In documentary, mostly, people are going to say untoward things; people are going to have gnarly beliefs. People aren't perfect.
I feel like reality TV has thrown a difficult wrench in the system - on the programming and making side, and on the curating side - which is that we now have a higher threshold for the salacious. We have a higher threshold, unprecedented, for fast, cheap, and out of control.
All filmmakers want the option to make another film, to have it not always be such an uphill battle - for it to be our life, our working life.
You can't make movies without known names, and unknowns can't become known, because they can't get work.
I'm doing my best to stay off that financing scheme that relies on this one strip of capital, which is the red carpet. And - no sob story - but it's hard. It takes a while.
I don't want to be on a soapbox, but I feel like a lot of documentary filmmakers are part of the ancient tradition of writing down notes, of saying, 'Hey people, hey people!'