The Thousand Roads Podcast

Tom Casciato

A podcast hosted by Emmy Award-winning director/producer/writer Tom Casciato.

  1. Julie Cohen & Betsy West

    EPISODE 1

    Julie Cohen & Betsy West

    Julie Cohen and Betsy West are best known as a team for their Oscar-nominated documentary RBG about Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg. They’re also both former network news journalists. We talk about the differences and similarities between those two worlds (hint: one of them sounds more fun), the films that helped shape their sensibilities, and their films RBG, Gabby Giffords Won’t Back Down, about the former Congresswoman’s recovery from an assassination attempt, and My Name Is Pauli Murray, about the non-binary lawyer who played a key role in the civil rights movement. Julie Cohen’s 2023 film, Every Body, premiered at Tribeca and was released theatrically by Focus Features. Called “a master class in how a documentary should be done” by The Boston Globe, it tells of three courageous intersex people who've overcome shame and secrecy to become their true selves. Betsy West is a filmmaker, journalist, and professor emerita at the Columbia Journalism School. A 21-time Emmy Award winner, she served as executive producer of the ABC News documentary series Turning Point and as VP of News at CBS, where she oversaw 60 Minutes and 48 Hours. More about Julie & Betsy here. Films mentioned in this episode: RBG (2018), Dir. Julie Cohen and Betsy West Hoop Dreams (1994), Dir. Steve James  Gabby Giffords Won’t Back Down (2022), Dir. Julie Cohen and Betsy West Flee (2021), Dir. Jonas Poher Rasmussen Haulout (2022), Dir. Maxim Arbugaev and Evgenia Arbugaeva The Endless Summer (1966), Dir. Bruce Brown The World At War series (1973-74), Dir. David Elstein Roger And Me (1989), Dir. Michael Moore Buena Vista Social Club (1999), Dir. Wim Wenders My Name is Pauli Murray (2021), Dir. Julie Cohen and Betsy West Other Mentions: Senator Mark Kelly  Turning Point (ABC News) Cinque Northern Follow us on Instagram! @ThousandRoadsPod Special thanks for helping make this series happen: Sara Archambault, Florence Barrau-Adams, Jon Berman, Ben Cuomo (music), Jax Deluca, Pallavi Deshpande, Nancy Gibbs, Kathleen Hughes, Caroline Kracunas, Laura Manley, Alexis Pancrazi, Liz Schwartz, Jeff Seelbach, Lindsay Underwood (logo/graphics) This episode was supported by a fellowship at the Shorenstein Center on Media, Politics and Public Policy at Harvard Kennedy School.

    40 min
  2. Dawn Porter

    EPISODE 2

    Dawn Porter

    Award-winning documentarian Dawn Porter talks about bringing journalistic principles and standards to documentary filmmaking and treating documentary subjects as collaborators and partners rather than “subjects.” We also discuss the need to keep having the difficult conversations needed to keep up with the changing documentary landscape. We also talk about how she got into the business by way of another profession, and discuss one of my favorites of her films, Gideon's Army, which premiered at Sundance and was nominated for both the Independent Spirit Award for Best Doc and an Emmy. Dawn’s 2023 film, The Lady Bird Diaries was called “mesmerizing” and “elegant” by The Guardian. She is also known for the HBO film Trapped, about the last abortion providers in Mississippi, as well as films about Civil Rights icon John Lewis and the Tulsa race massacre of 1921. More about Dawn here. Films mentioned in this episode: All the Beauty and the Bloodshed (2022), Dir. Laura Poitras Hoop Dreams (1994), Dir. Steve James  The Territory (2022), Dir. Alex Pritz Gideon’s Army (2013), Dir. Dawn Porter The Interrupters (2011), Dir. Steve James Jesus Camp (2006), Dir. Heidi Ewing and Rachel Grady Five Broken Cameras (2011), Dir. Emad Burnat and Guy Davidi Other Mentions: Nan Goldin Follow us on Instagram! @ThousandRoadsPod Special thanks for helping make this series happen: Sara Archambault, Florence Barrau-Adams, Jon Berman, Ben Cuomo (music), Jax Deluca, Pallavi Deshpande, Nancy Gibbs, Kathleen Hughes, Caroline Kracunas, Laura Manley, Alexis Pancrazi, Liz Schwartz, Jeff Seelbach, Lindsay Underwood (logo/graphics) This episode was supported by a fellowship at the Shorenstein Center on Media, Politics and Public Policy at Harvard Kennedy School.

