S3E4 S3 E4: Azza
- Kamala Harris inauguration: I was her videographer. I wish I could show you what I've seen. - This article reminds me that visibility matters.
CHANGE THE REEL with Piper and Monique
Executive Producers: Monique Velasquez and Piper Kessler
Producer: Arielle Morten
Director/Editor: Simon Beery
Copyright 2026 Monique & Piper
Transcript
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::When I would see a young black girl in the crowd looking at Kamala
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::Harris, I would always remain
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::composed, but internally sobbing because
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::thinking about what
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::that little girl got to see, that Kamala
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::Harris didn't get to see that none of us got to see, right?
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::A woman in that role.
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::The less we are
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::able to show women in their full dignity and authority,
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::political business, sports, all of
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::the arenas in which women are public figures.
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::The less that we have better
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::representation behind the camera to make sure that
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::those people in front of the camera are
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::taken seriously, the less you feel comfortable
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::with the idea of a woman in this type of power
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::and in this type of authority.
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::Change
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::the Reel with Monique Velasquez and Piper Kessler.
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::For more than 20 years, we've worked in video production behind the
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::scenes, helping mission-driven organizations and leaders.
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::This podcast exist for leaders who know their
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::stories matter and are ready to stop guessing and start
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::using video strategically to further their mission,
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::not just fill a content calendar.
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::Each month, we drop 2 types of episodes.
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::One with Piper and I kicking it, sharing production, insight
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::from our own work, and another featuring real stories about
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::using media to create change and connection.
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::This is change the Reel.
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::Representation starts here.
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::Hey,
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::y'all, I'm Monique Velasquez, and I'm Piper Kessler.
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::Today, I'm excited to get to know and introduce our guest,
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::Azza Cohen.
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::I want you to know that Monique read your
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::slate article in January:38
::to hear from this point of view just after the administration change.
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::And we're gonna keep this focused on media, hopefully.
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::Um, and focus on joy for 45 minutes.
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::Azza Cohen is a documentary filmmaker,
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::in a leading voice on visual sexism in media,
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::from:44
::She served as vice president Kamal
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::Harris's official videographer documenting historic
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::moments across the White House, 91
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::cities, in 28 states, 11 countries,
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::Her viral slate op ed.
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::I was Kamala Harris's videographer.
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::The experience completely changed me, trended nationally
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::on inauguration day in:52
::As a columnist for the contrarian, she educated
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::media creators on representing women with dignity
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::and authority.
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::In the spring of:56
::She taught at the Harvard Kennedy Schools Institute
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::of Politics, and as a fellow at Harvard Shorenstein Center.
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::Her short film, Float,
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::about her grandmother, learning to swim at 82
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::was acquired by the New Yorker, which is very, very cool.
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::In February of:62
::She co-founded Kung Borsha, media
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::with wife, Kathleen, where they work
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::to shift perspectives, deepen empathy,
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::and build a more expansive world,
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::one story at a time.
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::Azza, thanks for joining.
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::Change the Reel.
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::Representation starts here.
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::Hey, I want folks to know that you're out there in
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::the world intentionally shifting perspectives in front of and
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::behind the lens, helping people see how using your
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::voice matters and how it can change perspectives.
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::We know you're out there.
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::trying to change the reel.
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::And the story about who is and should
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::be considered a gatekeeper.
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::So this is a question we always ask.
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::Let's give credit where credit is due.
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::Even if you've never met this person.
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::If you could hand out your flowers today, who
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::would you honor for shaping your entrepreneurial journey?
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::This
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::is such a good question.
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::I love it so much.
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::I would hand my
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::flowers to the incredible trailblazing
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::Academy Award winning director
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::and producer Vanessa Roth.
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::She is the 1st female director that
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::I ever got to work with.
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::And I viscerally remember being
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::an intern.
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::20 something years old and working
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::with her and just seeing the
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::way that she ran her set with so
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::much empathy, so much curiosity,
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::she was trained as a social worker before becoming a
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::filmmaker and it really demonstrated
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::to me how directing
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::doesn't have to be one size fits all.
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::I think there's a Hollywood trope, a stereotype
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::that a director is, 1st of all,
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::a man, you know, in a baseball cap, like yelling at everybody to
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::make sure that everything is.
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::running and working
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::with Vanessa showed me a
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::quiet, yet assertive, yet empathetic
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::method of leadership because really
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::the director is like a CEO of a, a
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::small company that is the set and it really changed
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::my path showed
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::me how much I wanted to be a director and I'm,
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::working on another project with her right now and
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::it's just been such a joy to reconnect and so
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::I would give my flowers to Vanessa for really
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::inspiring me as a director with her
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::personality and her artistic vision.
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::It's so amazing to be able to work with
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::somebody who is such a great role model.
