
A portrait of adventurer Luc Mehl, who has spent 15 years packrafting through Alaska's most remote wilderness — the Alaska Range, the Brooks Range, and the Wrangells. Produced for the PBS Digital Studios series Indie Alaska, the film explores an Alaska-born sport that blends backcountry hiking with whitewater travel, and the singular freedom it offers in one of the last truly wild places on earth. Northwest Regional Emmy nomination.

In Bethel, the hub community for the Yukon- Kuskokwim Delta, the costs of a warming climate are becoming impossible to ignore. This short documentary examines how melting permafrost, flooding, and shifting infrastructure are transforming daily life in one of western Alaska's most vital communities and what it means for the dozens of villages that depend on it.

For the first time since their Elder, Maryann Sundown, passed away in 2011, the Scammon Bay dancers returned to the Cama-i Dance Festival stage in Bethel. Known across Alaska as the "Dance Diva" for her deadpan humor and irresistible comedic style, Sundown and her sister Agnes Aguchak left behind a unique legacy in Yup'ik dance. This film honors that legacy and the community that carries it forward. National Edward R. Murrow Award — Excellence in Video.

For years, a third of Lower Kalskag lived without running water, even as the rest of the village had been piped for over a decade. This film follows the community as the last homes finally get connected, capturing what it means to have a sink, a toilet, a shower for the first time. A quiet, human story about infrastructure, inequality, and what basic services actually change in a person's life. AP Television and Radio Association Award — Best Use of Videography.

Coverage of the 40th running of the Kuskokwim 300 Sled Dog Race, one of Alaska's premier mid-distance mushing competitions. Willow musher Matthew Failor crossed the finish line in 36 hours and 32 minutes, shattering a 25-year-old record on a hard, fast course along the frozen Kuskokwim River from Bethel to Aniak and back.