53 min

WTB 10: Collective Dreaming, Imposter Syndrome, & Roadmapping for Women in Film & Media with Fabiola Andrade WOC Talk Biz

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Welcome to Women of Color Talk Biz, Episode #10 (WOC Talk Biz). I’m your host, Monica Barriga-Weyers. This platform is for you if you want to hear about how women of color speak about work in the trenches from their mid-early years to working their way up as managers and solopreneurs. We’re covering areas in tech, media, and the corporate floors of America. Getting access to how they do it is key to knowing how you can move smarter and faster from our diverse community. 
Today, we have a special guest from the media world. We generally talk about tech, corporate floor environments, and side-hustles. I’m delighted to bring in media as part of our coverage, as women in film and media create the stories and identities so many of us follow in streaming stories, film, and tv. 
I welcome Fabiola Andrade who is originally from Honduras and is currently based out of New Orleans as a filmmaker. She is inspired by her multicultural heritage and interdisciplinary background. She’s also a Woman Telluride Film Festival Cinephile and NOFF’s Emerging Voices Film Director Mentee. In between her own projects, she’s collaborated with independent and studio productions from Netflix. Paramount Pictures, and Universal Studios. Her commercial and music video work includes brands like Coca-Cola, Gap, Mitsubishi, the Soul Rebels. Her latest screenplay on identity, It’s Me, Sarah, is in post-production getting prepped for festival runs in 2021. 
Today, we hear her perspective on:
Advice for women going into the media and film industry & how to handle typical pressures as a womanKeeping imposter syndrome’s positive and negative impacts in balance How she created an intentional roadmap & network to work on production teams and become a filmmakerFilm industry’s influence on tech platforms To learn more about Fabiola Andrade, you can say hello to her through email at  info@transversalproductions.com or through the links below.
You can always hear this show on most podcast apps, which are free for episode listens and subscriptions through websites like Spotify, Google Podcasts, and Apple Podcasts. Follow me and the show on LinkedIn or Instagram @woctalkbiz to catch previews of upcoming episodes.
To send in your anonymous questions or topics that you want to hear on the show, go to www.woctalk.biz or email me at monica@woctalk.biz. I can take questions and requests to be a guest on the show, and you can be added to our upcoming community group newsletter.
If you found value in this show, subscribe, and share an episode with a friend. Stay connected with the pulse of women shaping the world today. We're grateful for your listenership. Tune in next week for another gem on diversity, work, and living out your vision.  
Fabiola Andrade Links:
instagram.com/itsmesarahfilm
facebook.com/itsmesarahfilm
https://letterboxd.com/film/its-me-sarah/
www.transversalproductions.com
#itsmesarah
 
 
Support the show

Welcome to Women of Color Talk Biz, Episode #10 (WOC Talk Biz). I’m your host, Monica Barriga-Weyers. This platform is for you if you want to hear about how women of color speak about work in the trenches from their mid-early years to working their way up as managers and solopreneurs. We’re covering areas in tech, media, and the corporate floors of America. Getting access to how they do it is key to knowing how you can move smarter and faster from our diverse community. 
Today, we have a special guest from the media world. We generally talk about tech, corporate floor environments, and side-hustles. I’m delighted to bring in media as part of our coverage, as women in film and media create the stories and identities so many of us follow in streaming stories, film, and tv. 
I welcome Fabiola Andrade who is originally from Honduras and is currently based out of New Orleans as a filmmaker. She is inspired by her multicultural heritage and interdisciplinary background. She’s also a Woman Telluride Film Festival Cinephile and NOFF’s Emerging Voices Film Director Mentee. In between her own projects, she’s collaborated with independent and studio productions from Netflix. Paramount Pictures, and Universal Studios. Her commercial and music video work includes brands like Coca-Cola, Gap, Mitsubishi, the Soul Rebels. Her latest screenplay on identity, It’s Me, Sarah, is in post-production getting prepped for festival runs in 2021. 
Today, we hear her perspective on:
Advice for women going into the media and film industry & how to handle typical pressures as a womanKeeping imposter syndrome’s positive and negative impacts in balance How she created an intentional roadmap & network to work on production teams and become a filmmakerFilm industry’s influence on tech platforms To learn more about Fabiola Andrade, you can say hello to her through email at  info@transversalproductions.com or through the links below.
You can always hear this show on most podcast apps, which are free for episode listens and subscriptions through websites like Spotify, Google Podcasts, and Apple Podcasts. Follow me and the show on LinkedIn or Instagram @woctalkbiz to catch previews of upcoming episodes.
To send in your anonymous questions or topics that you want to hear on the show, go to www.woctalk.biz or email me at monica@woctalk.biz. I can take questions and requests to be a guest on the show, and you can be added to our upcoming community group newsletter.
If you found value in this show, subscribe, and share an episode with a friend. Stay connected with the pulse of women shaping the world today. We're grateful for your listenership. Tune in next week for another gem on diversity, work, and living out your vision.  
Fabiola Andrade Links:
instagram.com/itsmesarahfilm
facebook.com/itsmesarahfilm
https://letterboxd.com/film/its-me-sarah/
www.transversalproductions.com
#itsmesarah
 
 
Support the show

53 min