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- The power of fostering animals in need is undeniable. Hopalong Animal Rescue, based in Oakland, CA, demonstrates this every day. In the Summer of 2019, this film set out to chronicle the work that Hopalong does, via Tina Quon and Gary Moore, a couple who have dedicated their life together to fostering dogs in need of forever homes. Their pit bull, Nulo, plays a pivotal role, teaching young puppies how to grow into well-behaved, loving adult dogs. Together, they have fostered over 60 dogs - and counting. This documentary shows the ways in which Tina, Gary, and Nulo - along with Hopalong's larger network of over 600 foster homes throughout the Bay Area - have touched so many lives in profound and deeply moving ways.
- The music video for the highly anticipated debut single from Car Colors (the new project from Charles Bissell, formerly of The Wrens), "Old Death." The song and music video are about time, how one chooses to spend it, and what those choices cost. Set within the emotional framework of an old portable television with shoddy reception, Charles takes us on an odyssey of music, memory, and mortality.
- A few years ago, Tod Lippy began noticing the disproportionate number of Florida license plates gracing cars on the streets of his hometown of Brooklyn. And then he started noticing them in every other state he happened to be visiting. His catchy song "Florida Plates" is, on one level, simply a bemused observation of this fact. But it's also a meditation on the rise-and reach-of far-right Florida-based politicians like the state's governor, Ron DeSantis, and, of course, Donald Trump, whose influence seems to grow more pervasive every day. When Lippy approached director Kyle Garrett about doing a music video for the song, Garrett said he felt like the video should feel like "a road trip through dread." Taking the form of a 1950s industrial film, the film showcases how Garrett employs his technical wizardry and mordant sense of humor to create an uncanny world in which Florida license plates are, in the words of the song, "everywhere now."