Orian Barki
Editing
Known For

Wrestling with writer’s block for her first film, Bouchra, a queer Moroccan jackal living in NYC, starts having difficult yet overdue phone calls with her mother in Casablanca that begin influencing the project. Balancing the precarity of working as an artist, the rift in her cultural identity and an array of romantic interests, Bouchra’s emotional reckoning becomes her path to expression.
Bouchra

What follows is a candid look at the Pittsburgh native’s past six years, starting with his ascent, when he was 19, as a popular but critically panned rapper. “I was an easy target. I admit that,” he says now. “It became one of those things where I got so much negativity that it almost became, like, ‘There’s no point to overly hate on this dude, let me look in and see what he’s doing.’ And when you look in, there’s some good music there.” Following his 2011 debut album, Billboard's first independently released No.1 in over a decade, Mac moved to Los Angeles, where it seemed to many he was thriving. That’s where Andrew Nosnitsky met him for Mac Miller's 2013 The FADER cover story, and where he played an endearing role in Earl Sweatshirt’s cover too.
Stopped Making Excuses
Princess Nokia is unafraid. During the 16-minute film directed by Orian Barki and produced by The FADER, the self-proclaimed New York aficionado commands the sidewalks of the Lower East Side and East Harlem. There's footage of intimate recording sessions, shots of some of her most beloved local spots, and vulnerable stoop conversations that all show the city's important connection to her work.
DESTINY

Two lizards are grappling with the reality of the first wave of the COVID-19 pandemic in New York.
2 Lizards
Ron and Casey are expecting a child, but things get out of hand when they both try to protect each other from an inevitable break-up.
Don't Think About It

A personal video dairy: a coming of age story about being a teenager and figuring out your sexual identity.
Shooting Days

A short film that gives fans a closer look at the various stages of career arcs throughout the WNBA. The players highlighted in the film include: DiDi Richards, Isabelle Harrison and Angel McCoughtry.