April • 2021
Edwin was very professional and had great ideas to bring to the table. The shoot went smoothly and I look forward to working with him again.
Hong Kong
4 reviews$500 - $1000 / Day
Request QuoteI'm Edwin, director of Fallout Media in Hong Kong, China. My skills range from broadcasting TV, film, music video, multimedia journalism, photojournalism, adventure filmmaking, aerial cinematography and timelapse/hyperlapse. My career postings include Asia Television, South China Morning Post and Wall Street Journal. I am a video geek at heart and will take any opportunity to get out and shoot epic and meaningful work. I also engage in pro-bono work for charities. My side job is co-director of medical NGO Sight to Sky, based in Singapore. I am native in English and Cantonese.
April • 2021
Edwin was very professional and had great ideas to bring to the table. The shoot went smoothly and I look forward to working with him again.
March • 2021
Very professional service. Thank you Edwin.
A WOMAN who was once suicidal due to having a rare disorder that causes scaly skin, now is living life to the full. Mui Thomas, who resides in Hong Kong, suffers from a rare skin disorder called harlequin ichthyosis. Harlequin ichthyosis causes scaly skin, which cracks creating open wounds that leave suffers vulnerable to infection. The oldest survivor of harlequin ichthyosis is 35 years of age. At 26 now, Mui is one of the oldest known survivors and the world's first rugby referee living with this condition.
Uncle Wong is part of Protect the Children, a community group whose members put their bodies between the police and young Hongkongers protesting against the government. Waving his walking stick in the air and wearing swimming goggles to protect against teargas, he tries to reason with police and provide a distraction to allow activists to evade arrest. As tensions continue to rise between protesters and police, however, so does the emotional burden on Uncle Wong.
A major priority of the protest movement that has consumed Hong Kong for the past three and a half months has been to thwart the surveillance apparatus that's virtually everywhere. Demonstrators have felled camera poles with chainsaws, spray-painted security camera lenses, used green lasers to destroy sensors, and shielded themselves with umbrellas while marching through the streets.
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