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Vision Maker Media Announces 2021 Public Media Fund Made-for-Television Film Projects
LINCOLN, Neb., August 10, 2021 — Each year, Vision Maker Media funds media projects intended for PBS broadcasting that represent the cultures, experiences and perspectives of Native Americans and Alaska Natives. Films are reviewed by a panel of public media programmers and Native American filmmakers, and board approved based on Native involvement, topics of relevance that can garner a wide audience, guideline eligibility, and meeting technical standards of PBS broadcast quality. This year’s topics communicate social justice, climate and environment, health and wellness, democracy and arts.
Fourteen television projects were selected for 2021 funding and will be executive produced by Vision Maker Media for PBS television broadcasting. The filmmakers represent 23 different Native nations with a total $841,522 in funding support.
The films funded are at all stages of the production process, with some still in research while others are nearing the end of production. The Vision Maker Media Public Media Fund offers up to $150,000 in support for episodic programming and production, up to $100,000 for post-production, and a range of $5,000 to $25,000 for research and development.
The purpose for research and development support is to fully develop a documentary or episodic program for television broadcast. The purpose for production support is to film, record and produce projects for television broadcast. The purpose for post-production support is to bring projects to completion and deliver a master cut for television broadcast.
“We’re elated by the variety of projects selected for the 2021 Public Media Fund,” says Executive Director Francene Blythe-Lewis (Diné, Sisseton-Wahpeton, Eastern Band Cherokee). “The group of projects represent an array of tribes, topics and impactful new stories that are vital to today’s dialogue. It is an honor for everyone at Vision Maker Media to be part of the creation of these important stories being told by and about Native Americans for public media.”
Projects Selected for 2021 Public Media Funding:
Tiny Tot Nation
Animated Short
Phase: Research and Development
Awarded $18,200
Producer/Director/Writer: Yvonne Russo (Sicangu Lakota Nation)
Associate Producer: Reuben Fast Horse (Standing Rock Lakota)
Animator: Eric Peck
An adventure to find a lost moccasin in time for the Christmas Powwow.
Navajo Doctors Project (working title)
Feature Documentary
Phase: Production
Awarded $74,882
Director/Producer: Billy Luther (Navajo, Hopi, Laguna Pueblo)
Doctors on the Navajo reservation work through the COVID-19 pandemic.
The Salmon People
Feature Documentary
Phase: Production
Awarded $73,072
Executive Producer/Co-Director: Darrell Hillaire (Lummi Nation)
Story Consultant/Narrator: Jay Julius (Lummi Nation)
Writer/Co-Director/Editor: Beth Pielert
Lummi Nation confronts the drastic decline of wild salmon that is threatening their way of life.
Kanenon:we – original seeds
Feature Documentary
Phase: Production
Awarded $57,182
Director/Producer/Writer: Katsitsionni Fox (Mohawk)
Producer: Katja Esson
Cinematographer: Jaiden Mitchell (Mohawk)
Cinematographer: Mateo Hinojosa (Bolivian-American)
Indigenous women seed keepers working to propagate and protect our seed relatives for future generations.
Good Fire
Short Documentary
Phase: Production
Awarded $53,127
Writer/Producer: Roni Jo Draper (Yurok)
Director/Cinematographer: Marissa Lila
Producer: Jenn Lee Smith
Disputing the notion of fire as our enemy.
(Untitled Tuscarora Short Documentary)
Short Documentary
Phase: Research and Development
Awarded $11,450
Producer: Stacey Rice (Tuscarora)
Producer: Lindsey Ashley
The Tuscarora Nation faces an ongoing water crisis outside of Niagara Falls.
Apache 8: Beyond the Fire
Feature Documentary
Phase: Production
Awarded $70,582
Director/Producer: Sande Zeig
Executive Producer: Heather Rae (Cherokee)
Producer: Katy Aday (White Mountain Apache)
Producer: Vicky Westover
Producer: Nina Mistry
Writer: Shepherd Tsosie (Diné)
Facing catastrophic fires on the west coast, Native women work to incorporate Indigenous burning rights.
And Knowledge to Keep Us
Episodic Series
Phase: Production
Awarded $52,382
Producer/Director/Director of Photography: Torsten Kjellstrand
Producer/Photographer: Dr. Sven Haakanson, Jr. (Sugpiaq, Athabaskan)
Producer/Photographer: Mark Blaine
Community Producers: Cheri & Speridon Simeonoff (Sugpiaq)
Elder Producers: Judy & Mitch Simeonoff (Sugpiaq)
Alaska Native kids gather to connect with and celebrate their Sugpiaq ancestral knowledge.
The Land Returns
Feature Documentary
Phase: Production
Awarded $142,329
Co-Producer: Kevin Abourezk (Rosebud Lakota)
Co-Producer: Margaret Jacobs
Co-Producer/Director/Editor: Charles “Boots” Kennedye (Kiowa)
Opportune pathways whereby Indigenous nations are regaining their land.
Indigenous Genders (working title)
Episodic Series
Phase: Research and Development
Awarded $25,000
Writer/Director: Raven Two Feathers (Cherokee, Seneca, Cayuga, Comanche)
Executive Producer: Ciara Lacey (Kanaka Maoli)
Producer/Co-Writer: Nils Cowan
Producer: Eleni Ledesma (Indigenous Mexican descent)
Director of Photography: Steve Hyde
This documentary-series explores gender norms through Indigenous lenses.
#MMIW: Search for Truth (working title)
Feature Documentary
Phase: Production
Awarded $100,714
Director/Executive Producer: Amanda Erickson (San Carlos Apache Nation)
Executive Producer: Sarah V. Burns
Executive Producer: Alex Sherratt
An Indigenous woman’s search to uncover the details of her sister’s death.
Alchesay
Feature Documentary
Phase: Research and Development
Awarded $25,000
Director: Dustinn Craig (White Mountain Apache)
Producer: Mari Keiko Gonzalez
The untold story of the first Apache Scouts.
The Bears on Pine Ridge
Feature Documentary
Phase: Post-Production
Awarded $80,597
Executive Producer: Sonny Skyhawk (Sicangu Lakota)
Director: Noel Bass
Co-Producer: Mirosala Gonzalez
A tribe’s suicide prevention team mentors young suicide-survivors.
Drowned Land
Feature Documentary
Phase: Production
Awarded: $57,005
Director/Producer: Colleen Thurston (Choctaw Nation)
Producer: Michelle Svenson
Director of Photography: Charles Elmore
Editors: Gloria Shade (Cherokee, Diné) & Zach Litwack
Deep in the Choctaw Nation of rural Oklahoma, a group of water protectors fight to preserve the lifeline of their community.
About Vision Maker Media
Vision Maker Media (VMM) is the premiere source of public media by and about Native Americans since 1976. Our mission is empowering and engaging Native people to share stories. We envision a world changed and healed by understanding Native stories and the public conversations they generate. We work with VMM funded producers to develop, produce and distribute programs for all public media. VMM supports training to increase the number of American Indians and Alaska Natives producing public broadcasting programs. A key strategy for this work is in partnerships with Tribal nations, Indian organizations and Native communities. Reaching the national public and a global market is the ultimate goal for the dissemination of Native public media that shares Native perspectives with the world. VMM is a nonprofit 501(c)(3) funded in part by the Corporation for Public Broadcasting (CPB). For more information, visionmakermedia.org, visionmaker@unl.edu or (402) 472-3522.