Andrew Jenks | |
---|---|
Born | March 5, 1986 38) | (age
Nationality | American |
Other names | Jenks, The Mighty Jenk |
Occupation | Filmmaker |
Notable work | Andrew Jenks, Room 335, The Zen of Bobby V, dream/killer, Posterized and World of Jenks |
Andrew Jenks (born March 5, 1986) is an American filmmaker.
When he was nine, his family moved to Belgium for two years. Jenks attended Hendrick Hudson High School in Montrose, New York. When Jenks was 16 he founded the Hendrick Hudson Film Festival, featuring James Earl Jones as its keynote speaker. [1]
His father is Bruce Jenks, Assistant Secretary General for the United Nations. [2] His mother is Nancy Piper Jenks, a family nurse practitioner who is site director in internal medicine at Hudson River HealthCare in Peekskill, NY. [3]
Jenks attended New York University Tisch School of the Arts before dropping out after his sophomore year.
At 19 years old, Jenks moved into an assisted living facility, starring, directing, and producing the feature film Andrew Jenks, Room 335. While a sophomore at New York University, HBO bought the rights to the film and released the documentary on January 15, 2008. [4] The film premiered in Australia [5] and Europe. [6] The film received mostly positive reviews, Variety calling it 'a lovely and genuine account of generational understanding'. [7] Andrew Jenks, Room 335 is an example of a participatory documentary. Jenks' connection to his subjects makes an impact on him as well as them.
When he was 21 years old, ESPN Films financed Andrew's second film, The Zen of Bobby V. [8] The film received good reviews [9] after premiering at the TriBeca Film Festival. [10]
Jenks said of the pitch process 'It was me and my two friends – 21 years old, telling ESPN, the 'Worldwide Leader in Sports' that this was a story that had to be told -that it was their duty. I think we left every meeting unsure if we were acting our age, or just showcasing our passion'. [11] Due to a dispute between ESPN and the Nippon Professional Baseball Organization over rights of baseball footage the film was removed from United States availability until 2020. [12]
At the International Documentary Film Festival at Amsterdam, Jenks was widely acclaimed as one of the next great American filmmakers, and compared to filmmaker Woody Allen. [13]
In January 2010, MTV signed Jenks to do a documentary-series titled World of Jenks . Jenks claimed his inspiration behind World of Jenks was that "I [Andrew] also want to tell the stories of my generation. I want to be a filmmaker that is able to capture what my generation thinks, how they act and what they ultimately stand for." In each episode, Andrew will move in with a new stranger to experience a week in their life, from random people, such as a homeless woman, a man with autism, a rapper, MMA fighter, a professional poker player, an NFL cheerleader, a female-fronted band, etc. The series premiered September 12, 2010, on MTV. Kid Cudi allowed this show to use his song 'Soundtrack 2 My Life' as its theme song.
Season 2 of "World of Jenks" expanded to hour long episodes and continued to be a ratings hit. [14] MSN remarked, "'Jenks – like Chad, Kaylin and D-Real – has overcome the odds and consistently triumphed in its timeslot."
The award-winning show was dubbed as a show unlike any other on MTV. U.S. News & World Report said, "The only way to understand someone else's life is to live it. That's the premise behind documentary filmmaker Andrew Jenks's World of Jenks... The result: a raw, intimate look at daily struggles and victories, and what it means to be a young person today." USA Today said, "MTV's World of Jenks is one of the few unscripted shows that's actually snark-free and helpful to people ... I do like how this series gives a voice to all kinds of teens, not just the pretty ones in fashionable clothes." [15]
Jenks was the face MTV's 2012 election coverage, both producing and hosting. He interviewed or asked questions to nearly all of the candidates, including Governor Mitt Romney and President Barack Obama. [16]
Jenks left the show after 3 years because of a new film about Ryan Ferguson. [17]
Jenks is the creator of It's About a Girl, a magic realism YouTube web series premiered July 9, 2013. He plays a man who pursues the girl of his dreams, played by Taryn Southern. Tubefilter praised the series for seeking a connection between dreams and reality and preferring symbolism and emotions over dialogue. [18]
In May 2014, ESPN released the 30 for 30 short "Posterized", a look into former NBA center Shawn Bradley. Bradley is mostly remembered for two things—being one of the tallest players to ever play in the NBA and for being on the wrong end of a lot of great dunks. [19] Through interviews with Jeff Van Gundy and Shawn Bradley, the film shows the media attention he gained while a player and then focuses on Bradley's life after basketball.
In 2014, ESPN Films' 30 for 30 Shorts series took home an Emmy for Outstanding Short-Format Nonfiction Program. [20]
Jenks had advocated on behalf of prisoners wrongfully incarcerated. In 2011, he called for the release of Ryan Ferguson. He later advocated for the release of Kalvin Michael Smith who was released after 20 years in prison. [21]
Jenks has teamed up with DKMS and DoSomething to promote teens and college students to join the bone marrow donor registry. He will be participating in college speaking tours where he will try to raise awareness and involvement. He also did a PSA for Do Something with a five-year-old leukemia patient about the importance of "getting swabbed".