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::So I'm glad that you we asked this question so that you could give those flowers.
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::Uh, so, I'm glad that.
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::That was a beautiful question.
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::I just, it reflects so much on YouTube that this is the 1st
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::question you ask of people.
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::I love it.
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::Well, we're happy to give credit
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::where credit's due or inspiration, right?
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::Because part of it is, you know, we don't walk around in
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::a vacuum, we actually are a
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::line of people, soldiers that we stand on.
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::So, uh, that's why we do it.
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::I want to ask you a little bit about your business.
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::What's at the heart of what you do and what
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::keeps you motivated to show up and create every day.
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::Well, in these times.
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::It is.
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::Sometimes harder than ever,
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::and sometimes easier than ever at the same time, to
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::show up and create every day, after
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::working for Vice President Harris, or,
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::uh, 3 years in
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::the White House, and after losing the election,
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::or rather, as I like to say, after America
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::decided to choose a predator, pedophile,
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::business con man as the president,
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::over the qualified other candidate.
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::Uh, but regardless, after the
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:::150
::so upset, so honestly full of rage
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::every single day that this incredible person
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::that I had spent so much time with and made such
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::a sincere, full body, everyday effort to
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::portray her with the dignity
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::and authority, that,
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::She deserves every day to see that person
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::be so torn down in the
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::year:159
::uh, questioning whether women are electable,
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::and whether a black woman in particular could
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::possibly be audacious enough to run for president.
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::Um, It was really hard.
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::And, What motivated me.
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::was realizing that, actually,
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::a lot of people in charge of the
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::country and in charge of businesses are deeply
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::mediocre, and I have a
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::really unique perspective, and I had always
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::wanted to start a production company.
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::I have worked for lots of people.
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::And after the election,
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::my wife and I just looked at each other and instead
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::of saying, why us?
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::We started to say why not us?
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::And so in
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::terms of how we create every day, I'm really,
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::I was just talking about this actually with
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::a friend of mine, Julie Shane, who has an
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::amazing substack called In Habit, and she
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::posted recently saying, how do you get
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::the courage to overcome your
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::nervousness of
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::posting something, you know, putting yourself out there, starting a substack,
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::starting a blog, starting a podcast, I'm sure the 2
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::I have an experience with this.
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::And I said to her, Actually,
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::I think of all of the badass
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::women who came before us and had way more reasons to
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::not put themselves out there and they did
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::so that we could have an easier time and
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::that the path would be paved for us.
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::So, that's what I'm telling myself nowadays
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::is whenever I have imposter syndrome, I
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::just think, what about all of the trailblazers who came before?
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::Exactly.
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::I mean, we hear this over and over, you know, you are your ancestors' wildest dreams.
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::The, you know, coming to life, right?
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::Um, and so, yeah,
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::but there's also the vulnerability too, and it's,
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::yeah, to get past the being vulnerable.
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::Right.
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::You know, you draw on, uh, your
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::strength from either your own experiences or,
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::you know, your, your, you know, think about what your ancestors
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::have gone through, what they, they had to endure to get to.
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::You know, where you are standing.
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::Um, and so, now,
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::so, can you, can you, you, is it okay if I go ahead?
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::No, I'm not done.
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::I am not done.
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::Well, go ahead then.
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::All right, so, Let's talk about your business a little bit.
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::You said why not us?
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::Explain what it is that you do so so that
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::our audience has a better understanding.
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::Thank you for this question.
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::Cohen Borschow Media specializes in nonfiction,
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::video production, from development
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::all the way to delivery.
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::So, we work with amazing clients
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::all over the country and soon to be all over the world
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::where we help them figure
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::out strategy around storytelling,
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::we develop ideas with them, think about the
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::creative ways in which they can tell a story, we provide production services.
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::So, camera light sound, that
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::type of production, and then we also provide
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::post-production editing and delivery services.
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::We've done a lot of short form content in the past year and
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::are expanding into features.
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::My wife and I are directing our 1st feature this year, so we're
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::really excited about that.
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::And everything is really united by our
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::core values of representation of,
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::uplifting women, uplifting
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::queer people, people of color, other marginalized
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::people whose, it can seem and feel
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::overwhelming, that these stories are not getting told right now
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::with the attacks on diversity, equity,
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::inclusion, and accessibility, but what I keep
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::telling myself and what I'm sure.
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::Listeners are feeling is that this is the most important time
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::to double down and tell our stories and
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::who is going to, if not us.
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::True.
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::Oh, so now I can go.
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::So, can you share a moment when like a
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::specific moment when you realize representation was
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::missing and you were called to step up and be
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::the one to model the change?
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::What a
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::good question.
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::I think.
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::About this moment a lot.
