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Truly Free Film

10 Things We Learned About Sustainable Filmmaking While Working on the Documentary Seventh-Gay Adventists

by Stephen Eyer

For the past five years, my wife and producing partner, Daneen Akers, and I have been working full-time on a social documentary film called Seventh-Gay Adventists (http://www.sgamovie.com) about three gay and lesbian members of a conservative church and their challenge to reconcile their faith and sexuality. We spent the last year on the road traveling with the film in the U.S., Canada, and Australia at film festivals, churches, and community centers. Our last major festival screening will be on Dec. 5th as part of Frameline’s Encore series (http://www.frameline.org/now-showing/events/frameline-encore-seventh-gay-adventists) in San Francisco. Although we’ve been asked at filmmaker gatherings before if we’re selling marijuana on the side to make rent, we’ve actually been making enough to both pay for our expenses and fund the film primarily through cultivating an engaged and motivated grassroots community that believe in this film.

The following are 10 things we learned about how to sustain yourself as a filmmaker while making films that can have a positive impact on the world.

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Truly Free Film

Towards A Sustainable Investor Class: Diverse And Deep Industry Knowledge

Potential film investors need to be educated about what is working and what is not, where it works, and what could be done. No one likes to look foolish, but most film investors come to the industry having made their wealth in other fields (or having not actually generated it themselves) and thus often start with a paucity of the necessary and a surplus of the inapplicable.

Investments should be made based on educated choice, not an impulsive or biased guess — and certainly not on the advice of conflicted advisors.

The problem here is