
Native Word: Arne Vainio
From Vision Maker Media | Part of the Native Word series | 09:06
Reporter Ben Kreimer speaks with Dr. Arne Vainio from the film Walking into the Unknown.
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- Native Word: Arne Vainio
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- Vision Maker Media
Reporter Ben Kreimer speaks with Dr. Arne Vainio about his central role in the new Emmy-nominated American Indian health documentary Walking into the Unknown. Dr. Vainio is an Ojibwe physician on the Fond du Lac Reservation in northern Minnesota. In the film, Dr. Vainio, who is approaching the age of fifty, undergoes a series of medical examinations to determine his risk for health conditions such as diabetes, colon cancer and other health problems that have a tendency to appear during midlife. Be sure to check out the AIROS Producer Profile featuring Ivy Vainio and Nate Maydole, the producer and director of the film, available here.
Native Sounds: Robert Mirabal
From Vision Maker Media | Part of the Native Sounds series | 12:58
Tobias Grant speaks with Grammy Award winning musician Robert Mirabal.
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- Native Sounds: Robert Mirabal
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Production assistant Tobias Grant speaks with Robert Mirabal (Taos Pueblo) from northern New Mexico. He has won two grammys. He is a featured artist on the documentary For the Generations: Native Story and Performance.
Native Word: Navajo Weavers Interview
From Vision Maker Media | Part of the Native Word series | 20:55
NAPT Assistant Director Georgianna Lee and Production Assistant Ben Kreimer speak with Martha Schultz, her daughter Lola Cody and granddaughter Melissa Cody, representing three generations of Navajo weavers.
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- Native Word: Navajo Weavers Interview
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During the first week of October, the University of Nebraska-Lincoln and the Cooper Gallery in Morrill Hall opened "A Turning Point: Navajo Weaving in the Late 20th Century," an exhibition showcasing modern Navajo textiles reflecting a culture balancing both tradition and change. The exhibit's opening coincided with the Textile
Society of America's 12th Biennial Symposium in Lincoln. Three Navajo weavers from Arizona were invited to demonstrate the weaving process for exhibition visitors. Martha Schultz, her daughter Lola Cody and granddaughter Melissa Cody, representing three generations of one weaving family, setup their equipment outside the Cooper Gallery and demonstrated for visitors how raw wool is carded, then spun, and subsequently woven.
NAPT Assistant Director Georgiana Lee and Production Assistant Ben Kreimer interviewed the three weavers following their demonstration.
Native Sounds: Bill Miller
From Vision Maker Media | Part of the Native Sounds series | 13:50
Tobias Grant speaks with multiple Grammy Award winning musician Bill Miller.
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- Native Sounds: Bill Miller
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Production assistant Tobias Grant speaks with Bill Miller, Stockbridge-Munsee Mohican, about his music as well as performing a symphonic piece about the battle of Little Bighorn and an experience on the red carpet at the Grammys. He is a featured artist on the documentary For the Generations: Native Story and Performance.
Producer Profile: Michelle Danforth
From Vision Maker Media | Part of the Native Producer Profile series | 14:58
Reporter Ben Kreimer speaks with filmmaker Michelle Danforth of the Lacrosse documentary Sacred Stick.
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- Producer Profile: Michelle Danforth
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Ben Kreimer speaks with Michelle Danforth (Oneida) about her most recent film Sacred Stick. The film explains the origins and spirituality of Lacrosse within Native American cultures, as well as stories from early European contact and adoption of the game. Intertwined with the historical aspect of the film is game footage of the Iroquois Nationals--the modern all Native professional Lacrosse team representing the Six Nations of the Iroquois League--playing at the world level.
Producer Profile: Kate Montgomery
From Vision Maker Media | Part of the Native Producer Profile series | 15:22
Reporter Ben Kreimer speaks with filmmaker Kate Montgomery.
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- Producer Profile: Kate Montgomery
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Ben Kreimer speaks with Kate Montgomery about her film, Christmas in the Clouds. The film, written and directed by Kate Montgomery, is a Native American comedy of errors that humorously defies Native stereotypes on the big screen. Set at a plush Tribal owned and operated ski lodge, Christmas in the Clouds combines multiple cases of mistaken identity and a cast of quirky characters that flies "in the face of stereotypes about Native American people," says Montgomery.
Native Sounds: Gary Farmer
From Vision Maker Media | Part of the Native Sounds series | 11:12
Brendan McCauley speaks with Native American actor and musician Gary Farmer.