    38 min
  3. Yoruba Richen & Brad Lichtenstein

    EPISODE 3

    Yoruba Richen & Brad Lichtenstein

    What’s it like for independent doc filmmakers, accustomed to making all their own decisions, to work with a top-notch doc series like PBS’s Frontline, with its strict journalistic guidelines? That’s the main topic I discuss with award-winning doc filmmakers Yoruba Richen and Brad Lichtenstein, whose terrific 2022 film American Reckoning began as an indie project but eventually turned into a Frontline project. Yoruba Richen and Brad Lichtenstein are well-known both separately as a team, Yoruba for films including 2023’s The Cost of Inheritance, which premiered at DOC NYC, Brad for films including 2022’s Emmy Award-winning When Claude Got Shot. More about Yoruba here, and Brad here. Films mentioned in this episode: American Reckoning (2022), Dir. Yoruba Richen and Brad Lichtenstein The Sit-In: Harry Belafonte Hosts The Tonight Show (2020), Dir. Yoruba Richen When Claude Got Shot (2021), Dir. Brad Lichtenstein The Rebellious Life of Mrs. Rosa Parks (2022), Dir. Yoruba Richen and Johanna Hamilton Black Natchez (1967), Dir. Ed Pincus and David Neuman Other mentions: St. Clair Bourne Bill Moyers The Un(re)solved Project Dawn Porter Frontline Hillary Bachelder Raney Aronson-Rath The Emmett Till Anti-lynching Act Follow us on Instagram! @ThousandRoadsPod Special thanks for helping make this series happen: Sara Archambault, Florence Barrau-Adams, Jon Berman, Ben Cuomo (music), Jax Deluca, Pallavi Deshpande, Nancy Gibbs, Kathleen Hughes, Caroline Kracunas, Laura Manley, Alexis Pancrazi, Liz Schwartz, Jeff Seelbach, Lindsay Underwood (logo/graphics) This episode was supported by a fellowship at the Shorenstein Center on Media, Politics and Public Policy at Harvard Kennedy School.

    38 min
  4. Jennifer Tiexiera & Camilla Hall

    EPISODE 4

    Jennifer Tiexiera & Camilla Hall

    I think it’s safe to say Jennifer Tieixiera and Camilla Hall have created a documentary unlike any other. It's called Subject, and it profiles people whose stories have appeared in some of the most acclaimed documentaries of the last three decades or so, including Hoop Dreams, The Square, The Wolfpack, and The Staircase. But what makes Subject different is that it focuses on what happened to these folks after their participation in documentaries made them famous. It’s a film that asks filmmakers to take a hard look at their own processes and motives, and we discuss not only filmmaking practices and ethics, but also the state of the doc world both from a creative and business perspective. More about Jennifer and Camilla here. Films mentioned in this episode: Subject (2023), Dir. Jennifer Tiexiera & Camilla Hall The Staircase series (2022), Dir. Leigh Janiak, Antonio Campos Hoop Dreams (1994), Dir. Steve James  Capturing The Friedmans (2003), Dir. Andrew Jarecki The Square (2013), Jehane Noujaim Winter On Fire: Ukraine’s Fight For Freedom (2015), Evgeny Afineevsky Other Mentions:  Gordon Quinn Pat Aufderheide Margie Ratliff Kirsten Johnson Michèle Stephenson Joe Brewster Assia Boundaoui  Sam Pollard Bruce Shapiro Dart Center for Journalism & Trauma Documentary Accountability Working Group Sonya Childress Dr. Kameelah Mu’Min Rashad aka Oseguera  Ahmed Hassan Rita Baghdadi Follow us on Instagram! @ThousandRoadsPod Special thanks for helping make this series happen: Sara Archambault, Florence Barrau-Adams, Jon Berman, Ben Cuomo (music), Jax Deluca, Pallavi Deshpande, Nancy Gibbs, Kathleen Hughes, Caroline Kracunas, Laura Manley, Alexis Pancrazi, Liz Schwartz, Jeff Seelbach, Lindsay Underwood (logo/graphics) This episode was supported by a fellowship at the Shorenstein Center on Media, Politics and Public Policy at Harvard Kennedy School.

    40 min
  5. Robert Greene

    EPISODE 5

    Robert Greene

    Robert Greene is a professor at the University of Missouri's Journalism School, where he runs the Murray Center for Documentary Journalism. But he's better known as a filmmaker whose documentaries are anything but “traditional” journalism. These include two that we talk about in this podcast, Procession, about the pedophilia scandal in the Roman Catholic Church, which was shortlisted for the documentary Oscar in 2021, and the award-winning Bisbee ‘17, about a mass deportation of immigrants that took place in the American Southwest about a century ago. We also discuss his influences, his filmmaking philosophy, and some of his favorite documentaries. Robert’s other films include Kate Plays Christine and Actress. More about Robert here. Films mentioned in this episode: Procession (2020), Dir. Robert Greene Spotlight (2015), Dir. Tom McCarthy Bisbee ‘17 (2018), Dir. Robert Greene Written On The Wind (1956), Dir. Douglas Sirk Imitation of Life (1959), Dir. Douglas Sirk Racetrack (1985), Dir. Frederick Wiseman  Strong Island (2017), Dir. Yance Ford  Cameraperson (2016), Dir. Kirsten Johnson Hale County This Morning, This Evening (2018), RaMell Ross Time (2020), Garrett Bradley  Primary (1960), Dir. Robert Drew Gimme Shelter (1970), Albert and David Maysles Other Mentions: Eric Hynes Museum of the Moving Image Peter Watkins Chantal Ackerman Robert Flaherty Michael Moore Direct Cinema movement Follow us on Instagram! @ThousandRoadsPod Special thanks for helping make this series happen: Sara Archambault, Florence Barrau-Adams, Jon Berman, Ben Cuomo (music), Jax Deluca, Pallavi Deshpande, Nancy Gibbs, Kathleen Hughes, Caroline Kracunas, Laura Manley, Alexis Pancrazi, Liz Schwartz, Jeff Seelbach, Lindsay Underwood (logo/graphics) This episode was supported by a fellowship at the Shorenstein Center on Media, Politics and Public Policy at Harvard Kennedy School.

