MANDY LEVY, a co-founding PROJECTMILL projector, is basically a Renaisssance Woman.  While the Written Word is her forte (she's penned novels, memoirs, screenplays, teleplays, and epic poetry...and has yet to publish much more than a really bad greeting card), Mandy is also a Master of Disguise--not to be confused with Dana Carvey, though she'll welcome the comparison--and revels in the opportunity to create unflattering characters for herself.  She shoots movies so she can star in them and forms bands so she can sing in them; her blatant self-promotion is only the beginning of her endless charm.  She is not opposed to trying her hand at a Vaudeville show, stand-up-comedy, or a noir radio play, but is vehement in her aversion to animals with mouths that move when they talk, i.e. Babe.  At 25, she'd make a great child actor.


JOSHUA MATTIE, a co-founding PROJECTMILL projector, is a mathematician. Note + note = song. Paper + ink = drawing. Type + image = design. Josh longs to communicate ideas in whatever medium they call for. Right now he is knee-deep in a children’s adventure through the mysterious landscape of the Low Country. The south captured Josh’s heart during his time in Georgia and he hopes to revisit it with this short film about big ideas.

PETE OHS, a co-founding PROJECTMILL projector, is a two-time Emmy-award winning director/editor/writer.  He has made music videos for The Fiery Furnaces, The Unicorns, and Ghosthustler, among others.  He likes to draw with Bic mechanical pencils and record music in GarageBand.  He is currently re-reading Dashiell Hammett’s The Thin Man.


By day, KEVIN BAYER creates websites and occasionally edits animation productions. By night, he creates videos for his online project Soft City Lights while listening to his record collection and desiring to train a carrier pigeon. Recently he found a lizard in his apartment that he tried to make a pet out of, but it died shortly after he discovered it. He named it Lazlow. He creates music inspired by Lazlow with his friend Yusef under the name You, You're Awesome. When asked to critique something, his go-to answer is that it "needs more plaid."