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::Vice President Kamala Harris
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::was the 1st White House principal to visit
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::an abortion clinic.
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::And I remember planning
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::for this, thinking through the big burden.
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::This was going to be a big press moment and I thought, okay,
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::how am I going to approach making this video,
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::how am I going to approach the edit, the framing, and
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::as I'm sure you and listeners
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::know, filming or any type of image
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::making inside of an active health clinic
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::is very difficult.
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::It's very fraught.
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::And especially with not
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::only patient privacy, but also the attacks on abortion providers
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::and reproductive healthcare more generally.
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::We wanted to make sure that everybody felt really comfortable
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::with what we were trying
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::to do, but also understood the
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::opportunity of the moment when the vice president of the
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::United States shines a light on this issue.
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::So, I remember working
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::extensively with the clinic staff.
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::Starting with the security team about,
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::okay, you can't show any bit
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::of the floor plan, right?
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::We want to make sure there's no security issues with any part of the video.
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::We want to make sure that no patient at
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::all, even back of head, something like that, no patients are shown at all.
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::We want to blur everybody's identification.
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::If you walk past a nurse, And make
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::sure that their identity is protected.
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::And at the same time,
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::The very brave clinic director,
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::Dr. Sarah Traxler said, I want my name.
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::I want to say my name.
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::I want to.
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::I want people to know what I do.
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::And that Vice President Kamala Harris came to uplift
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::the work that we do.
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::And something that, was
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::a creative decision that was really important to
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::me was when we were working with Dr. Traxler,
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::she initially was
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::dressed very casually and didn't have her white coat.
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::And I remember saying to her, I want you to
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::put on your white coat because visually, people,
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::see a white coat and then they assume that
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::it's a doctor, right?
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::And I think in our world where representation
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::of women in leadership positions is
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::already so sparse.
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::It was really important to me that people not make
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::assumptions about this doctor because she
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::wasn't wearing a white coat.
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::So we put her in the white coat.
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::And then the other framing decision that was really important to me.
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::And, uh, I'll send you the
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::video so you can see it and link it for folks if they haven't.
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::But it was really important to me to not just have the
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::vice president in the frame by herself, talking about the importance of this.
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::I wanted you to see her with
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::the clinic staff, with this doctor, so that it
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::became not just a visual story of one
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::singular politician.
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::making a statement, but that it
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::was a communal statement about the healthcare providers
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::and the work that they do.
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::So I thought a lot about, I practiced
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::the shot a couple of times, you know, I got to Minnesota a
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::day early before the vice president just to make sure that we could really now this.
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::And To your question,
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::Piper, about representation.
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::I'm not saying that
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::Someone of a different gender
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::wouldn't take seriously the issue of
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::abortion access in this country.
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::But, I take it seriously
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::because I'm a woman, and because this is something that
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::I viscerally understand, and that is why representation
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::matters, it's not about lessening the pie for anyone else.
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::It's about thinking.
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::What different stories can we tell?
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::Right.
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::You know, we talk to Natalie Bullock Brown,
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::who is part of DAWG.
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::Um, it is a, you may be familiar with DAWG.
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::It's cooperative in New York.
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::Uh, cannot remember what the acronym is, but she talks.
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::I've heard of it and I also don't know what the acronym is.
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::You know, it's like who is best the
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::position to tell the story and you have that real feeling.
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::of the stakes
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::of your own life, in
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::a different way than the
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::person standing next to you.
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::Um, and so I feel like, you know,
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::you've answered this question in in a great way
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::to give our audience an understanding of where
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::you were understanding that the representation
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::and who's behind the camera.
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::And who was actually telling the story.
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::Makes a difference.
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::And so, how did you, you
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::know, I know that you've come to this job and you're doing this
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::particular job, but how did it push you to create
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::the change that you wanted to see?
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::When
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::I 1st heard about the job.
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::I thought it was not real because
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::it just seemed too good to be true, being the
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::videographer to the 1st woman vice president
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::of the United States.
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::I mean, as a filmmaker, I just couldn't imagine literally
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::anything more exciting and what an
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::opportunity, not just from a video perspective,
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::but a historic perspective, right?
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::Because every day that I filmed, Vice
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::President Harris doing something was the 1st
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::time that a woman had done that thing in that role, right?
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::And so going back
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::briefly to Piper's question about representation, it
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::matters who's behind the camera and it matters who's in front of it, right?
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::And it's this chicken and egg cycle that I
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::write about, on my substack and
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::I teach about, right, that the less we
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::are able to show women in their full dignity
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::and authority, political, business,
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::all of the arenas in which women are public figures.
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::The less that we have better
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::representation behind the camera to make sure that
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::those people in front of the camera are taken seriously.
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::the less you feel comfortable with the idea of
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::a woman in this type of power and
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::in this type of authority.
