Lindsay MacFarland (born 1978) is an American film actress and Stunt performer.
Biography
Early life
Lindsay MacFarland was born on 1978, in Las Vegas, NV.
She attended the University of Nevada, Reno for her first year of college. She then transferred to the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, where she finished her bachelor's degree in Communication Studies in 2001.
In her early twenties, MacFarland moved to Los Angeles, CA where she has been steadily working as an actress in numerous films, television, and commercials.
Career
In 2000 MacFarland hosted a cable show Totally Band in Vegas in which she also produced.
In her early twenties, she moved out to Los Angeles, CA to pursue a more professional career.
In 2004, MacFarland booked a supporting role in the film A Lot Like Love, opposite Ashton Kutcher. She also worked on this film as the stunt-double for Amanda Peet. In 2005, MacFarland was Ana Claudia Talancón's stunt-double in The Virgin of Juarez.
In 2005, MacFarland booked a supporting role opposite Eric Bana for the film Lucky You, released in 2007.
Selected filmography
* A Lot Like Love (2005)
* Close To Home (2006)
* Lucky You (2007)
Biography
Early life
Lindsay MacFarland was born on 1978, in Las Vegas, NV.
She attended the University of Nevada, Reno for her first year of college. She then transferred to the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, where she finished her bachelor's degree in Communication Studies in 2001.
In her early twenties, MacFarland moved to Los Angeles, CA where she has been steadily working as an actress in numerous films, television, and commercials.
Career
In 2000 MacFarland hosted a cable show Totally Band in Vegas in which she also produced.
In her early twenties, she moved out to Los Angeles, CA to pursue a more professional career.
In 2004, MacFarland booked a supporting role in the film A Lot Like Love, opposite Ashton Kutcher. She also worked on this film as the stunt-double for Amanda Peet. In 2005, MacFarland was Ana Claudia Talancón's stunt-double in The Virgin of Juarez.
In 2005, MacFarland booked a supporting role opposite Eric Bana for the film Lucky You, released in 2007.
Selected filmography
* A Lot Like Love (2005)
* Close To Home (2006)
* Lucky You (2007)
Patrick F. Leonard (born July 26, 1979) is an American writer. He will receive an MFAW from The Art Institute of Chicago. A sentence writer, he's appeared in The Mid-America Poetry Review, The Adirondack Review, The Pebble Lake Review, MiPOesias, elimae, 2River View, and Hotel St. George.
Education and Early Interests
After attending Augustana College in Rockisland, Il Patrick moved to Texas to be with his son and wife. There he began writing poetry with Rebecca Wee, who advised before his acceptance to the School of the Art Institute of Chicago.
Career
Publications
Education and Early Interests
After attending Augustana College in Rockisland, Il Patrick moved to Texas to be with his son and wife. There he began writing poetry with Rebecca Wee, who advised before his acceptance to the School of the Art Institute of Chicago.
Career
Publications
When God gives someone a vision. It's no surprise that Warren is the son of a builder, because for 30 years he has been dedicated to building the ministry of Family Life Radio. He and his wife, Char, met in their teenage years while singing and traveling with the "Children's Bible Hour." They were married in 1947.
From there, Warren and Char were called to be involved as music ministers, assistant pastors or youth directors for church ministries in Michigan and New York. Even in the midst of this pastoral work, the couple had a dream of seeing non-commercial Christian radio in every home. Following their ministry in New York, Warren and Char and their five children moved back to Michigan and settled in the Jackson area. It was there, in a clapboard house on Jericho Road, that the dream of Christian radio started to come alive. Family Life Radio was born in the basement studio of Warren and Char's home, with a 30-minute radio program for teenagers.
While the rich history of Family Life Radio is captured in the book "On The Jericho Road: The Family Life Radio Story," you must forward almost 40 years later to understand the magnitude of the work God has done in Family Life Radio; you must look at today, where you find a network of over 30 stations and station transmitters around the United States.
With the broadcasting reach out to nearly 15 million people, Family Life Radio has grown. But more importantly than anything, God has cast his favor upon the faithful ministry that started in a small room 42 years ago in Michigan, and now touches lives for Christ everyday across the entire nation and around the world.
Dr. Randy L. Carlson, President of Family Life Radio, and the leadership team of Rod Robison, Alonzo Williams and the Board of Directors, and countless others who make this ministry possible with labor and love, are here daily, to be faithful servants, mindful stewards, and passionate to spread the Gospel of Christ in a dark and fallen world!
