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Eagle Smith

2episodes
1podcast

We have 2 summarized appearances for Eagle Smith so far. Browse all podcasts to discover more episodes.

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2 episodes
The Pitch

#22 - Leah and Angel Interview Eagle Smith - Pt 1

The Pitch
39 minNative American Filmmaker

AI Summary

→ WHAT IT COVERS Alaska Native filmmaker Eagle Smith discusses breaking Hollywood's stereotypical Native American casting, producing her first feature film on limited resources, and advocating for authentic tribal representation beyond the seven commonly depicted tribes. → KEY INSIGHTS - **Bootstrapped filmmaking approach:** Smith created over 60 short films in two years during high school, learning to work with available resources. Her recent short cost $216, shot entirely on a broken iPhone, proving quality content doesn't require large budgets when paired with determination and creativity. - **Feature film budget priorities:** For her ghost hunter comedy feature, Smith prioritizes three expenses regardless of budget constraints: hiring a skilled cinematographer, securing a professional editor, and allocating funds for marketing. Everything else gets negotiated through favors or free work to maximize production value. - **Film leasing versus selling strategy:** Lease finished films to platforms like Netflix for 10-15 years instead of selling outright. Leasing retains ownership rights, allows sequel production, and can generate more revenue over time than immediate sale, especially for emerging filmmakers without established followings. - **Authentic Native representation requires:** Visit the actual tribe being depicted, hire tribal consultants throughout production from preproduction to final edits, and feature tribes beyond the commonly shown seven or eight. City natives comprise 75 percent of the Native American population and deserve representation alongside reservation communities. → NOTABLE MOMENT Smith reveals that six or seven people have directly told her they forgot Native Americans exist, highlighting the erasure problem in mainstream culture. This drives her mission to create films showing contemporary Native life beyond Hollywood's narrow, fetishized portrayals and historical trauma narratives. 💼 SPONSORS None detected 🏷️ Indigenous Filmmaking, Independent Film Production, Native American Representation, Film Financing

AI Summary

→ WHAT IT COVERS Filmmaker Eagle Smith discusses her journey from producing 60 short films to her first feature, detailing her experience in the Native American TV Writers Lab and her approach to creating authentic native characters in contemporary settings. → KEY INSIGHTS - **Parallel project strategy:** While in preproduction for her feature film, Eagle develops a modern Robin Hood podcast pilot about a city native in a gentrified neighborhood, building audience following and creating intellectual property to sell while keeping creative skills sharp between major projects. - **Script editing discipline:** Through the eight-week Native American TV Writers Lab, Eagle learned to cut scripts from 60 to 46 pages in hours and complete 25-page overnight redrafts by staying married to the story rather than specific characters, eliminating four characters and unnecessary elements without losing narrative core. - **Cultural representation approach:** Eagle writes native characters based on her city native experience rather than reservation life, creating protagonists who move through stories without cultural density requirements, similar to how Bridgerton and Orange is the New Black cast diverse actors who simply excel at their craft. - **Festival marketing budget:** Film festival attendance requires budgeting beyond production and post-production, including plane tickets, hotel accommodations, festival badges, and ten thousand dollar PR representatives who provide access to networking parties where meaningful industry connections happen, all essential for effective film promotion. → NOTABLE MOMENT Eagle lost a role in Killers of the Flower Moon, which devastated her, but channeled that rejection into writing her Robin Hood pilot script while caring for her mother who nearly died, transforming personal crisis into creative momentum that launched her television writing career. 💼 SPONSORS [{"name": "Netflix", "url": ""}] - Provided $10,000 writers grants to Native American TV Writers Lab participants 🏷️ Native American Representation, Screenwriting Process, Independent Filmmaking, Cultural Storytelling

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