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::So it's just a vicious cycle, right?
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::So I also think,
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::It's not a coincidence that the 1st
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::White House principle to ever go to
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::an abortion clinic was the 1st woman.
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::So, not only was
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::it about me thinking, okay, from my personal perspective,
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::how can I make this an important visual moment?
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::It's also because Kamala
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::Harris decided to be brave and do something that no
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::man in her position had done before.
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::you know, president or vice president.
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::So, I'm so sorry, Monique, I
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::forgot your question.
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::It is, it is about like,
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::how did you push to create the change that you wanted to see.
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::And so you see this job.
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::And you're thinking, that's for me.
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::I had
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::so much imposter syndrome.
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::Basically every single day of the job, I
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::viscerally remember on my 1st day.
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::nd,:413
::And it was the anniversary of the Americans
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::with Disabilities Act.
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::So much of her day and the
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::White House generally was focused on uplifting this anniversary.
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::It's a landmark piece of legislation.
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::And as someone with a chronic migraine
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::condition, like I really appreciate the protections
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::of the Americans of Disabilities Act.
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::And so I was really excited.
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::Because it's personal to me.
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::And I remember, She,
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::uh, the vice president had an open, press
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::conference before she was going to
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::meet in a private round table with activists
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::from the disability community, and I was so excited.
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::And, She introduced
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::herself and did a visual description,
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::which is very common for people
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::in, uh, who want to be inclusive of a
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::disabled crowd and obviously on the
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::anniversary of the Americans of Disabilities Act.
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::It makes special sense.
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::To do a visual description.
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::She described her outfit and sort of
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::like the room.
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::I don't exactly remember her exact words, but then,
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::Gosh, later that day,
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::not even a couple hours after this event.
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::I we had TVs with every news
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::channel on in the White House all the time.
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::So, I see that there's this Fox News
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::piece about,
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::Why would Kamala Harris describe
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::herself, you know, anybody can see that she's
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::a woman and basically denigrating her for doing a visual description.
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::And in that moment, I
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::lost my imposter
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::syndrome, because I thought,
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::This is so much bigger than whether I'm nervous.
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::This is such a big battle
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::where every single thing she says, even
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::if it's the smart thing, even if it's the right thing, even if it's
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::the respectful thing, she will be torn down every 2nd of every day.
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::And it's not my job to be nervous.
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::It's not my job to worry
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::about whether or not I can do this because
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::I was hired and I can do this and
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::I know how to use this camera and I know how to capture
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::people in a way that makes them look good.
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::So,
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::That moment was really visceral for me.
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::And so when you think about,
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::okay, how do you change the perspective?
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::Every day I just thought,
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::How do I show this in my
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::unique lens, right?
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::Oh, we love a camera pun, change the reel.
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::Um, you know, how do I pick a different
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::angle that maybe someone else isn't thinking of?
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::How do I bring my own personal lived
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::experience as an American to this particular
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::issue that she is exploring.
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::And so, Again, that goes
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::back to that question of representation, Representation
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::in front of the camera is so important and
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::also it's very critical behind the camera because
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::the making of images is a subjective part.
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::And people assume that a picture
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::is some objective truth, right?
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::But as I always,
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::Say to people, ask yourself, who took this picture?
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::What is outside of the 4 walls of the frame?
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::What story isn't being told?
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::And I think about that.
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::I thought about that a lot in that job in particular and
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::I think about it now every day as a cinematographer in other contexts.
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::And that's really where the representation matters,
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::because it's, we can't just take for
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::granted that the picture that's being shown to us is
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::somehow the truth or the only depiction.
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::Right.
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::There's no bias included because there is.
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::And so exactly.
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::And so this leads me to, but I have to, we have to tweak it a little bit.
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::Why inclusion matters in
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::who's making media and who's telling the story?
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::And so what's been the most rewarding
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::in figuring out, well, having you behind the
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::lens, pointing at a
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::very varied things in front of the lens.
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::Why does it matter that somebody like you is doing this?
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::It
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::matters to have more women
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::in particular behind the camera because What
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::I ask for is 50-50, right?
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::If we're 50% of the population, we need to be behind
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::the camera 50% of the time.
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::And that is not even close to what we're dealing with, right?
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::I sincerely hope that by the time this
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::podcast comes out, Autumn Arkapaw will
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::have won, the Oscar for best
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::cinematography, making her the 1st woman to ever win
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::in that category, which is, again, insane
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::that in:517
::actually win this category, right?
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::So, Fighting for this inclusion is
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::so essential because we
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::are depriving ourselves and audiences
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::of really talented creative people.
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::when we don't have as
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::much diversity behind the camera as
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::in front of it and as reflects our country.
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::Yeah.