Jenks directed a feature-length documentary titled "It's Not Over", an inspiring story of three courageous millennials from around the world who are living with or affected by HIV/AIDS. Jenks takes viewers on a journey across India, South Africa and the United States to experience the epidemic first hand. The result is a deeply personal and uplifting story that is rarely represented in popular culture. [22]
Rihanna took part in the production and press for the film. [23]
It's Not Over was made possible by the M·A·C AIDS Fund and is available on Netflix, SnagFilms, Hulu and Pivot (where available).
In 2015, CNN Films released "All American Family", a short film Jenks' company produced and he directed. The film chronicles an all-Deaf high school championship football team. The film premiered at the Tribeca Film Festival and Los Angeles Film Festival and won Best Short Film at the Hamptons International Film Festival. [24] Rich Eisen said the film was, "Friday Night Lights" like I haven't seen before." The deaf community lauded the film for capturing an accurate perspective of their life. [25]
Jenks premiered his latest feature documentary titled dream/killer at the 2015 Tribeca Film Festival, his most acclaimed film since ROOM 335. The New York Times said the film "elicits incredulity, frustration and astonishment...fast-paced and frightening.", [26] the Village Voice calling it a "Must-See Wrongful-Conviction Doc 'dream/killer' Indicts a System.", [27] and Rolling Stone saying, "Fans of Serial and The Jinx, meet your new favorite film." [28] While in production, Jenks made head waves in the legal community after filming Ryan Ferguson in prison giving a plea straight to camera. After nearly 10 years, Ferguson's conviction was vacated. Jenks however indicated, the film is bittersweet, "I wanted to make sure that people knew this was not going to be a happy ending. Because it isn't." [29]
In 2016, Jenks co-created and executive produced the MTV Series, "Unlocking the Truth". The docu-series followed Ryan Ferguson as he investigated three cases believed to have resulted in wrongful convictions. It is believed that the series led to the release of Kalvin Michael Smith. Jenks noted that, "This show starts and ends with Ryan Ferguson. He is a natural leader, a guy with zero self-pity for what he has been put through and instead has a unique instinct to wake up every morning and help others." [21]
In 2015, Jenks sold a spec script to ABC Studios, titled "Sam". He said after covering the 2012 election for MTV, he believed "education would prove to be America's greatest weakness. It will catch up with us. And this is coming from me, certainly no genius. I haven't even graduated college". "Sam" follows a quirky teacher kicked out of several public high schools for eccentric teaching methods, left with one last chance to teach with his best friend at an elite private school in New York City. ABC Family developed the script and passed on the project after the pilot stage.
Jenks sold and developed a half hour comedy titled "The Motivational Speaker" to HBO in 2016. The project remains in development with HBO and Pretty Matches, the Sarah Jessica Parker production company. [30]
In 2019, Jenks began hosting the podcast Gangster Capitalism , the first C13Originals podcast produced by Cadence13. Season one was nominated for a Peabody Award and optioned as a TV series. [31]
In October 2017, Jenks debuted as writer and narrator of the documentary podcast What Really Happened from Seven Bucks Productions, with executive producers Dwayne Johnson and Dany Garcia. The podcast is described as a rogue investigation into pop culture history. [32]
The podcast reached #1 on the international Apple Podcast charts and is now in its third season. [33]
Jenks founded the all All-American High School Film Festival. The annual event is held at the AMC Theatres in Times Square, New York City, the largest movie theater in the United States. The festival has given over $1,00,000 in scholarships and prizes, hosted over 30 universities for the largest arts college fair in the country, and partnered with AT&T for an anti-bullying initiative. The festival was inspired after 10 years of Jenks' high school film festival. The 2021 festival had over 2,000 submissions from over 30 countries with judges such as Kristen Stewart, John Oliver, and James Earl Jones. [34]
After the release of Pitch Perfect, E! News broke the story that Jenks was dating actress Brittany Snow. [35] In 2019, The New York Post's Page Six reported Andrew was dating Barbara P Bush, the daughter of President George W. Bush. [36]
On his podcast, What Really Happened?, produced by Dwayne Johnson, Andrew revealed he had "battled depression, and it took time to just say that out loud", [37] adding in an interview with Dr. Barbara Van Dahlen that while at MTV he was embarrassed and had turned down an offer to speak at the 2013 National Conference on Mental Health at the White House. Andrew said it was one of the "bigger regrets of my career". [37]
In 2014, while only attaining a high school degree, Andrew received an honorary doctorate from Quinnipiac University for his “quest to uncover stories that beg to be told.”. [38] A bomb threat delayed the event. Jenks, and the nearly 9,000 attendees, moved to the TD Bank Sports Center for the ceremony. Jenks later met with Danielle Shea, who was arrested for claiming there was a bomb, to offer support. [39]
Rory Elizabeth Katherine Kennedy is an American documentary filmmaker. Kennedy has made documentary films that center on social issues such as addiction, her opposition to nuclear power, the treatment of prisoners-of-war, and the politics of the Mexican border fence. She is the youngest child of U.S. Senator Robert F. Kennedy and Ethel Skakel.
