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Documentary Seminars - Sale Ends Today!

December 2, 2024

Today is the final day to get our popular seminars for sale. I’m offering a three-for-one sale on my popular documentary seminars. Buy The Ultimate Guide to Structuring Your Documentary for $50 (normally $297.) You’ll also receive for free 1) Editing the Character-Driven Documentary here (valued at $79.97) and 2) my recent tutorial on “How to Log Quickly”. Click here to buy all three for $50: Buy The Ultimate Guide to Structuring Your Documentary

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Documentary Seminars - Sale Ends Today!

Documentary Seminars – Ending Soon

November 30, 2024

Our sale on documentary seminars end today. These seminars come with a 100% money-back guarantee. Buy The Ultimate Guide to Structuring Your Documentary for $50 (normally $297.) You’ll also receive for free 1) Editing the Character-Driven Documentary here (valued at $79.97) and 2) my recent tutorial on “How to Log Quickly”. Click here to buy all three for $50:Buy The Ultimate Guide to Structuring Your Documentary

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Documentary Seminars – Ending Soon

Documentary Seminars - Black Friday Sale

November 28, 2024

To celebrate Indigenous Peoples’ Day in the U.S., I’m offering a three-for-one sale on my popular documentary seminars. Buy The Ultimate Guide to Structuring Your Documentary for $50 (normally $297.) You’ll also receive for free 1) Editing the Character-Driven Documentary here (valued at $79.97) and 2) my recent tutorial on “How to Log Quickly”. Here’s what one Emmy-Award-winning director had to say about Editing the Character-Driven Documentary: “This class was invaluable for bringing into crystal clear focus how to bring a 3-act structure to a documentary film. Karen is inspiring and the documentary clips she screens are extrememly useful.” -Paige Bierma,…

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Documentary Seminars - Black Friday Sale

Hightlighted Posts

Why I Hired A Story Consultant

May 10, 2022

I hit a serious roadblock editing my own (fifth) documentary. At the time I was teaching editing at UC Berkeley’s #1-ranked documentary program–so you’d think I’d know what I was doing! But after editing my personal doc for several months in an isolation tank, I’d lost perspective. I couldn’t see a clear storyline for even one of my seven characters! I needed expert guidance; an outside assessment that I could trust. So I sought out the most talented story consultant I knew. Deborah Hoffmann (now retired) had edited the Oscar-winning “The Times of Harvey Milk”. Together we crafted a riveting film in…

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Why I Hired A Story Consultant

What Is A Post-Progressive Documentary?

November 15, 2020

Last week as President-elect Joe Biden was calling for unity, I read one political philosopher who said finding “common ground” is no longer viable. What we need, says Steve McIntosh, is to find a “higher ground”, or a post-progressive perspective. That got me thinking, what would a “post-progressive documentary” look like? First, it would include multiple perspectives. This idea is not new for anyone trained to think critically. But even college-educated filmmakers forget, in our hyper-polarized era, the value of including and transcending multiple viewpoints. Instead, as far back as 1989 when Michael Moore’s “Roger and Me” plowed both the…

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What Is A Post-Progressive Documentary?

$10,000 Relief Discount for Post-Production – Time Sensitive

May 11, 2020

I’m happy to announce that New Doc Editing has established a $10,000 Covid-19 Relief Discount for filmmakers in post-production. We’ve received a PPP loan for small businesses that allows us to offer this benefit to a few select filmmakers. Those selected will collaborate with one of our talented editors and myself at a 30% discount for up to 7 weeks. Our goal is to support 2-3 filmmakers who meet the following criteria: You’re producing a solution-oriented, social issue documentary; Or, you’re producing a documentary about Covid-19 or any illness that celebrates the power of human resiliency and love;You have cash…

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$10,000 Relief Discount for Post-Production – Time Sensitive