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::And so, you know, you're speaking about,
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::you know, the sort of thing and I'm wondering, you know, in your career.
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::Um, if you've heard, like I've heard,
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::um, You know, women aren't funny.
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::Um, and nobody cares about, Such and such a story.
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::And for us, it was, you know, looking for representation.
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::For me, it was about representation, looking for, you know,
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::where are the Latinos on TV?
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::Where are, uh, the,
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::you know, the, the LGBTQ
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::folks that are, you know, living their best life
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::and not just a punchline or a joke.
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::And so growing up, that that was like, where
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::I was and what I heard, and so it
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::makes me wonder, it's like, you're a
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::different generation, and things have definitely changed.
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::But even now, I mean, you're, we're
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::still looking for our 1st cinematography win and
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::as, as a woman.
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::And, You know, we're
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::still looking for the right representation, not right.
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::A different representation on screen because even when
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::I see uh, new shows on on big TV fan.
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::New shows with multiple cast members.
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::I'm always thinking, are they gonna have casta Latino this time?
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::And I'm often disappointed.
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::Um, not that they aren't great shows and, you know,
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::funny, whatever, have different perspectives, but, um,
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::I'm wondering where you are in your, uh, career
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::and your experience about,
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::What you've encountered
557
::in your pursuit to be the one behind the lens.
558
::I
559
::got into filmmaking because I love people
560
::and I love stories and I really sincerely
561
::believe in narrative change.
562
::I was not the kid who watched
563
::a ton of movies and obsessed over lighting design
564
::or studied Scorsese.
565
::I've actually never seen the Godfather.
566
::I need to watch it.
567
::But like, that is not what brought me into filmmaking.
568
::I got into filmmaking because I took a class
569
::in college and was
570
::lucky enough to have another person to give
571
::flowers to as my beloved, Documentary
572
::film teacher Purcell Carson.
573
::who referred me to the White House job and was
574
::the 1st person to, you know, teach me about filmmaking.
575
::And uh, just a quick side note about her.
576
::She's an academy award winner, just an incredible, incredible
577
::documentary film editor, uh, and director.
578
::And when I was a senior in college, I was applying all these jobs.
579
::And I wasn't getting call backs
580
::or video producing anything like that and I was so
581
::nervous about it.
582
::So I go to her and I thought maybe my resume is off.
583
::Can you take a look at my resume?
584
::And I had,
585
::I showed her my resume, and at the top of the resume,
586
::it said, Azza Cohen aspiring filmmaker.
587
::And she didn't even read the rest of it.
588
::She looked me dead in the eye and said, don't put aspiring.
589
::You are a filmmaker.
590
::If you've made one film, you are a filmmaker.
591
::Why are you underestimating yourself?
592
::And I think about that so
593
::often, I tell this to interns
594
::and PAs and people who we
595
::are lucky enough to work with because it's
596
::so often that women especially,
597
::just are the last people to,
598
::not even brag, but just literally acknowledge
599
::the work that they that we have done.
600
::And so I think that's a really important part of
601
::representation too, is getting comfortable with
602
::saying, I did this, I did this, I
603
::did this, and I deserve to be here.
604
::I am the qualified candidate to be here and
605
::not worry about what others
606
::may be saying to you or doubting you or underestimating you.
607
::Um, and so I think
608
::also to your question.
609
::Literally 100%
610
::of U.S. presidents have been a man.
611
::So when Americans close
612
::their eyes and picture the president of the United
613
::States, they picture a man.
614
::And it's for, it goes deeper than
615
::just politics.
616
::It's our entire culture, right?
617
::TV shows.
618
::For the most part, if there is a
619
::TV show that concerns American politics, the president is
620
::very likely a man, right?
621
::Not 100% of the time, but almost, almost
622
::100% of the time.
623
::And so,
624
::If we don't, show,
625
::women in leadership positions, even fictionally.
626
::We cannot, as viewers,
627
::get comfortable with the idea that this is possible, right?
628
::Gina Davis, the iconic, incredible
629
::actor, producer,
630
::She started an organization, and research
631
::organization that tracks various
632
::representation in media.
633
::And she has a slogan, if she can see it, she can be it.
634
::Right?
635
::And if you can't see it, what
636
::are, how do little girls think that their
637
::future in, you know, politics or
638
::other types of representation is possible, right?
639
::Famously, there was a Barbie astronaut
640
::before Sally Ride, right?
641
::We have to imagine that these things are possible before
642
::they actually are possible.
643
::And so I just think it's
644
::not just, again, robbing Americans of
645
::a woman leader to not take
646
::women in politics or other leadership positions seriously.
647
::It's robbing us of qualified.
648
::Incredible candidates because
649
::we are wired in our brains to not take them
650
::as seriously as the male candidate.
