Documentary Reel
documentary reel
- News Shooter / Video Journalist
- Documentary DP
- Commercial DP
- Corporate Videographer
New York, NY, USA
5 reviews$750 - $2000 / Day
Request QuoteCarmen is a video journalist and director of photography with 7 years' experience. She loves collaborating on projects of all kinds, and can create incredibly cinematic images in fast-paced settings where every moment counts.
documentary reel
Raveena Aurora's R&B, soul-inflected music and soft-spoken spirituality have garnered her a dedicated legion of fans. The Queens-raised, Indian-American singer embarks on her first national tour this fall, one that she calls "the softest tour of all time." In this video, Raveena takes the Cut through a day in her life, and talks us through the inspiration for her album Lucid, her favorite cafe in the city, and what being a musician of color means to her.
Lauren Simmons discusses the power that comes with being the only full-time female trader on the New York Stock Exchange.
Laverne Cox sat down with New York Magazine to talk about what makes her feel powerful, and the impact that she hopes her work has on the world.
Science writer Alice Robb taught herself how to lucid dream a few years ago, on a research trip to Peru. In her new book, Why We Dream: The Transformative Power of Our Nightly Journey, Robb writes that most people experience a lucid dream at least once in their lives, but “only about 10 to 20 percent have them regularly.” While her newfound powers have made her nighttime life much more exciting—allowing her to experience adventures and escape nightmares—they’ve also helped her deal with loss and grief. In this video, she reveals her surreal experiences within her nighttime imagination.
Welcome to the stylish minds of the improv group Three Busy Debras. Comedians Sandy Honig, Mitra Jouhari, and Alyssa Stonoha had just wrapped a show at Carnegie Hall when they got a call from Amy Poehler, offering to produce their web series, Three Busy Debras, for Adult Swim on Cartoon Network. Playing with tropes of femininity, beauty, dieting, and wealth, the Debras — a gaggle of “disturbed” Connecticut housewives—tend to take things a little too far when they get together, spitting up diamonds and eating lipstick. Inspired by their most popular video on YouTube, we invited the Debras over for a “fashion brunch” and asked them to improvise using the clothes as prompts. Naturally, things got weird.
Camera
Production Support