
On Thursday, September 25, from 4-5 p.m. ET, Firelight Media hosted a YouTube Live virtual Beyond Resilience conversation diving into a case study of the Firelight Media-supported documentary visual album Songs From The Hole, plotting the film team’s journey from idea to impact. Joined by the film team and moderated by Firelight Media President & CEO Loira Limbal, the conversation uplifts how activists can use documentary films as vessels to transform communities, designing a curriculum with a focus on systemic change, and unpacking the intimate (and ethical) relationship between filmmaker and protagonist.
Accessibility Notice: This event recording includes auto-generated closed captions.
Savvy young activists, like the team behind the Netflix documentary Songs From The Hole, are leveraging the cultural reach of documentary film to scale years-long efforts toward systemic change. Filmmaker Contessa Gayles, producer richie reseda, and protagonist and writer JJ’88 have long advocated for prison abolition and restorative justice, but their collaboration on Songs has reaped tangible results: Incarcerated folks across California who watch the film and engage in its curriculum are eligible for a one-week reduction in their sentence. And across the country, the team has tied screenings of the film to a “healing plan” that challenges notions of domination and power, safety, and community.
---
As part of our 2025 Beyond Resilience series, we are publishing case studies of films and impact campaigns by Firelight Media-supported filmmakers in order to provide a detailed overview of the filmmaker's journey from ideation to research and development to production to post-production, distribution, and impact and engagement.
The case study, authored by Beyond Resilience Series Producer Sian-Pierre Regis, features candid interviews with filmmaker Contessa Gayles, film protagonist and writer JJ'88, and producer richie reseda.
Case study highlights include:
Songs From The Hole is now streaming worldwide only on Netflix.
Firelight Media joined The Movement for Black Lives' national call to action on June 19 with a panel conversation that explored the history of Juneteenth and the burning of Black Wall Street in Tulsa, and grappled with the path toward economic justice for Black America.
As physical distancing continues to be the new norm, how can we still make an impact when apart? Sonya Childress, senior fellow at the Perspective Fund, takes us through case studies of documentary film campaigns that have launched in this moment and raise key questions around audience access, care, and how to reach social justice impact goals.

A live event featuring a music set by DJ Frotasia to give our community the opportunity to dance, sing, and shout during a time of tremendous difficulty.
Conversations on representation, labor, and equity featuring the work and perspectives of Undocumented storytellers.
A conversation with Black filmmakers on how they are navigating the ubiquitous images of Black trauma in this moment, documenting Black life, and forging new cinematic languages, practices, and formal approaches.
The recent announcement that golfing icon Tiger Woods would be the subject of a two-part HBO documentary series set in motion a heated debate in the documentary industry about equity, power, and BIPOC filmmakers' demands for structural change.

A conversation to lift up the life and legacy of the former Congressman with inside stories and reflections on his leadership.
Tuesday, September 29, 2020, presented at the International Documentary Association’s (IDA) Getting Real conference.