The Future Starts Here: Tiffany Shlain On “Cloud Filmmaking”

(Photo by: TiffanyShlain.com)

Tiffany Shlain, Sundance Institute Artist

Honored by Newsweek as one of the “Women Shaping the 21st Century,” Tiffany Shlain, 43, is a filmmaker, public speaker, writer, founder of The Webby Awards, and co-founder of the International Academy of Digital Arts and Sciences. She has been invited to advise former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, and the U.S. State Department has used her films to represent America at embassies around the world.

Honored by Newsweek as one of the “Women Shaping the 21st Century,” Tiffany Shlain, 43, is a filmmaker, public speaker, writer, founder of The Webby Awards, and co-founder of the International Academy of Digital Arts and Sciences. She has been invited to advise former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, and the US State Department has used her films to represent America at embassies around the world. – See more at: http://tiffanyshlain.com/bio/#sthash.kBia91GS.dpuf
Honored by Newsweek as one of the “Women Shaping the 21st Century,” Tiffany Shlain, 43, is a filmmaker, public speaker, writer, founder of The Webby Awards, and co-founder of the International Academy of Digital Arts and Sciences. She has been invited to advise former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, and the US State Department has used her films to represent America at embassies around the world. – See more at: http://tiffanyshlain.com/bio/#sthash.kBia91GS.dpuf
Honored by Newsweek as one of the “Women Shaping the 21st Century,” Tiffany Shlain, 43, is a filmmaker, public speaker, writer, founder of The Webby Awards, and co-founder of the International Academy of Digital Arts and Sciences. She has been invited to advise former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, and the US State Department has used her films to represent America at embassies around the world. – See more at: http://tiffanyshlain.com/bio/#sthash.kBia91GS.dpuf
Honored by Newsweek as one of the “Women Shaping the 21st Century,” Tiffany Shlain, 43, is a filmmaker, public speaker, writer, founder of The Webby Awards, and co-founder of the International Academy of Digital Arts and Sciences. She has been invited to advise former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, and the US State Department has used her films to represent America at embassies around the world. – See more at: http://tiffanyshlain.com/bio/#sthash.kBia91GS.dpuf

It was a dream to have the world premiere of my first feature documentary at the 2011 Sundance Film Festival. The film was Connected, and one of the ideas I explored at the climax of the story was what I called “The Participatory Revolution,” the potential of so many people around the world having cameras in their hands at all times, connected to the Internet. So after the premiere, my team and I had an idea that we call “Cloud Filmmaking,” where we’d make a film together with all those people around the world. Over the last three years, we’ve released four of these “Cloud Films,” all putting the idea of the Participatory Revolution into action.

In the beginning of this year, AOL approached me to make an original film series for them where we’d explore some of the new ways we are creating films. In our eight-episode (three to six minutes each) series “The Future Starts Here,” we explore everything from the creative process to the history and future of robots to this Participatory Revolution and cloud filmmaking, delving into the question, what will the world look like when everyone is able to contribute, participate, collaborate, and create?

It used to be that our history books told the story of a few people, but when we look back at today, the story will finally be about all of us. Check out our 3 min episode, “The Participatory Revolution.”

You can watch the whole series here.

“What will the world look like when everyone is able to contribute, participate, collaborate, and create?”

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Alexis Chikaeze as Kai in 'Miss Juneteenth,' coming to digital platforms June 19

Channing Godfrey Peoples on a Bittersweet ‘Miss Juneteenth’ Release and the Urgency of Portraying Black Humanity on Screen

After premiering at the 2020 Sundance Film Festival, Channing Godfrey Peoples’s debut feature is hitting digital platforms this Juneteenth—the day for which the film is named and which is very close to the director’s heart. “I feel like I’ve been living Miss Juneteenth my whole life,” she says.
The June 19 holiday—which commemorates the day slavery was finally abolished in Texas (more than two years after the 1863 Emancipation Proclamation was issued)—is celebrated in her hometown of Fort Worth with a deep sense of reverence and community, with barbecues, a parade, and a scholarship pageant for young Black women.

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