
LIFE ON PLANET TERRA
SETH NATIVEWOOD

THIS FELLA is different. Not lonely different or creepy different... just not what you'd expect in any respect.
​SETH was born and raised in Kansas, danced ballet and played violin for 14 years, joined the Army, went to film school then Afghanistan, got blown up and shot at, became an official JAG investigator, denied recruitment to the Pentagon and Special Forces for Meritorious Service, turned his sights on a filmmaking career and finally landed in Los Angeles. . . a stranger in a strange land. There he studied everything about the film trade, all positions and departments in addition to writing and developing an ambitious amount of material.
This exciting road lead him into political activist work around Constitutional reformatting and a burning desire to implement some important conceptual architecture into the national and international political conversation. And as it turned out. . . his military education and mindset proved to be extremely valuable in assessing the damage and reporting on the key players.
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He's got some wild ideas about all sorts of things, but to him it's all connected to his role as D8 Command with the Quantum Intelligence Agency. His newfound passion and humility for this role fuels his creativity, ambition, and lust for life as he is finally beginning to gain clarity on how big of a difference he can make decades into the Future.
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He'd say, "it's an interesting journey".
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PASSION PIT

WATER POWER DOCUMENTARY
In Development
"I believe that water will one day be employed as fuel", the famous futurist Jules Verne penned in 1874. There have been numerous inventors who've discovered this during the course of last century. Their inventions were silenced, but their stories could not be.
Two of these brilliant men were Stanley Meyer and Denny Klein who were both murdered to keep their water-powered internal combustion engines kits from coming to the market. There is a remarkable amount of information on both these men.

TOM OGLE FEATURE FILM
In Development
Technological Suppression. This topic is one of the most important in the world. Why are we being held back from the future we all dream of? In the early 80s, a young inventor named Tom Ogle wondered the same thing. But he did something about it. He changed how gasoline fuel was delivered to the internal combustion engine on his Ford Galaxy 500. It got 100 miles to the gallon. He was offered millions, but he wouldn't sell. He died mysteriously a short time later. Only the legend remains.