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Lurline Wailana McGregor

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marzo 2005

Mariano Estrada AguilarProducer Lurline Wailana McGregor (Native Hawaiian) directs short videos and is a former director of Pacific Islanders in Communication (PIC), the public television consortium responsible for programming by indigenous Pacific Islanders. She is also the former executive director of 'Olelo Community Television, where she founded NATV, a public access television channel devoted to indigenous programming. Under her leadership, 'Olelo Community Television established video production training programs at rural O'ahu schools. McGregor currently works on legislative issues for the State Senate of Hawaii, and formerly worked on Native Hawaiian issues for Hui Na'auao, a coalition advocating Native Hawaiian sovereignty, and for the Senate Select Committee on Indian Affairs, under Senator Daniel Inouye, committee chair. McGregor received an MA in political science and public affairs at George Washington University in Washington, D.C. She was born to a Hawaiian, Chinese, Scottish father and a German mother, and grew up in Honolulu, Hawai'i, in a community that reflected her own multi-cultural background.

"My primary interest in filmmaking and video production has always been
in using the medium as a tool to educate our own communities and to
inform others about us from a first person viewpoint. To engage an
audience, though, a production must be artistic and entertaining. I
like making documentaries because not only is truth often more
compelling (and unbelievable!) than fiction, but there are many
stories in our communities about our people that deserve to be told.
The challenge is to tell the story in a way that is fresh and that will
allow the truth to reveal itself. My goal is always to leave the
viewer with a new understanding and new insights of Native people as
human beings."

Presentado por NMAI

Créditos Fotográficos: Lurline Wailana McGregor - gentileza del realizador

Presentado por NMAI

 

 

 

 


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