Director, Producer & Writer. Alexander Shebanow is a political documentary filmmaker who started his career making documentaries on non-profit organizations around the San Francisco Bay Area. In 2013, he began working on his directorial debut feature, Fail State, an expansive documentary exposé on predatory for-profit colleges and worsening inequality in American higher education. Fail State premiered in the fall of 2017 to packed houses at Austin Film Festival and DOC NYC, garnering strong press attention and rave reviews. The film is in the midst of its nationwide film festival tour and will be released publicly in 2018. Alexander's other documentary work include short films on music therapy for children with autism and the life-changing power of sports and fitness programs for people with physical disabilities. Alexander attended Foothill Community College before finishing his studies at the University of Southern California.

Julia Glausi

Producer. Julia Glausi is an independent producer hailing from Portland, Oregon. She completed her bachelor's degree with an emphasis in producing from Brigham Young University where she produced the award winning feature-length documentary, Chronicle of a Country. She currently works in production and development at Endgame Entertainment, a production and finance company notable for feature-films Looper, An Education, Side Effects, I’m Not There. Most recently, Julia assisted in shepherding Charlie McDowell’s The Discovery (Robert Redford, Rooney Mara, Jason Segel) as well as the upcoming Netflix Original docu-series Last Chance U.

Terrence Crawford

Producer. Terrence Crawford is a documentary filmmaker hailing out of the San Francisco Bay Area. Terrence started documentary filmmaking with Alex Shebanow on the short documentary, ASRA: Autism Spectrum Research Alliance. His other documentary work includes pieces on the International Brain Research Foundation, the National Institutes of Health, and most recently collaborated with Brick City TV on their show Inside the FBI: NYC for the USA Network. Terrence received a Bachelor of Fine Arts in Film and Television Production at New York University.

Adam Bolt

Producer & Supervising Editor. Adam Bolt edited and co-wrote the Oscar-winning documentary Inside Job, for which he received the Writer's Guild Award for Best Documentary Screenplay and was nominated for an American Cinema Editors award for Best Edited Documentary in 2011. He won an Emmy in 2014 for his work on the Showtime documentary series Years of Living Dangerously, where he served as editor, writer, and senior producer. His other credits include director Alex Gibney’s Park Avenue: Money, Power & The American Dream, which premiered on PBS's Independent Lens and went on to win a Peabody Award in 2013; Page One: Inside the New York Times, which was nominated for two Emmys (including Best Editing) in 2012; and the HBO documentary The Recruiter, which won a Columbia duPont award for excellence in broadcast journalism in 2010. Adam is also the director of The Edit Center, a renowned film editing school in Brooklyn, NY.

Regina Sobel

Editor, Writer. Regina Sobel is a Brooklyn-based film editor. She recently completed work as editor and co-producer on a science documentary series funded by The Simons Foundation. She was the associate editor on Alex Ross Perry’s Queen of Earth, which stars Mad Men's Elisabeth Moss and was released by IFC Films last summer. She was also an additional editor on Paula Eiselt's 93Queen, which was selected as part of IFP's Spotlight on Documentaries. Previously, Regina produced and directed graphics for film and TV, including PBS's Park Avenue: Money, Power & the American Dream, Showtime’s Years of Living Dangerously, and HBO’s Game of Thrones.

Jennifer Latham

Co-Producer. Jennifer Latham is a producer of features and documentaries. She started her film career in her home state of Vermont on Nora Jacobson’s feature debut My Mother’s Early Lovers, the beginning of nearly two decades of work in films that go beneath the surface in revealing, honest, and often provocative ways. Her documentary credits include the award-winning Endurance: Shackleton’s Legendary Antarctic Expedition, followed by Two Towns of Jasper, the critically acclaimed documentary for which she received a Columbia-Dupont award as Co-Producer. Jennifer line produced Michael Moore’s Academy Award nominated Sicko and Capitalism: A Love Story, and has produced documentaries ranging in topics from international adoption to an enduring musical tradition in Haiti. Most recently, she was the Supervising Producer of the Emmy Award winning, Years of Living Dangerously, a 9-part documentary series on climate change that aired on Showtime in 2014.