January 26, 2023

The Future of Film Programming | Beyond Resilience

Firelight Media presents a Beyond Resilience event exploring emergent curatorial practices, festival programming guidelines, and distribution pathways that prioritize transparency and community responsibility. This conversation is part of a special series “The State of the Field: BIPOC Filmmakers and the Future of Documentary” co-presented by the MENASA Advisory Group, Brown Girls Doc Mafia, Color Congress, and Working Films.

With the rise in documentary film production over the past several years due to increasing commercial interest in the form, documentary film faces an existential threat. Hegemonic curation due to commercial streamers' dominance, eroding filmmaker independence in the face of financial precarity, and a lack of transparency are among the latest trends. Many in the filmmaking community are pushing back, calling for more restorative programming practices and seeking frameworks that account for issues including self-representation, editorial independence, and community accountability. How are BIPOC curators and programmers in particular addressing these issues, and what are the benefits they reap for filmmakers, audiences, and the documentary industry alike?

In a panel moderated by Karim Ahmad (founder, Restoring the Future), we highlight organizational models and missions that are advancing the form and building the ethical future of documentary distribution today. From the community-centered curatorial work of Nehad Khader at BlackStar Film Festival, to the accountability interrogations of programmers like Lucy Mukerjee (Programmers of Colour Collective), and social impact-centered distribution outlets like Elijah McKinnon’s Open Television (OTV), we give filmmakers (and the industry) a host of examples as to the presence of ethics-based practices within the industry and the power in aligning with them today. The event is introduced by Marcia Smith, co-founder and president of Firelight Media.

Accessibility Notice: This event includes live closed captions and ASL interpretation.

The Beyond Resilience Series is sponsored by Open Society Foundations. Beyond Resilience is supported, in part, by public funds from the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs in partnership with the City Council. This project is supported in part by the National Endowment for the Arts and Field of Vision.

Participant Bios:

Karim Ahmad is a writer, culture strategist, and organizer. He is the founder of Restoring the Future, a network of culture workers using worldbuilding and industry organizing to build a more just and beautiful media arts system, the creator of the Muslim Futures project, a cross-platform anthology of stories set in radically aspirational Muslim futures, and the writer of the speculative fiction comic book, DIVIDE. He was the Creator and Showrunner of the groundbreaking science fiction series, FUTURESTATES, and is a member of the Guild of Future Architects. He can be found on Twitter as @thatkarimahmad.

Nehad Khader is the Festival Director of the BlackStar Film Festival — a curator, editor and writer whose work in film informs her work as a historian and vice versa. Trained in media and literature by Black and Palestinian creators, Nehad is moved by art that carries aesthetic excellence as well as social and political significance.

Elijah McKinnon (they/them) is an award-winning strategist, entrepreneur and visionary from the future currently residing on planet earth. They are the Co-Founder and Executive Director of Emmy-nominated web TV platform and non-profit, Open Television (OTV). Over the past decade, they have worked tirelessly to create brave and equitable spaces for intersectional communities to thrive. Through various non-profit and grassroots initiatives, Elijah has raised over $10 million dollars toward amplifying the lived experiences of people with disabilities, gender minorities, BIPOC, LGBTQ+ identified individuals and many other intersectional communities. They are constantly moving and shaking in an attempt to build and share resources that uplift their commitment to human rights, mental & behavioral health, HIV/AIDS, education and more.

Lucy Jane Mukerjee is a queer British-Indian film curator and programming disruptor, dedicated to elevating the careers of underestimated storytellers. Her area of expertise is the intersection of activism and the arts, specifically where programming and inclusion meet. Over her 20+ year career, Lucy has produced and programmed films all over the world, including as Director of Programming at Outfest, Senior Programmer at the Tribeca Festival, and most recently, the Programming Director of Tasveer, the largest film festival in North America dedicated to stories by and about the South Asian diaspora. In 2018 Lucy co-founded the Programmers Of Colour Collective, a global professional development group for BIPOC film curators at festivals around the world. The Collective is a catalyst of transformative change in the industry, advocating for inclusion on-screen and on-staff, and calling for transparency and accountability in the curatorial process. Lucy’s passion is to guide and empower queer and trans storytellers of color to tell the LGBTQIA+ stories that are missing from the film canon.

Program Notes:

  • Read "How to Build a Restorative Media Arts System" by Karim Ahmad, on building a more abundant media arts system through restorative values practice.
  • Learn more about BlackStar Projects, organizers of the BlackStar Film Festival, which creates the spaces and resources needed to uplift the work of Black, Brown and Indigenous artists working outside of the confines of genre.
  • Visit Open Television (OTV), an Emmy-nominated nonprofit platform for intersectional television, with artists and their creative visions at the center.
  • Learn more about Programmers of Colour Collective, comprising programmers who are POCs, women and TSLGBTQ+, who are advocating for a more inclusive programming pool worldwide.

June 12, 2020

Production in Times of Upheaval | Beyond Resilience

How does a documentary filmmaker fulfill their role in the midst of a pandemic and an uprising?

June 19, 2020

Tulsa, Juneteenth, and the Path Toward Economic Justice | Beyond Resilience

Firelight Media joined The Movement for Black Lives' national call to action on June 19 with a panel conversation that explored the history of Juneteenth and the burning of Black Wall Street in Tulsa, and grappled with the path toward economic justice for Black America.

June 26, 2020

Can Impact Go Virtual + How? | Beyond Resilience

As physical distancing continues to be the new norm, how can we still make an impact when apart? Sonya Childress, senior fellow at the Perspective Fund, takes us through case studies of documentary film campaigns that have launched in this moment and raise key questions around audience access, care, and how to reach social justice impact goals.

July 3, 2020

Dance, Scream, Shout! | Beyond Resilience Virtual Dance Party

A live event featuring a music set by DJ Frotasia to give our community the opportunity to dance, sing, and shout during a time of tremendous difficulty.

July 10, 2020

The (Un)Documented Lens | Beyond Resilience

Conversations on representation, labor, and equity featuring the work and perspectives of Undocumented storytellers.

July 17, 2020

The Black Gaze | Beyond Resilience

A conversation with Black filmmakers on how they are navigating the ubiquitous images of Black trauma in this moment, documenting Black life, and forging new cinematic languages, practices, and formal approaches.

July 31, 2020

After the Call Out | Beyond Resilience

The recent announcement that golfing icon Tiger Woods would be the subject of a two-part HBO documentary series set in motion a heated debate in the documentary industry about equity, power, and BIPOC filmmakers' demands for structural change.

August 7, 2020

The Life and Legacy of John Lewis | Beyond Resilience

A conversation to lift up the life and legacy of the former Congressman with inside stories and reflections on his leadership.


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