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The Family Journey: Raising Gender Nonconforming Children
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The Family Journey: Raising Gender Nonconforming Children charts the emotional and intellectual transformations parents and siblings must make in order to successfully nurture their gender nonconforming family members. In frank, vulnerable interviews, families from all over the country speak about the power of love and acceptance to help their unusual children thrive. They also come to realize that loving a gender nonconforming child, in the face of ignorance-and sometimes-hostility, has turned them into more compassionate human beings.
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Jonathan Skurnik Jonathan Skurnik has produced, directed and shot numerous award-winning documentaries and has recently completed his first two fiction films as writer/director. His three most recent documentaries include: The Elevator Operator, a documentary about a Ukrainian immigrant who runs a manual elevator in Manhattan. It has screened at the Museum of Modern Art in New York, won Best Documentary at the Urban TV film festival in Madrid and had its broadcast premiere on PBS and Ukrainian TV; the award-winning Spit It Out which was broadcast on PBS in 2007; and A Day’s Work, A Day’s Pay which won the prestigious Harry Chapin award for films about hunger and poverty and was broadcast on PBS and in Europe in 2002. Jonathan is currently directing Ice Music, an hi-def documentary about an ice music festival in Norway; producing Something’s Moving, a documentary about survivors of American Indian boarding schools; and he’s directing She’s A Boy, a documentary about transgender children.
From a snowy small town in northern Michigan to the mountains of Afghanistan and back, the Emmy-winning WHERE SOLDIERS COME FROM follows the four-year journey of childhood friends and their town, forever changed by a faraway war.
Frontier Youth
Growing up in neighboring towns divided by a steel border fence.
Children in No Man's Land
A documentary that uncovers the plight of unaccompanied immigrant minors entering the United States.
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