651
::Right.
652
::Amen.
653
::So, you know, we get,
654
::you know, this whole, you know, having that representation, having
655
::those road models and, you know, we're very familiar with the Genia
656
::Davis Institute's work, um, we follow, uh,
657
::it's, it's progression.
658
::We're all fans here.
659
::we're all friends.
660
::We love.
661
::We love.
662
::We love that, you know, that there's,
663
::somebody actually counting the numbers and then showing, you know,
664
::Hollywood itself.
665
::like look, do better.
666
::You know, we're showing you, you can.
667
::There's room.
668
::Um, and there's data that says, you can
669
::make a $:670
::So, uh, and so, those
671
::are all the amazing things that we have.
672
::In your own career.
673
::What?
674
::What's been the most rewarding or
675
::challenging weaving in this idea of
676
::fully who you are authentically?
677
::What's been the most rewarding part of that?
678
::In your career.
679
::To
680
::me, The best part about working
681
::for Vice President Harris was,
682
::Obviously it was very cool
683
::to get to travel the world.
684
::Obviously, it was very cool to get to see
685
::world leaders and be in
686
::rooms that Obviously, I otherwise wouldn't be in.
687
::But really, the thing that got me out of bed every
688
::morning was, without a doubt
689
::when I would see a young girl, especially
690
::a young black girl in the in the crowd.
691
::And when I would see a young black girl
692
::in the crowd looking at Kamala Harris, I would always.
693
::Remain composed, but internally
694
::sobbing because thinking about
695
::what that little girl got to see that
696
::Kamala Harris didn't get to see that
697
::none of us got to see, right?
698
::A woman in that role.
699
::It's just, you never know how
700
::that's going to change the trajectory of that kid's life.
701
::And further, Also, Little
702
::kids of all genders and especially little boys, seeing,
703
::again, a woman in this role and getting
704
::comfortable with a woman being
705
::the executive leader.
706
::And I think that's I just think about that so often.
707
::And every time that I'm lensing someone,
708
::I just think about what kind of visual
709
::world are we showing to this
710
::current generation and the next generations after,
711
::and how can we make sure that that
712
::leadership is fair and representative?
713
::I love this.
714
::It reminds me, you know, just sort of having that representation
715
::that, you know, the WNBA has these little boy
716
::fans out there like wearing
717
::jerseys.
718
::I know, right?
719
::And so, you know, this happens because, you know, the TV...
720
::The little boys with the Caitlin Clark jerseys.
721
::Yeah, these fanboys, which I love because,
722
::and I think directly due to the fact that there's
723
::greater coverage, the more people fill the
724
::in-person space, filling arenas, means
725
::the broadcasters are looking to put eyeballs on the screen.
726
::So they're willing to also put that out there.
727
::And so we can prove we can, you know,
728
::be at the highest levels of
729
::politics, or of leadership and
730
::nonprofit and leadership of, you know, human
731
::rights, and leadership in sports.
732
::And I think that in
733
::general is one of the things that I'm going to give flowers to
734
::you about because you were able to lend some
735
::of this and really be part of that flywheel
736
::of getting representation in front of the camera in a meaningful way.
737
::So thank you for that.
738
::I mean, and there's also this huge thing of starting
739
::off in the industry of being a sound person.
740
::And, you know, I didn't think about it.
741
::I was just like, oh, I know sound.
742
::I'm going to go do it.
743
::And then there, if there was a little girl on set, and
744
::her staring at me.
745
::And I can't even imagine.
746
::I mean, like, It's, it's 1st I'm
747
::going, oh, I'm, I'm working and I'm being watched.
748
::And I know why I'm being watched, you
749
::know, and having people come up and go, I've never been on
750
::a set before with a female sound person.
751
::I've never been on a set before.
752
::I watch it with a female, uh,
753
::camera op or a DP, and it's like
754
::all of a sudden when that conversation starts,
755
::like there's a 2nd reason you're there.
756
::It's like, oh, I have a 2nd job now.
757
::And I mean, even in just
758
::small productions.
759
::Here you are at the White House.
760
::And so you're also on display.
761
::I can't even imagine.
762
::I mean, you helped us see
763
::history in a different way.
764
::I mean, that is huge, and to wear that.
765
::Wait.
766
::So effortlessly
767
::in going, okay, this is my job.
768
::I mean, yeah, I guess I guess I'm giving flowers to you too.
769
::It's like, It's a big deal.
770
::It is, it's a big deal.
771
::really is.
772
::You were just doing your job, but I just want you to know, I mean, it's
773
::a big deal because, you know, when I read
774
::the article on slate and I thought, I could have done this.
775
::But I'm so glad that you had
776
::done it and then spoke out about what you saw and spoke out about it.