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- Native Sounds: Gary Farmer
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- Vision Maker Media
NAPT Project Coordinator Brendan McCauley speaks with Gary Farmer, Cayuga, from Canada. Farmer has been a television and film actor since the 80s. He plays the father of the main character in Chris Eyre's Smoke Signals and is also one of the co-stars of Dead Man. He helped create Aboriginal Voices Radio in Canada.
Native Sounds: Gary Farmer
From Vision Maker Media | Part of the Native Sounds series | 11:12
Brendan McCauley speaks with Native American actor and musician Gary Farmer.
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- Native Sounds: Gary Farmer
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NAPT Project Coordinator Brendan McCauley speaks with Gary Farmer, Cayuga, from Canada. Farmer has been a television and film actor since the 80s. He plays the father of the main character in Chris Eyre's Smoke Signals and is also one of the co-stars of Dead Man. He helped create Aboriginal Voices Radio in Canada.
Native Sounds: Joey Stylez
From Vision Maker Media | Part of the Native Sounds series | 11:35
Tobias Grant speaks with Native American Hip Hop musician Joey Stylez.
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- Native Sounds: Joey Stylez
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NAPT Project Assistant Tobias Grant speaks with Joey Stylez, Cree Metis, from Canada. Joey Stylez is a Canadian hip hop artist from Moosomin, Canada. He and his friends started their own record label and clothing company. He won 2009 best video and the 2010 best pop cd and songwriter of the year from the Aboriginal Peoples Choice Awards.
Native Sounds: Louie Gonnie
From Vision Maker Media | Part of the Native Sounds series | 10:37
Shirley Sneve speaks with Navajo singer Louie Gonnie.
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- Native Sounds: Louie Gonnie
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Louie Gonnie is Dineh from the Navajo Nation in New Mexico. Due to Louie's admiration for his father and uncles, he decided to sing in the Native American Church so that he could be just like them. Gonnie is a well-rounded artist with ties to music, art and writing. After singing for the church and family and friends, he noticed that people were recording his music, realizing that a career as a recording artist was within his grasp.
Producer Profile: Diane E. Benson
From Vision Maker Media | Part of the Native Producer Profile series | 15:29
Reporter Ben Kreimer speaks with Diane E. Benson (Tlingit). She is an actress in the film For the Rights of All: Ending Jim Crow in Alaska.
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- Producer Profile: Diane E. Benson
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Ben Kreimer speaks with actress Diane E. Benson (Tlingit) about her role as Tlingit activist Elizabeth Peratrovich in the film, For the Rights of All: Ending Jim Crow in Alaska. The film tells the story of Alaska Natives and the injustice they experienced after the United States purchased the Alaska Territory from Russia. Facing racism, segregation and discrimination, Alaska Natives staged their own civil rights movement. Peratrovich's impassioned testimony before the Alaska Territorial Senate helped Alaska Natives achieve the legal recognition they desired.
Producer Profile: Diane E. Benson and Jonathon Stanton
From Vision Maker Media | Part of the Native Producer Profile series | 27:55
Ben Kreimer speaks with Diane E. Benson and Jonathon Stanton, about their films incorporating Alaska Natives and their efforts to overcome harsh Alaskan environmental and racial obstacles.
In the first interview, Ben Kreimer spoke with actress Diane E. Benson (Tlingit) about her portrayal of Alaska Civil Rights leader Elizabeth Peratrovich, in the Jeffry Silverman documentary, For the Rights of All: Ending Jim Crow in Alaska. The film tells the story of Alaska Natives and the injustice they experienced from the United States government.
Visit the film's website
In the second producer profile, Kreimer spoke with filmmaker and adventure athlete Jonathon Stanton about his new documentary, Games of the North: Playing for Survival. Games of the North: Playing for Survival, showcases Indigenous Arctic sports that incorporate survival skills necessary to inhabit the extreme Arctic environment.
Visit the Games of the North: Playing for Survival website
Producer Profile: Jonathon Stanton
From Vision Maker Media | Part of the Native Producer Profile series | 13:13
Reporter Ben Kreimer speaks with filmmaker Jonathon Stanton.
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- Producer Profile: Jonathon Stanton
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Ben Kreimer speaks with filmmaker Jonathon Stanton. He is the producer, writer and directer of the new documentary, Games of the North: Playing for Survival. The film showcases traditional Indigenous sports of the Arctic from the perspective of the athletes themselves. The sports incorporate physical and mental skills necessary to survive in the extreme Arctic environment.
