#1312: Sundance Dispatch Part 4 / Tia Lessin & Carl Deal




Filmwax Radio show

Summary: DownloadGet it on iTunes {pb_mediael audio_mp3=[http://d343ypnmzkqpnf.cloudfront.net/filmwax/1312-filmwax.mp3] } The Supreme Court’s Citizens United decision in 2010 lifted a century-long ban on restricted corporate election spending, unleashing a new era of unbridled special-interest campaign finance. CITIZEN KOCH examines the mushrooming struggle between money and democracy through the dramatic lens of the 2011 standoff in Wisconsin when Governor Scott Walker, bankrolled by out-of-state billionaires, stripped state employees of their union rights. Among a million outraged Wisconsinites, we meet individuals struggling with their Republican political loyalties as they decide whether to join the grassroots-fueled recall of Walker, a GOP rising star and Tea Party favorite. Meanwhile, on a national level, former Louisiana governor Buddy Roemer watches his Republican presidential campaign fizzle as he refuses, on principle, donations of more than a hundred dollars and gets outspent and drowned out by Super PAC–funded opponents. Combining intimate vérité scenes and a big-picture–style investigative exposé, Citizen Koch probes behind the headlines to penetrate one of the core issues of our time: Who really has the power in America—private donors or the voting public? Carl Deal and Tia Lesson (Directors and Producers) are Academy Award® and Emmy Award® nominated filmmakers who produced and directed TROUBLE THE WATER, winner of the Gotham Independent Film Award, as well as Grand Jury prizes at both the Sundance Film Festival and the Full Frame Documentary Festival, in addition to being named a finalist for the Britdocs/PUMA Creative Impact Award. They were producers of Michael Moore’s Fahrenheit 9/11, Bowling for Columbine, and most recently Capitalism: A Love Story. Tia and Carl were nominated for an NAACP Image Award and a Producers Guild Award for their work on Trouble the Water. In addition to a 300 city theatrical run, and broadcasts on HBO, National Geographic, Turner Movie Channel and Channel Four, the film continues to be used by dozens of partner organizations and hundreds of educational institutions and NGOs to create dialogue and inspire action for racial and economic justice. In television, Tia was line producer of Martin Scorsese’s No Direction Home: Bob Dylan and a consulting producer of Living in the Material World: George Harrison. She received two Emmy nominations for her work as producer of the series The Awful Truth and is the recipient of the  Sidney Hillman Prize for Broadcast Journalism for Behind the Labels. Tia is a Sundance Institute Fellow and Creative Producing Lab Advisor, a Creative Capital grantee and was awarded the L’Oréal Paris/Women in Film Women of Worth Vision Award. She is a graduate of Cornell University and a member of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. Carl previously worked as an international news producer and a writer, reporting from natural disasters and conflict zones throughout the U.S., Latin America, and in Iraq. He has an MS in journalism from Columbia University, which awarded him its Social Justice Prize, and is a member of the Writers Guild of America and the Academy of Motion Picture arts and Sciences. HOST: After abandoning a career in higher education, Kristin McCracken realized that writing about movies all day long was way more fun. Until recently, she was the Vice President of Digital Media at TribecaFilm.com. She now writes about film and consults with filmmakers about social media. Her most recent book is entitled 101 Things to Do Before You Turn 40.