#KidsOnTech
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Our Story

Our team came to this topic long before Covid and not as filmmakers, but as parents raising young children between the ages of one and nineteen. Moms and dads at our kids’ schools all ask the same questions: How much Youtube does your kid watch?  Did you let your kid watch “His Dark Materials”? Does your kid have a smartphone? And then Covid hit!

Most of us were relieved to have zoom classrooms and that facsimile of education referred to as, “distance learning.” But children around the world are now emerging even more obsessed with their devices. The science is clear: Heavy use of tech can profoundly compromise healthy “brain development” in young children.

The weird part is that most parents know this already.
It’s been our instinct all along...

We made this film to remind parents of what we already know — instinctively, as parents — children need to experience outdoor play, work with their hands, engage with their friends, and figure out what to do when they become insufferably bored. In making this film, we wanted to explore how we might both protect and prepare our children for a rapidly changing world where turning back the clock is not an option.

While editing the film, everyone wanted us to offer a simple answer; but there were none. Our process was to seek out intimate conversations with parents, teachers, neuroscientists, tech executives, child psychologists, and kids of every age from around the world hoping to better understand what’s become humankind’s greatest social experiment. Is tech somehow inherently evil? Should we shield our children from it at all costs?  Certainly not, nor could we if we tried. Our goal is not to tell you what to do. Rather, we hope this film can help start a conversation that is as important and alive today as climate change.

 
 

Filmmakers

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Paul Zehrer
Writer / Director

Paul’s film and television career has earned nominations for the Sundance Grand Jury Prize, an Independent Spirit Award, and an Emmy Award. Paul made his directorial debut with the award-winning feature film “Blessing” and directed award-winning films on education and disabilities, earning the Prix du Documentaire at Cannes’ Festival International for “Being Seen”. His producing experience includes the recent feature documentary, “The Test & The Art of Thinking”. Nominated for a directing Emmy for Nickelodeon’s “Blues Clues,” Paul also has 25 years experience as an editor, with credits that include the feature documentary, “Listen Up: The Lives of Quincy Jones” and PBS’s “Picasso Paints Picasso”.

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Henning Kullak-Ublick


Executive Producer

Speaker of the Board for the Federation of Waldorf Schools and on the board for the Friends of Waldorf Education and International Forum for Steiner/Waldorf Education, Henning collaborated with writer/director, Zehrer to produced a trilogy of documentary films for the 2019 Waldorf Centennial. A co-founder of the German Green Party and a Waldorf class-teacher for 28 years, Henning has authored numerous articles and two books on education and coordinates the Waldorf 2019 Centennial throughout the world.

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Pierre Laurent
Executive Producer

Pierre, a Silicon Valley business executive, has worked with Mr. Zehrer on several educational films. With a background in Education, Computer Science, and AI, he collaborates with High-Tech companies and schools and is frequently quoted in the press about the tech's impact on education and home life. Pierre has been interviewed by the media, extensively, and is a recognized public speaker.

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Eric Ivey
Cinematographer / Editor

Eric has been a principal collaborator with Paul and Potential SF on dozens of films, including “Being Seen” winner of the “Audience Award” at the 2016 San Francisco IndieFest. Eric recently directed the short, “Not Worth Killing,” a story about redemption on death row. Eric’s skillsets behind the camera, as well as in the editing room are complimented by his keen sensibilities in emotion-driven storytelling.

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Maren Wickwire
Co-producer / Cinematographer

Maren Wickwire is a documentarian and visual anthropologist. She is the founder of Manifest Media. She has wide-ranging experience in directing, producing and filming documentaries. Her work has been screened around the globe and focuses on migration studies, mobility and transnationalism with a particular interest in the everyday experiences of women and marginalized communities.

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Dr. Gillian Lerner
Consulting Psychologist

A clinical psychologist, Dr. Lerner’s work focuses on maternal mental health, parenting, and family dynamics. She has been in private practice for over two decades addressing contemporary parenting styles and family issues.

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