David
Poulshock
David Poulshock is a writer/director based in the
Northwest. He is nationally-known for his work on the highly
successful WEE SING childrens series, produced by his Portland-based production
company and distributed by Universal Home Video. For Universal,
he also produced two Wee Sing compilation programs featuring the
animated character Singaling. Additionally, David has
written and directed a number of shorts, including the experimental
film SHADOW a dream-sequence based on the works of Carl Jung
and Joseph Campbell, and winner of the 1994 INTERCOM Silver Award.
His screenplays have received honors in many script competitions,
including: Nicholl Fellowships, Sundance, Chesterfield, Austin Heart
of the Screenplay, Writer's Network, Fade-in Magazine, World-Fest
Houston, and many others. Beyond screenplays, shorts and kidvids,
David Poulshock has produced, written and directed numerous commercials,
infomercials and corporate films for clients ranging from Goodwill
Industries and the Oregon Lottery to Hewlett-Packard and View-Master
3-D. He has also written a number of educational scripts and served
as acting coach for Oregon Public Broadcasting. Since the late 1980s,
his commercial and entertainment projects have won over 50 regional
and national awards.
|
Annie Tonsiengsom
With over five years of in-depth knowledge and experience producing food television, Annie has traveled the world and crisscrossed the United States searching out the most compelling food stories. Working alongside celebrity chefs such as Emeril Lagasse, Mario Batali, Sara Moulton, Lidia Bastianich, Bobby Flay, Tyler Florence, Caprial Pence and others, shes helped to create millions of devoted “foodies” who just cant get enough food television.
Whether shes directing fifty costumed, Mardi Gras marching band members during a crawfish boil in New Orleans, producing a shoot in the middle of the Arizona desert to make miso soup over a campfire, or a complex multi-camera shoot in a soup kitchen during Thanksgiving - shes got it under control.
Where Annie goes, food television magic follows!
|
| |
|
 |