777
::Behind the lens, you saw what you saw.
778
::You saw it in a way that was about
779
::sex and misogyny.
780
::The idea that people or how they treat people
781
::can be a little racist.
782
::You're bringing your biased.
783
::And so like having you put those into,
784
::put that into words and to actually consciously,
785
::And with thought.
786
::Break through that and
787
::and, Call it for what it is and
788
::actually work against those things of bias.
789
::It's big for what I see culturally and
790
::what is what should be out in the world in
791
::general as far as uh, people knowing about.
792
::So that's one of the reasons why I reached out after that and
793
::I wanted to have this conversation.
794
::Now, I miss Kathleen because I would love to get to know her too.
795
::So maybe in the future, we can do.
796
::We will have to get her as well.
797
::I just, I also wanted to share.
798
::I mentioned it in my slate article, but on the power of representation.
799
::So we were in a photo line.
800
::And this little girl, 7 year old Ellie.
801
::She, Met the vice president.
802
::Was so excited and she shared that
803
::she loves to write.
804
::And What
805
::was so powerful and feminist about and continues
806
::to be about Kamala Harris is instead of saying, oh,
807
::that's so cute, you know, good for you, she
808
::says, oh, you should write a book.
809
::If you want to be a writer, you should write a book.
810
::And Who
811
::knew that the 7 year old would actually go and write
812
::a book and she did?
813
::Uh, she wrote a book called The Girl with the Loudest
814
::Voice about a little girl speaking up.
815
::And I just,
816
::Listen, Ellie is very impressive and
817
::she probably would have written this book anyway, but That
818
::is so important because when you have a
819
::woman in that leadership position.
820
::And I mean, people of all genders do this, right?
821
::You see a little girl and you say, you're so cute.
822
::Oh, I like your dress, right?
823
::And you never say that.
824
::To little boys, right?
825
::And I just think seeing someone.
826
::in that position and
827
::hearing from the vice president of the United States telling you
828
::to write a book and encouraging your dreams.
829
::You know, what a transformational
830
::thing that was.
831
::And that's also one of those moments that I just think back to a lot and it.
832
::Keeps me going.
833
::Yeah, I mean, it is,
834
::it is all the things, right?
835
::You have just like a lot of energy and a lot of different experiences
836
::in this one short amount of time.
837
::I mean, I'm sure it felt like a very long time to you.
838
::Uh, but you know, you'll look back on
839
::your life and and just be so full of,
840
::of appreciation and, um, Your
841
::gratitude for the experience in general.
842
::And I know you've spoken on this, but how has media
843
::and storytelling helped you amplify your voice or
844
::connect with your audience in a way that feels authentic to you.
845
::Well,
846
::I also want to say, Piper, to
847
::you, that sound is such an intimate
848
::role on set, and I am
849
::so glad that you have been that trailblazer
850
::for little girls on set
851
::for actresses of any age, really, because
852
::sound is so you have to get so close to the person,
853
::you have to fix the right place for the love, like it's
854
::very, it's really
855
::one of the most intimate jobs that
856
::occur on a film set, and this
857
::has been my experience as well, where when we
858
::hire, um, female
859
::sound people, We just get
860
::great feedback, especially from women
861
::who've been in situations where, you know, you
862
::just feel like a museum exhibit where people are just touching
863
::you and putting something down your shirt and it's very
864
::uncomfortable and they
865
::really appreciate how,
866
::You know, it's not so clean
867
::along a gender binary, of course, but 9
868
::times out of 10, if you hire a
869
::sound girl, you're going to get an
870
::experience where that person takes the extra time to make you feel comfortable.
871
::So I also think representation and sound is really, really important.
872
::And it's so cool that you have been
873
::able to be that representation.
874
::In terms of like telling my story,
875
::To the world, I was.
876
::A little nervous about the
877
::slate article, but I also was mostly just so full
878
::of rage that I thought.
879
::Maybe like a couple of Kamala-Stan
880
::girlies will read this article and feel
881
::something on inauguration day that I'm feeling.
882
::And the reception completely shocked me.
883
::But also,
884
::Once I thought about it more, did
885
::not shock me because clearly, there
886
::are so many people who, around
887
::the world, were devastated by the election, not
888
::necessarily because of some kind of political alignment.
889
::But seeing a really qualified,
890
::excellent woman be torn down in such a merciless,
891
::clearly biased, clearly
892
::unfair fashion, right?
893
::And what it meant, so viscerally, so
894
::emotionally, so profoundly to, Again,
895
::to so many types of people, but especially to women
896
::and girls, especially to women and girls of color.
897
::I think it's so important to not overlook that
898
::that was extremely emotional and very difficult to think.
899
::and witness that and then experience
900
::what we experience.