Producer Profile: Sande Zeig
From Vision Maker Media | Part of the Native Producer Profile series | 13:44
Reporter Ben Kreimer speaks with filmmaker Sande Zeig.
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- Producer Profile: Sande Zeig
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Sande Zeig is the producer and director of the new documentary Apache 8. The film unveils the unique and untold history of Apache 8, an all-women wildland firefighting crew from the Fort Apache Indian Reservation in Arizona. Throughout the documentary, the lives of four Apache 8 crew members are woven into the film's narrative, revealing captivating stories from their lives both on and off the fire line.
Producer Profile: Tom Curran
From Vision Maker Media | Part of the Native Producer Profile series | 16:50
Reporter Ben Kreimer speaks with filmmaker Tom Curran.
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- Producer Profile: Tom Curran
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The Silence, a new documentary by Tom Curran, tells the decades old, untold story of what happened behind church doors in the remote Alaska village of St. Michael. Throughout the 1970s, Father George Endall and his deacon-in-training Joseph Lundowski molested much of the Yup’ik children living in St. Michael, a village on the remote southwest coast of Alaska. In the decades following the abuses, the Catholic Church denied the accusations of molestation from St. Michael, and other Native villages throughout Alaska. In The Silence, four victims, now-grown up, tell their stories from childhood, revealing the events that ravaged their lives and their families.
Producer Profile: Christine Lesiak and Princella Parker
From Vision Maker Media | 16:00
Reporter Ben Kreimer speaks with film producers Christine Lesiak and Princella Parker.
Standing Bear’s Footsteps, the new historical documentary by Christine Lesiak and Princella Parker (Omaha), tells the story of one of America’s original civil rights activists, Ponca Chief Standing Bear. “The film... is about what it means to be a person as told through the life of a Ponca Indian chief, and his struggle to be free,” said Lesiak. It is the first documentary to tell the story of Standing Bear’s life and activism work for Native American rights in America. The film presents his story though historical reenactments, photographs, film footage and interviews.
Native Sounds: Devin "Buddaz" Whirlwindsoldier
From Vision Maker Media | Part of the Native Sounds series | 10:14
Tobias Grant (Omaha) speaks with Native musician Devin Whirlwindsoldier.
Devin Whirlwindsoldier is Lakota and Diné. He was raised on the Rosebud Reservation in South Dakota. He grew up singing with various drum groups on the pow wow trail. Devin was able to stay positive and out of trouble through singing. He united with Stephen Yellowhawk and the duo formed “Buddaz and Stephen” and recorded their first album titled “Northern Lights.” Devin and Stephen also have recorded another project with RSBK (Ricky, Stephen, Buddaz & Kilo) titled RSBK.
Producer Profile: Tracy Rector
From Vision Maker Media | Part of the Native Producer Profile series | 14:44
An interview with Seminole filmmaker Tracy Rector, Producer of March Point.
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- Producer Profile: Tracy Rector
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Reporter Nancy Kelsey recently spoke with Tracy Rector, Executive Director and Co-founder of Longhouse Media, about her new documentary March Point. The two also discussed Tracy's work with Native youth and how she empowers them through media literacy and training. March Point will be airing on many public television stations November 18th at 10pm eastern. Here is the interview, from October 2008.
Native sounds: Raven Chacon
From Vision Maker Media | Part of the Native Sounds series | 13:28
Interactive Media Specialist Eric Martin speaks with Raven Chacon (Navajo) an experimental musician, composer and educator.
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- Native sounds: Raven Chacon
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Interactive Media Specialist Eric Martin speaks with Raven Chacon (Navajo) an experimental musician, composer and educator. Raven has been building his own instruments for creating new sounds since he was a child growing up in Chinle. Today he teaches Native youth through various programs including the Native American Composers Apprenticeship Project.
Producer Profile: Suree Towfighnia and Debra White Plume
From Vision Maker Media | Part of the Native Producer Profile series | 29:17
Vision Maker Media Executive Director Shirley Sneve speaks with filmmaker Suree Towfighnia and consulting producer Debra White Plume.
Crying Earth Rise Up is a film by Suree Towfighnia of Prairie Dust Films with consulting producer Debra White Plume (Oglala). The name of the film comes from an old belief of the Lakota that Mother Earth needs to be cared for through good stewardship of the land, caring for its natural resources.
Native Sounds: Brent Michael Davids
From Vision Maker Media | Part of the Native Sounds series | 17:40
Executive Director Shirley Sneve speaks with Brent Michael Davids (Stockbridge Munsee Band of the Mohican Nation), a classically trained musician and composer.
