June • 2019
Mychaylo was fantastic. He helped plan the shoot, worked independently to make sure the job was successful, and was a pleasure to work with overall. Would definitely work with him again!
Vancouver, BC, Canada
2 reviews$400 - $1500 / Day
Request QuoteI am a video journalist with 15 years experience shooting, editing and producing for national broadcasters and independent media productions. At CBC News, I shot/edited +1,000 TV stories across Canada as a reporter and video journalist. I also shot, edited and produced a documentary in China for the National that won an Honourable Mention from the Columbus International Film & Video Festival. I also freelanced as a video journalist for the Globe and Mail and other publications.
June • 2019
Mychaylo was fantastic. He helped plan the shoot, worked independently to make sure the job was successful, and was a pleasure to work with overall. Would definitely work with him again!
July • 2019
Very professional and punctual. We would work with him again!
Prime Minister Trudeau met with all 13 premiers in Vancouver to work out a pan-Canadian climate change plan. So what did the Prime Minister achieve? A video reportage from the First Ministers' Meeting, for The Tyee.
Lliam Hildebrand has created Iron and Earth, an Alberta nonprofit designed to retrain oil workers for work with solar panels and renewable energy. (Filed this video story for two publications: Tyee and Globe and Mail.)
An Indigenous chief occupies an island and triggers a war over British Columbia’s salmon farms. I shot and edited the video story that accompanied a magazine article (that I also wrote) for Cascadia Magazine in Seattle, Washington.
This summer, I went to southern Manitoba to shoot this Globe & Mail news video about mosasaurs —a prehistoric sea lizard chosen as the province’s official fossil emblem. Extinct for 83 million years, and from the age of dinosaurs, this giant sea monster, nicknamed the ‘T-Rex of the Sea’, hunted for prey in a salt water seaway that once covered much of the Canadian prairies.
Oil sands worker Lliam Hildebrand admits he's been living a "double life" —living part of the year on in B.C., where he appreciates the West Coast's natural beauty; and the other part in Alberta, working what may be one of the most controversial industries on the continent: Canada's oil sands. Hildebrand launched a non-profit to help laid off oil workers transition into solar power.
Sixty-four years ago, a tiny B.C. Aboriginal community was paid just $1,292 for a giant corporation's right to forever pump oil through its reserve. Now the Coldwater Indian Band is suing to kill that deal -- a challenge that threatens to derail the $6.8-billion expansion of that pipeline proposed by current owner Kinder Morgan. Video story for The Tyee.
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