901
::So, I was nervous, you know,
902
::I worked with an incredible editor at Slate, Natalie
903
::Shetler, shout out to Natalie, you are brilliant.
904
::And shout out to my writing agent, Bridget Matsy,
905
::another absolutely brilliant editor who helped me.
906
::get that piece across the finish line, but since then,
907
::I've just realized that.
908
::A lot of people don't know what goes on behind the camera.
909
::They don't know how the sausage gets made and that I
910
::have this interesting different perspective,
911
::different angle, different lens.
912
::Um, is
913
::really a part should be a part of the conversation because
914
::I think so many people.
915
::are aware that media literacy generally
916
::is important, that understanding a biased headline
917
::or a biased quote is something that folks
918
::should pay attention to, but, For the
919
::most part, if you're not a camera person or really steeped
920
::in like photo editing or the picking of a
921
::newspaper cover page, like, you
922
::don't necessarily know or assume
923
::that images are biased.
924
::Every image has a subjective take,
925
::and that's okay.
926
::But the problem is when we don't analyze
927
::it and have skepticism around it.
928
::And clearly, now with AI,
929
::with fake news, with misinformation and
930
::disinformation, it's really such an important time
931
::for all of us as camera folks to
932
::raise our voices to tell our stories because people
933
::really are interested.
934
::I've had so many people reach out and say, 0 my gosh, I
935
::had no idea.
936
::I didn't even think about a high angle versus a low angle.
937
::I didn't even think about, you know, a single shot or
938
::a really wide shot with more context, how
939
::that affects your understanding of the situation.
940
::And so,
941
::I'm just out here telling my truth, and
942
::of course, the hater's gonna hate,
943
::but the internet, and, you know, I've
944
::had my fair share of existential moments
945
::thinking, okay, the internet is so big and it's such a swamp
946
::and it's so racist and sexist and awful.
947
::How can I possibly think that my little substack
948
::articles are somehow like chipping away at it?
949
::But then I also say, For every
950
::person that you provide a new perspective to that.
951
::is change.
952
::And that changes the real, that it totally changes the real.
953
::I love having a chance to introduce our
954
::audience to amazing change makers that are
955
::showing up authentically and are actively trying
956
::to change the real for people that look like us, right?
957
::If folks want to know more about your work, how
958
::can they work with you, get to know you better?
959
::How do they how do they interact with you?
960
::Thank you so much.
961
::I, my DMs are open.
962
::Follow me on Instagram at Azza Cohen,
963
::um, A-Z-Z-A, C-O-H-E-N, same with my
964
::substack, substack.com slash Azza Cohen.
965
::I love to hear from people.
966
::I love to get tips, especially on substock from readers
967
::of people saying, 0 my gosh, this image is so crazy.
968
::Can you analyze it?
969
::Or, you know, somebody wrote in to
970
::tell me somebody in Boston said, oh, Mayor
971
::of Boston, Michelle Wu is pregnant and
972
::there's really sexist coverage of what's going on.
973
::Can you look at it?
974
::And I said, 0 my god, I would love to.
975
::I mean, that was one of my favorite pieces that I've written.
976
::So, Please follow me on Instagram,
977
::get in touch on Instagram or substock,
978
::and we would be really thrilled to
979
::collaborate, my wife and
980
::I, our company, is based in DC, but we go all around
981
::the country, all around the world.
982
::And so we'd be happy to hear from you and
983
::something that we're hoping to launch soon.
984
::is on our website, we want to put a directory of
985
::baddies who we want to recommend that you work with.
986
::So, you know, again, our amazing diverse
987
::crew of people, you know, camera people, sound people,
988
::lighting, editing, all sorts of people.
989
::So, um, if you're interested in being included in this
990
::directory, again, just like DM me or message me on Substack,
991
::I'd be happy to read about your work and um, potentially uplift it.
992
::So get in touch and I think it's really important for
993
::all of us to uplift each other.
994
::Yeah, absolutely.
995
::I think those are great ideas and like doing the
996
::things to help uplift others.
997
::Thank you, Asa.
998
::We had so much fun and it was so interesting.
999
::I'm glad we got this conversation.
1000
::Yes.
1001
::It was perfect.
1002
::It was.
1003
::It was.
1004
::And for our audience, we'll see you next time.
1005
::That's it for this episode of Change the Reel.
1006
::If you're enjoyed it, share the episode or leave a review wherever
1007
::you listen, connect with us or any of our guests on
1008
::LinkedIn, check the show notes for links.
1009
::And if you're done with DIY and ready to record something that
1010
::matters in a safe, inclusive space,
1011
::check out our studio at Velasquezmedia.com.
8
::Remember, representation starts here.
1012
::Hasta pronto.
1013
::See you soon.