Websites:
http://www.myflr.org/ (links directly to Family Life Radio Webpage
From there, Warren and Char were called to be involved as music ministers, assistant pastors or youth directors for church ministries in Michigan and New York. Even in the midst of this pastoral work, the couple had a dream of seeing non-commercial Christian radio in every home. Following their ministry in New York, Warren and Char and their five children moved back to Michigan and settled in the Jackson area. It was there, in a clapboard house on Jericho Road, that the dream of Christian radio started to come alive. Family Life Radio was born in the basement studio of Warren and Char's home, with a 30-minute radio program for teenagers.
While the rich history of Family Life Radio is captured in the book "On The Jericho Road: The Family Life Radio Story," you must forward almost 40 years later to understand the magnitude of the work God has done in Family Life Radio; you must look at today, where you find a network of over 30 stations and station transmitters around the United States.
With the broadcasting reach out to nearly 15 million people, Family Life Radio has grown. But more importantly than anything, God has cast his favor upon the faithful ministry that started in a small room 42 years ago in Michigan, and now touches lives for Christ everyday across the entire nation and around the world.
Dr. Randy L. Carlson, President of Family Life Radio, and the leadership team of Rod Robison, Alonzo Williams and the Board of Directors, and countless others who make this ministry possible with labor and love, are here daily, to be faithful servants, mindful stewards, and passionate to spread the Gospel of Christ in a dark and fallen world!
Websites:
http://www.myflr.org/ (links directly to Family Life Radio Webpage
Dextrapodophobia is a short film made in the spring of 2007 as a part of Bowling Green State University's 48 Hour Film Project, sponsored by the University Film Organization. It was awarded first place at the spring 2007 screenings.
The film was written, shot, and edited from March 30th to April 1st, 2007. The first screening was held on April 4th, 2007.
The team had to incorporate an analog clock as a prop and the line "You're standing on my foot." The film was intended to be that of a sci-fi genre.
Plot
A pizza delivery person, Harvey Lockwood, stumbles upon a secret government organization. The Department Of Undercover Classified Happenings Everywhere (D.O.U.C.H.E.), responsible for 90% of the world's cover-ups, offers Lockwood a choice: He could either join the organization or face an untimely death. Choosing to join, he is escorted around the facility where he discovers pizza to be the meaning of life. After confronting another captured pizza delivery person, Lockwood works to escape D.O.U.C.H.E. headquarters, ending in an anti-climatic battle with the leader of the organization (The Big Douche).
Cast and Crew
Harvey Lockwood............................Matt Cass
Miss Lexington (The Big Douche).....Amanda Kleiman
Tom Pawn......................................Matt Van Wormer
Dr. Alexander Dirkfall.......................Kevin Bean
The Intern.......................................Larry Marshall
Robin Hawke..................................Robyn Ferguson
Mr. Oldman....................................Steve Grunwell
Extras............................................Mallory Baumann, Lisa Meade, A.J. Brock
Director..........................................Steve Grunwell
Asst. Director.................................Larry Marshall
Director of Photography...................Steve Grunwell
Camera Operators...........................Steve Grunwell, Larry Marshall, Matt Van Wormer
Boom Operators..............................Kevin Bean, Larry Marshall
Editors...........................................Steve Grunwell, Larry Marshall
Graphic Artist.................................Barrett Dorner
Foley Artist.....................................Matt Cass
Wardrobe........................................Lisa Meade
Featuring original music by Matt Cass
The film was written and produced collectively by the members of Period Piece Part Deux:
Mallory Baumann, Kevin Bean, Matt Cass, Robyn Ferguson, Steve Grunwell, Amanda Kleiman, Larry Marshall, and Matt Van Wormer.
Equipment
Dextrapodophobia was shot on MiniDV with a Canon XL-2. It was shot using a 16:9 (widescreen) aspect ratio and 24p tape speed.
With limited access to good equipment, audio was recorded using a hand-held condenser microphone mounted at the end of a telescoping golf ball retriever en lieu of a boom. A rolling chair was also used as a dolly at one point in the movie.
The film was edited using Final Cut Pro.
Trivia
·The film was made to be YouTube-safe, so all music, foley sounds, and graphics are original.
·Every crew member appeared in some role within the film.
·The character Tom Pawn is a loose reference to a tampon, fitting with the feminine hygiene-themed organization
·A leadership retreat took place during the shoot in the large room used in the final scene. Shooting had to be delayed for seven hours.