Jeffrey Leib Nettler Zimbalist is an American filmmaker. He has been Academy Award shortlisted, has won a Peabody, a DuPont, 5 Emmy Awards with 17 Emmy nominations. He is the owner of film and television production company All Rise Films.
Philip Alexander Gibney is an American documentary film director and producer. In 2010, Esquire magazine said Gibney "is becoming the most important documentarian of our time."
Judd Milo Ehrlich is an American documentary film director and producer. In 2016, The New York Times said "Ehrlich, an Emmy-winning documentarian, clearly knows his craft."
rakontur is a Miami-based media studio founded by Billy Corben and Alfred Spellman in 2000.
Adam Bhala Lough is an American film director, screenwriter, and documentary filmmaker from Fairfax, Virginia. Known for his dramas about subcultures and popular youth cultures, several of Lough's films have been selected as part of the Sundance Film Festival, and is the only filmmaker with a feature film and a documentary in the festival, as well as a screenplay selected for the annual Sundance Screenwriter's Lab.
The Tribeca Film Institute (TFI) is a non-profit arts organization based in New York City, founded in 2001 by Robert De Niro, Jane Rosenthal and Craig Hatkoff following the September 11 attacks as a means to revitalize the arts community in lower Manhattan. TFI launched its first program in 2002, the Tribeca Film Festival.
Andrew Rossi is an American filmmaker, Emmy nominated for directing, writing and producing The Andy Warhol Diaries (2022), Ivory Tower (2014) and Page One: Inside the New York Times (2011).
Daniel Junge is an American documentary filmmaker. On February 26, 2012, he won the Academy Award for Best Documentary for the film Saving Face, which he co-directed along with Pakistani filmmaker Sharmeen Obaid-Chinoy. He lives in Los Angeles, CA.
Adam Hootnick is a director and producer of film, television, and other short-form content. His work includes What Carter Lost, UNSETTLED, Destination: Team USA, Son of the Congo, Judging Jewell, and Pro Day. He is currently developing his first narrative feature film.
Erin Lee Carr is an American documentary filmmaker. She is also an author for publications including VICE and her memoir called All That You Leave Behind: A Memoir, a story about love, addiction, and the relationship between father and daughter. In 2015, Variety included Carr as one of its "10 Documakers To Watch". Carr made the 2018 Forbes 30 under 30 list.
Chris Moukarbel is a film director, writer, producer, contemporary artist and runs the award winning production company Permanent Wave Productions. His first feature documentary Me at the Zoo premiered in competition at Sundance Film Festival in 2012 and was acquired by HBO Documentaries. The film charts the rise of YouTube and tells the story of an early viral Internet celebrity, Chris Crocker of “Leave Britney Alone!” fame. Moukarbel was approached by Sheila Nevins to direct the Emmy nominated documentary Banksy Does New York for HBO.
Bryan Sarkinen is an American cinematographer, best known for shooting documentaries such as The First Monday in May (2016).
Marina Zenovich is an American filmmaker known for her biographical documentaries. Her films include LANCE, Robin Williams: Come Inside My Mind, Richard Pryor: Omit the Logic and Roman Polanski: Wanted and Desired, which won two Emmy awards.
Lance Oppenheim is an American filmmaker, documentarian, and producer. His work blends nonfiction storytelling with heightened, cinematic formalism. Oppenheim has received critical acclaim for his films Some Kind of Heaven (2020) and Spermworld (2024). He is also known for creating the HBO documentary series Ren Faire (2024).
Smriti Mundhra is an American filmmaker based in Los Angeles. Her production company, Meralta Films, specializes in documentary films and non-fiction content.
Kareem Rahma is an Egyptian-American comedian, artist, and media entrepreneur.
Dream/Killer, stylized onscreen as dream/killer, is a 2015 documentary film about the wrongful conviction of Ryan Ferguson based on the testimony of a classmate who said that he’d dreamt that Ferguson was the killer. The film details the case and Bill Ferguson's journey to free his son. It debuted at the 2015 Tribeca Film Festival. It aired in August 2016 as a two-hour special on the Investigation Discovery network. The documentary was later released on Netflix in 2019.
Michael Zimbalist is an American filmmaker. He is a three-time Emmy Award and a Peabody Awards winner.
Giant Pictures is an American independent film distribution company founded by Nick Savva and Jeff Stabenau with offices in New York City and Los Angeles. The company releases feature films, documentaries and series on streaming platforms, with an emphasis on flexibility and customization for filmmakers. Giant Pictures owns and operates specialty theatrical label, Drafthouse Films. Giant is the distribution and technology partner of the Tribeca Festival.