    42 min
  6. Natalie Bullock Brown

    EPISODE 6

    Natalie Bullock Brown

    The Documentary Accountability Working Group (DAWG) is making quite an impact in the documentary film world, promoting a framework for values-based documentary ethics and practices. Natalie Bullock Brown is its director, and she’s my guest this time around. We talk about DAWG’s suggestions as to how people agreeing to appear in documentaries ought to be treated, with regard to compensation, psychological services, community outreach and more. There’s some great overlap between this conversation and my podcast conversations with Byron Hurt and Jennifer Tiexiera & Camilla Hall, so please check those out too.  Along with her work at DAWG, Natalie is an award-winning film producer who also teaches at North Carolina State University. She's held several fellowships, including one at the Harvard Kennedy School's Shorenstein Center on Media, Politics and Public Policy. More about Natalie here. Films mentioned in this episode: Hazing (2022), Dir. Byron Hurt Sabaya (2021), Dir. Hogir Hirori Subject (2023), Dir. Jennifer Tiexiera & Camilla Hall Other Mentions: Documentary Accountability Working Group Documentary Magazine “Documentary Future: A Call For Accountability” Sonya Childress Bhawin Suchak Youth FX Molly Murphy Hannah Hearn Getting Real Dr. Kameelah Mu’Min Rashad aka Oseguera Follow us on Instagram! @ThousandRoadsPod Special thanks for helping make this series happen: Sara Archambault, Florence Barrau-Adams, Jon Berman, Ben Cuomo (music), Jax Deluca, Pallavi Deshpande, Nancy Gibbs, Kathleen Hughes, Caroline Kracunas, Laura Manley, Alexis Pancrazi, Liz Schwartz, Jeff Seelbach, Lindsay Underwood (logo/graphics) This episode was supported by a fellowship at the Shorenstein Center on Media, Politics and Public Policy at Harvard Kennedy School.

    46 min
  7. Byron Hurt

    EPISODE 7

    Byron Hurt

    Byron Hurt wears a lot of hats: filmmaker, journalist, activist, mentor and more. He’s also brave, if his 2022 film Hazing is any indication. Hazing takes on the subculture of humiliation and often violence that people endure when they wish to join certain organizations, including college fraternities and sororities. It’s taboo to talk about hazing if you’ve taken part in it, but Byron, a fraternity member who’s seen it from both sides, does just that. We talk about the challenges he encountered in making Hazing, including something that could have scuttled the film’s release two days before it premiered on the PBS Independent Lens series. We also talk about Byron’s evolving philosophy as to how he treats the participants in his films, as well as his influences as inspirations in the documentary business.  Byron’s other films include 2023’s Lee & Liza’s Family Tree, for the PBS NOVA series, as well as Hip-Hop: Beyond Beats and Rhymes and Soul Food Junkies. More about Byron here. Films mentioned in this episode: Hazing (2022), Dir. Byron Hurt Soul Food Junkies (2012), Dir. Byron Hurt Hip-Hop: Beyond Beats and Rhymes (2006), Dir. Byron Hurt Tongues Untied (1989), Dir. Marlon Riggs Black Is… Black Ain’t (1995), Dir. Marlon Riggs Ethnic Notions (1987), Dir. Marlon Riggs Color Adjustment (1992), Dir. Marlon Riggs Other mentions: Documentary Accountability Working Group Marlon Riggs Stanley Nelson Andrew P. Jones Orlando Bagwell Michael Moore Bill Moyers Follow us on Instagram! @ThousandRoadsPod Special thanks for helping make this series happen: Sara Archambault, Florence Barrau-Adams, Jon Berman, Ben Cuomo (music), Jax Deluca, Pallavi Deshpande, Nancy Gibbs, Kathleen Hughes, Caroline Kracunas, Laura Manley, Alexis Pancrazi, Liz Schwartz, Jeff Seelbach, Lindsay Underwood (logo/graphics) This episode was supported by a fellowship at the Shorenstein Center on Media, Politics and Public Policy at Harvard Kennedy School.

    43 min

Ratings & Reviews

5
out of 5
9 Ratings

About

A podcast hosted by Emmy Award-winning director/producer/writer Tom Casciato.