Producing has become a means of survival that has sustained me for the past few years. Through it, I’ve amassed an arsenal of practical knowledge about making things happen on screen. The production of short films, music videos, and image films has become the foundation of my income and, inevitably, my life. Producing has given me the chance to observe the dance between logistics and art, to see how the machinery of film runs on an engine as human as it is technical—whether it’s managing a budget that builds the magic before your eyes, or quietly observing actors turn their inner worlds outward.
The word collaboration always felt a bit overused for its property of bringing santiment, but it has, over time, became an act of faith for me. I’ve worked with independent filmmakers, artists, and production companies alike, all held together by a sense of purpose as fragile as it is enduring. I’ve learned to adapt quickly and support projects across a variety of roles, from the most mundane logistics to creative development, whether refining a script, assembling a budget that might just work, or handling the chaos of a shooting day.
Producing is, if nothing else, but an exercise in contingency and in patience—qualities I bring to every production. I’m here, ultimately, to keep things moving forward, with as little friction as possible, for those strange few who persist in telling stories that might matter to someone, somewhere.