FAQ About Editing Services

January 16, 2020

I frequently get asked about our editing services so I’m reposting these FAQ’s, updated for 2020. Can you please send me the names and clips of your editors? Eventually, yes. But first we’ll talk about your vision so I can determine which editor’s sensibility best fits your film.  Then we’ll have a three-way conference call with the editor so you can feel out whether it’s a good match. Fit is so important to me that it comes before credentials. I’ll send resumes, clips, and testimonials after our three-way call so you can do your due diligence. What makes your editing…

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FAQ About Editing Services

Talented Editor Available

January 3, 2020

Happy New Year! I have a talented editor coming available shortly. He’s kind, supportive, and deeply experienced in storytelling. Let me know if you’re interested. Read more about our editing services here.

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Talented Editor Available

Finding The Story’s Micro-Manifestation

March 15, 2019

I recently did a pre-production story consultation with Katie Teague, an award-winning director with whom I’ve worked before. She came up with a brilliant new term that many directors will find helpful when confronting the most important question about a narrative arc: “What does the protagonist want?” For some documentaries the answer is obvious. In Free Solo, Alex Honnold wants to be the first person to climb Yosemite’s El Capitan without ropes or safety gear. In Man on Wire, Philippe Petit wants to walk a high-wire between the Twin Towers. And in HBO’s Fifty Children, a film we helped structure,…

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Finding The Story’s Micro-Manifestation

Should You Break Documentary Convention?

February 22, 2019

One of the most exciting documentaries to emerge from Sundance this year is The Infiltrators, a narrative experiment which won the festival’s Audience Award and Innovator Award. Breaking the conventional filmmaker/subject wall, the directors enlisted undocumented Americans as co-conspirators to voluntarily get themselves detained. Their mission: release themselves and their fellow detainees. Mixing verite scenes with scripted re-enactment, this thriller expands the documentary genre “in exciting new ways,” according to The Hollywood Reporter. “Once we freed ourselves from conventional documentary ethics,” said the directors, “we entered into a realm of possibilities”. While many directors love the idea of “freeing themselves…

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Should You Break Documentary Convention?

Sundance Winners Focus on Character Journeys

February 5, 2019

Most of the award-winning docs coming out of Sundance this year have one thing in common: they are riveting character-driven journeys. While it could easily have been a wonky essay doc, One Child Nation (U.S. Grand Jury Prize) examines China’s one-child policy through the eyes of director Nanfu Wang. The inciting incident? Wang gets pregnant. The journey? To return to China. The central question? What were the consequences of this population experiment? (Spoiler alert: tragic!) Midnight Traveler, which received the World Cinema Documentary Special Jury Award, is another personal documentary. The catalyst? The Taliban puts a bounty on director Hassan…

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Sundance Winners Focus on Character Journeys

How We Edit Quickly

January 14, 2019

One of the things we do best is edit great documentaries quickly—making the cost of finishing a film within reach for many producers. What’s our secret sauce? First, we get you to sift the chaff. By helping you see the narrative arc and major themes, we guide you or your assistants to cull the best 30 hours from your footage. This saves our editor time. Second, we drive fast because we know the terrain. With our Accelerated Post schedule, we’ll fast-track the industry’s conventional journey through Assembly Cut, Rough Cut(s), Fine Cut and Locked Picture. Normally these cuts can take…

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How We Edit Quickly

The Case for Narration

June 25, 2018

I recently returned from my fourth year as a visiting story consultant for Doc Nomads. This unique film master’s degree program shepherds an international group of graduate students from Lisbon to Budapest to Brussels. Their pedagogy is strong in observational-style shooting, but I’ve often felt frustrated by a reluctance to add exposition (a.k.a. narration). To my delight, many of this year’s student filmmakers used narration with great success, enhancing beautifully-shot verite footage. Voiceover narration has been eschewed for the past few decades by many directors hoping to escape the “voice of god” that “tells viewers how to feel”. But I’ve…

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The Case for Narration