·Many of the crew members reunited in the fall of 2007 to work on another 48 Hour project, titled "Spellbound." They produced the film under the company "Scooter Pie Productions."
·Dextrapodophobia is a combination of two fears. Dextraphobia, fear of things on the right side of the body, and podophobia, fear of feet. Literally translated, the name would imply "fear of the right foot," which is how Harvey Lockwood is able to defeat the members of D.O.U.C.H.E.
·The group name, "Period Piece Part Deux," is a reference to a team of the previous semester that included Mallory Baumann, Lisa Meade, Amanda Kleiman, and Steve Grunwell.
·Around ten minutes of in-car footage was shot for the opening sequence of the film but cut due to time constraints. They were shot by director Steve Grunwell and involved hanging the camera out the window of a moving car and shooting out the sunroof.
Links
The film on YouTube
The film was written, shot, and edited from March 30th to April 1st, 2007. The first screening was held on April 4th, 2007.
The team had to incorporate an analog clock as a prop and the line "You're standing on my foot." The film was intended to be that of a sci-fi genre.
Plot
A pizza delivery person, Harvey Lockwood, stumbles upon a secret government organization. The Department Of Undercover Classified Happenings Everywhere (D.O.U.C.H.E.), responsible for 90% of the world's cover-ups, offers Lockwood a choice: He could either join the organization or face an untimely death. Choosing to join, he is escorted around the facility where he discovers pizza to be the meaning of life. After confronting another captured pizza delivery person, Lockwood works to escape D.O.U.C.H.E. headquarters, ending in an anti-climatic battle with the leader of the organization (The Big Douche).
Cast and Crew
Harvey Lockwood............................Matt Cass
Miss Lexington (The Big Douche).....Amanda Kleiman
Tom Pawn......................................Matt Van Wormer
Dr. Alexander Dirkfall.......................Kevin Bean
The Intern.......................................Larry Marshall
Robin Hawke..................................Robyn Ferguson
Mr. Oldman....................................Steve Grunwell
Extras............................................Mallory Baumann, Lisa Meade, A.J. Brock
Director..........................................Steve Grunwell
Asst. Director.................................Larry Marshall
Director of Photography...................Steve Grunwell
Camera Operators...........................Steve Grunwell, Larry Marshall, Matt Van Wormer
Boom Operators..............................Kevin Bean, Larry Marshall
Editors...........................................Steve Grunwell, Larry Marshall
Graphic Artist.................................Barrett Dorner
Foley Artist.....................................Matt Cass
Wardrobe........................................Lisa Meade
Featuring original music by Matt Cass
The film was written and produced collectively by the members of Period Piece Part Deux:
Mallory Baumann, Kevin Bean, Matt Cass, Robyn Ferguson, Steve Grunwell, Amanda Kleiman, Larry Marshall, and Matt Van Wormer.
Equipment
Dextrapodophobia was shot on MiniDV with a Canon XL-2. It was shot using a 16:9 (widescreen) aspect ratio and 24p tape speed.
With limited access to good equipment, audio was recorded using a hand-held condenser microphone mounted at the end of a telescoping golf ball retriever en lieu of a boom. A rolling chair was also used as a dolly at one point in the movie.
The film was edited using Final Cut Pro.
Trivia
·The film was made to be YouTube-safe, so all music, foley sounds, and graphics are original.
·Every crew member appeared in some role within the film.
·The character Tom Pawn is a loose reference to a tampon, fitting with the feminine hygiene-themed organization
·A leadership retreat took place during the shoot in the large room used in the final scene. Shooting had to be delayed for seven hours.
·Many of the crew members reunited in the fall of 2007 to work on another 48 Hour project, titled "Spellbound." They produced the film under the company "Scooter Pie Productions."
·Dextrapodophobia is a combination of two fears. Dextraphobia, fear of things on the right side of the body, and podophobia, fear of feet. Literally translated, the name would imply "fear of the right foot," which is how Harvey Lockwood is able to defeat the members of D.O.U.C.H.E.
·The group name, "Period Piece Part Deux," is a reference to a team of the previous semester that included Mallory Baumann, Lisa Meade, Amanda Kleiman, and Steve Grunwell.
·Around ten minutes of in-car footage was shot for the opening sequence of the film but cut due to time constraints. They were shot by director Steve Grunwell and involved hanging the camera out the window of a moving car and shooting out the sunroof.
Links
The film on YouTube