04/19/2026
Proud to sponsor productions that tell real stories, told by the people who live them.
Film doesn’t replace traditional storytelling, it expands it.
Usually stories are passed down through conversation, family tradition, and shared experiences. That still matters, but another, less prominent format exists: film and video.
What’s interesting about projects like The Espanglish Generation is how they take something that used to be personal, and make it visible. You’re not only hearing about someone’s experience but you’re seeing it and feeling the small details that don’t always convey in words.
For a lot of second-generation kids, identity is layered, complicated and evolving. And video is one of the few formats that can capture that complexity.