
DAMON DAVIS / DIRECTOR
Damon is an interdisciplinary artist who works and resides in St. Louis, Missouri. The vast scope of his work includes illustration, painting, printmaking, music, film, and public art. He is both the producer and vocalist of experimental hip hop outfit Scripts N Screwz; co-founder of art collective Civil Ape; and founder of independent music and art imprint, Far Fetched. Immediately after the events in Ferguson, MO, Davis began illustrating political cartoons, speaking on discussion panels, curating art exhibitions of fellow artist activists, and making films. Davis’ most identifiable work, All Hands on Deck, shaped and upheld the movement as a strong statement about basic human rights. Davis is a recipient of The Riverfront Times Master Mind Award (2013), an Emmy Award for Best Short Form Program with A Story To Tell (2013), St. Louis Soup Across the Delmar Divide Award (2013), and Best Hip Hop Producer SLUMfest Award (2014). He is also a Regional Arts Commission Community Arts Training Fellow (2012) and named to Alive Magazine's Buzz List (2013).Damon is an interdisciplinary artist

SABAAH JORDAN / DIRECTOR
Sabaah Jordan is an organizer, advocate, and storyteller born in raised in South Central LA. She entered the world of storytelling through theater and performed as a member of the Black Theater Ensemble in college. She curates the blog Sixty Million and More, an anthology of original poetry, short stories, and informative articles. She recently published an account of the non-indictment of Darren Wilson in The Experience magazine. In 2013 her advocacy work took her to Rikers Island where she interviewed dozens of incarcerated people about their experiences with trauma.Determined to expose the deep wounds inflicted on the Black community at the hands of the criminal justice system, she came to Ferguson with cinematographer Lucas Farrar in September 2014 to learn the truth behind the dramatic scenes playing out on the news. Hearing the stories of community members in Ferguson and the surrounding St. Louis area inspired her to enter the world of film. Sabaah continues to inspire others to fight for justice - on 12.13.14 she helped organize The Millions March, one of the largest marches for racial justice in New York history, in response to the non-indictment of the officer responsible for killing Eric Garner.

LUCAS ALVARADO FARRAR / DIRECTOR OF PHOTOGRAPHY
Lucas is a filmmaker and the creative director/founder of Far Fetched Future. Over the past four years he has worked largely around hip hop and jazz and the youth cultures attached to them, traveling from California to Texas and up and down the East Coast to document the field. From boxing rings and backstreet stages to apartment studios and basketball courts, his photography documents the past and present key players as they navigate this complex landscape. In addition, he has had the opportunity to shoot a meat market in Brazil, one of four ever black US fencing Olympians, an Ailey Dancer, Annie Leibovitz on set, amateur boxing in Brooklyn, a train crash on New Years Eve, an album cover for Interscope's Cozz, and much more. In the process, his work has been featured in The New Yorker, The Washington Post, XXL, VICE, Complex, and in a music column in The Huffington Post. This past summer he completed a residency with NY gallery GersonZevi (www.GersonZevi.com) throughout the Southwest called Land Art Road Trip. He is currently a field producer for Revolt TV shooting and packaging content for air.

CHRIS MCNABB / EDITOR
Chris is a filmmaker, editor, and writer dedicated to the art of both fiction and non-fiction storytelling. For the last year, he has worked as the editor and post-production supervisor for The Skin Deep, a startup media company dedicated to creating interactive content. McNabb is the editor of The Skin Deep’s ongoing project {THE AND} (Official Selection, IDFA 2014), an interactive documentary about contemporary human relationships, and the accompanying short film {THE AND} Marcela & Rock (Official Selection, Sundance 2015). He is also working as the assistant editor for documentary filmmaker Lana Wilson (After Tiller) on her second feature film. He graduated with a bachelor’s degree in Film Studies from Wesleyan University, where his thesis film, Driven, won the NNK Award for Best Screenplay. Passionate about telling stories that are both personal and far-reaching, McNabb is currently researching and developing two documentary projects of his own and collaborating with the filmmakers of Whose Streets? in post-production.
Flannery Miller/Producer
Flannery is a filmmaker and impact producer committed to using visual storytelling to promote human rights and social justice. She is co-founder of Global Video Letters (GVL), a participatory media initiative dedicated to social inclusion and citizen journalism (Kabul Cards exhibited at the Nobel Peace Center in 2012). As Director of Human Rights Education at Skylight Pictures (2011-2014) she designed and produced impact campaigns for Emmy nominated Granito: How to Nail a Dictator (Official Selection, Sundance; Grand Prix Best Creative Documentary) and Disruption (2014). She produced the Dictator in the Dock short film series and managed the outreach for Skylight’s trans-media project Every Memory Matters, an interactive collective memory portal, both about the Guatemalan armed conflict and genocide. Until recently, Flannery produced social impact media, art installations and events for Soze, a creative impact firm based in New York.



