Selected Work

We Make Movies Winner: Make Your Feature Competition
We Make Movies Winner: Make Your Feature Competition

Digital artist Lex Carre documents her struggle with anxiety through work that she posts anonymously online. Her pieces capture the attention of cunning curator Andrea Caulfield, who offers mentorship in exchange for control of Lex's career.

When Lex’s mental health starts to spiral from the pressure, Andrea assumes ownership of her work—prompting Lex to plot a psychological showdown against the exploitative mentor who stole her art and nearly destroyed her mind.

Best Feature San Antonio Q Fest
Best Feature San Antonio Q Fest
Best Feature SFQFF 2024
Best Feature SFQFF 2024
Director's Choice Cinema Diverse Film Festival
Director's Choice Cinema Diverse Film Festival
Outstanding Panavision Feature Micheaux Film Festival
Outstanding Panavision Feature Micheaux Film Festival

Feature Film

"A playful Arrested Development for dykes, this sitcom features superb comic timing, offbeat dialogue and witty cutting, and its poppy soundtrack only punctuates the sarcasm. All four actors work well off one another, effortlessly spinning dry and absurd jokes, or, better yet, making fun of their own comedic efforts.

For those who like their ladies smart, funny and self-deprecating (as well as sexy), this is the show to watch." - LOTL Australia

Jill Bennett 3way
Jill Bennett 3way

Festival favorites Jill Bennett and Cathy DeBuono (Out at the Wedding, And Then Came Lola) once again ignite the screen, this time as a sexy, professional couple who seem to have it all. Director Robyn Dettman’s engaging vignettes string us along as the humor and mischief build. We Have to Stop Now is a wacky but down-to-earth emotional rollercoaster likely to remind you of your most dysfunctional (yet likeable) queer friends." - Frameline

"...(the cast) and Jill know what it takes to make you watch...once they start, you can't take your eyes off them." - The Advocate

"The dialogue is quick and snappy, full of contemporary one-liners that range from tongue-in-cheek references to women's soccer players (Bennett's Kat McDonald, the owner, is a former professional soccer star), the ever-evolving lesbian coif du jour, and of course, numerous jokes about the Hole itself. The humor is generally good-natured and often full of puns, as well as catchphrases that are destined to become colloquial in the lesbian community.

Second Shot views almost like a lesbian take on It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia, focusing on its characters' supposedly doldrum existence and the surprising camaraderie and, well, "second shots" that appear when you let go of your ego and move back home." - Pride.com

Jill Bennett Second Shot
Jill Bennett Second Shot

Comedy

Season 1 & 2

Curve Magazine
Curve Magazine

Best Digital Series

Curve Magazine
Curve Magazine

Web Series Pioneer

Gultiest Pleasure TV Show

for them

Anti-suicide PSA

Creative Director:
PSAs, Branded Content, Commercials

Do It For Us

Voting PSA

The Volunteers

Volunteering PSA

Peer Pressure

Volunteering PSA

Democrats: Factory Towns

Voting PSA

Welcome to Perry's Place

Branded Content

Election Day in GIFs

Branded Content

Excuses

Volunteering PSA

Game of Homes

Branded Content

Wondering where to spend your money on a low or no budget project?

Don't hire a traditional line producer - micro budget projects are a completely different animal. One consulting session will save you hours of time and ensure that the limited resources available are used effectively and realistically.

Landing a development deal based on the popularity of a no-budget video blog proved two things:

  • You don't need piles of money to make engaging content

  • Niche audiences are often underestimated and usually overlooked

I've spent the last 15 years making content with these two facts in mind. Who wouldn’t love 10 million dollars for their next project? The question is, do you really need that to tell a story?

Low budgets require high creativity. Embrace the constraints, and turn limitations into innovations. Simple narratives can still have a profound impact.