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- Native Sounds: Brent Michael Davids
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Brent Michael Davids (Stockbridge Munsee Band of the Mohican Nation) is a classically trained musician and composer. He has been a long-time fixture in the music scene of the Twin Cities area of Minnesota, but is now building a new home and studio on his reservation in Wisconsin. Through the American Composers Forum (ACF), he's a founder of the First Nations Composer Initiative (FNCI).
Native Sounds: Swil Kanim
From Vision Maker Media | Part of the Native Sounds series | 19:47
Production Assistant Landon Mattison speaks with Swil Kanim (Lummi Nation), an award-winning, world-class virtuoso violinist and inspirational speaker.
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- Native Sounds: Swil Kanim
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Swil Kanim (Lummi Nation) is an award-winning, world-class virtuoso violinist and inspirational speaker. from the Lummi Tribe in Washington. He travels throughout the United States, inspiring audiences through his music and personal stories. His compositions incorporate classical influences and reflect his journey from depression and despair to spiritual and emotional freedom. He is also the president of HonorWorks, a nonprofit organization who mission is to to create and ignite the potential for honor among all people.
Producer Profile: Chris Eyre
From Vision Maker Media | Part of the Native Producer Profile series | 11:27
Growing Native Associate Producer Blue Tarpalechee speaks with renowned Native filmmaker Chris Eyre.
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- Producer Profile: Chris Eyre
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Southern Cheyenne and Arapaho filmmaker Chris Eyre is synonymous with Native film. His work includes feature films like Skins and Smoke Signals. He recently directed the film Hide Away featuring Josh Lucas and James Cromwell. Today, Chris shares his experience with his students as the Chair of The Film School at the Santa Fe University of Art and Design. Chris also serves as the host of the upcoming Vision Maker Media production, Growing Native. Growing Native follows Chris on his journeys through Indian Country, highlighting inspiring stories of cultural and physical sustainability. Associate Producer Blue Tarpalechee sat down with Chris after they had just wrapped filming for an upcoming Growing Native episode in Alaska.
Native Sounds: Jack Gladstone
From Vision Maker Media | Part of the Native Sounds series | 18:56
Production Assistant Landon Mattison speaks with Jack Gladstone (Blackfeet), a storysmith sharing his unique brand of music inspired by the stories and history of Native Americans.
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- Native Sounds: Jack Gladstone
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Production Assistant Landon Mattison speaks with Jack Gladstone (Blackfeet), a storysmith sharing his unique brand of music inspired by the stories and history of Native Americans. Jack recently was honored with the CM Russel Heritage Award, and a Native American Music Award. 2013 marks the 29th year Jack has been sharing insight about Montana's Indigenous people at Glacier National Park.
Native Sounds: Hawk Henries
From Vision Maker Media | Part of the Native Sounds series | 14:36
Production Assistant Landon Mattison speaks with Hawk Henries (Nipmuc), a gifted flutist and flute maker.
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Production Assistant Landon Mattison speaks with Hawk Henries.Hawk Henries is a gifted flutist and flute maker from the Nipmuc tribe in southern New England. He has performed at various venues across the United States, as well as several in the United Kingdom. Hawk has been a flute maker for over 20 years, and believes in creating his instruments through traditional techniques and the use of hand tools.
Producer Profile: Julianna Brannum
From Vision Maker Media | Part of the Native Producer Profile series | 09:29
Interactive Media Specialist Eric Martin speaks with Comanche filmmaker Julianna Brannum about her new biopic about LaDonna Harris.
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- Producer Profile: Julianna Brannum
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Indian 101 is a new biopic from Comanche filmmaker Julianna Brannum. The film chronicles the life of LaDonna Harris and the role that she has played in Native and mainstream American history. In March of 2013, Vision Maker Media's Interactive Media Specialist, Eric Martin, caught up with Juliana at the South by Southwest Film and Interactive Festival in Austin, Texas and spoke to her about the documentary and her career.
Producer Profile: Torsten Kjellstrand and Jamie Francis
From Vision Maker Media | Part of the Native Producer Profile series | 12:04
Vision Maker Media Assistant Director George Lee speaks with filmmakers Torsten Kjellstrand and Jamie Francis.
The efforts of one dying woman to preserve her Native culture don't end when she passes, but prompts a renewal in finding pride in that culture. She confronts the violent event over two centuries ago that began the destruction of her people and the shame that colonialism created. Vision Maker Media Assistant Director George Lee speaks with filmmakers behind the documentary Finding Refuage, Torsten Kjellstrand and Jamie Francis.
