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Documentary 2.0: Making Media That Matters

Katy Chevigny, Executive Director of Arts Engine, Inc., the nonprofit arm behind the festival, and Gina Teleroli of Meerkat Media Collective, one of the seven collaborators behind Every Third Bite, another of this year’s official selections, discuss artistic collaboration, trends from this year’s festival, and how the Internet is changing the way we make and view film.


Some members of the Meerkat Media Collective discuss decisions in the editing room.

Each June, The Media That Matters Film Festival selects a group of 12 shorts by independent filmmakers designed to spark action and debate in twelve minutes or less. Unlike other festivals, MTM works to promote its selections year-round through online streaming, broadcasts and community screenings.

Filmmaker's Journal: So Much for Taking a Break

Jason Rosette went to Southeast Asia to take time off after his second film wrapped. That's where the subject of his third and latest film grabbed him


In His Element: Filmmaker Jason Rosette (with camera) started a production company and film festival in Cambodia.

In 2007, an article in the New York Times hailed Phnom Penh, the capital city of Cambodia, as “the next Prague.” Soon thereafter, every footloose hipster in the West seemed to home in on the place. But the city they found was a far cry from “the next Prague.” It is still too alien to most Western sensibilities, and it is at times dismayingly dark, violent, and desperate.

For Inspiration, Judd Ehrlich Looked to the Subject of His New Film, "Run For Your Life"

A look at the crowd-pleasing Fred Lebow biography that premiered at the 2008 Tribeca Film Festival


A Place in the Run: Fred Lebow, shown in the red Mercedes, in the subject of Judd Ehrlich's "Run for Your Life."

While vampires made a big splash at this year's Tribeca Film Festival, a documentary about a son of Transylvania carved out a decidedly different niche for itself.

The Doc Doctor's Anatomy of a Film: "Muskrat Lovely"

A look at Amy Nicholson's film, which aired on PBS's "Independent Lens"


The Fur Flies: Filmmaker Amy Nicholson shot "Muskrat Lovely" in less than three weeks.

About this column: Many filmmakers ponder in anguish, How do other people—celebrated people—do it? Am I taking too long to make this documentary? Does everybody spend as much money as I am spending, or am I spending too little? And when filmmakers share their lessons learned in interviews in the glossy trade magazines, their tales seem to follow the arc of otherworldy heroes rather than real documentary makers, i.e. human beings like you and me. So each month, the Doc Doctor will go out into the world (this real world) of filmmakers who are successful and find out how they made it. The "Anatomy of a Film Column" is a chance to learn from filmmakers' hits and misses in real life examples. —Fernanda Rossi, story consultant a.k.a. the Documentary Doctor

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