NYWIFT Blog

Meet the New NYWIFT Member: Ching Juhl

By Katie Chambers

Welcome, new NYWIFT member Ching Juhl! Ching is a Chinese American filmmaker, video journalist, and music educator who has directed, filmed, edited, and produced three feature films, promotional videos, and hundreds of shorts. Her feature documentary My Yang Gang Diary, which she shot entirely on an iPhone 11, won Best Feature Film Award at Toronto Documentary Film Festival in 2021.

Ching has published more than 800 videos on various social media platforms with topics ranging from live interviews to current events to music productions. She taught music at St. Joseph’s College for 15 years. Ching currently directs Music Studio Manhattan and conducts Smartphone Video Production workshops in colleges and organizations. 

Ching spoke to us about the benefits of shooting on iPhone, the intersection of music and filmmaking, and the friends who brought her to NYWIFT.

NYIWFT member Ching Juhl

 

Tell us about yourself – give us your elevator pitch!

I am Ching Juhl, a Shanghai-born New York City based film director, video journalist, content creator and concert violist. I am the proud mom of Sean Juhl, a violist who just joined the Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra. In recent years, I have enjoyed shooting videos and films with iPhones. My feature doc shot on iPhone won five awards internationally in 2021-2022.

 

  

I first met you when NYWIFT co-presented the screening of that most recent award-winning documentary feature, My Yang Gang Diary, at the Socially Relevant Film Festival earlier this year. Tell our members about that experience making the film – I know you were so inspired by 2020 presidential candidate Andrew Yang that you left your college teaching job to campaign for him full-time and made a film about your time doing that across the country. What was it like being fully immersed in that world 24/7?

Becoming a Yang Gang [member] in 2019 (a supporter of Andrew Yang’s 2020 presidential campaign) was one of the most exciting experiences I have ever had in my lifetime. Reading Yang’s book The War on Normal People and witnessing how people volunteered for his movement Not Left, Not Right, But Forward, was incredibly inspiring.

I was fascinated by what grassroots movements were like and how a political campaign was conducted, and I documented every event I went to in New York, Connecticut, Iowa, and New Hampshire. I quit my teaching job, which I had been doing for 15 years, so I could devote my time to the cause.

 

 

You shoot most of your work on an iPhone. What are some tips for other filmmakers who want to use their phone as their primary tool?

I have been using video camcorders in different formats and sizes for more than 20 years. As a video journalist, shooting with an iPhone has changed the whole game. I shoot events on the streets, in my car, and capture music concerts and my cats.

The quality of the phones has improved greatly, and the audio of the newer iPhones is impressive. I like to shoot with iPhones because of their accessibility, lightness, low budget production and unobtrusiveness.

 

 

In addition to being a filmmaker, you are an accomplished musician. How do those two artistic mediums overlap for you? What are some of the similarities and differences as forms of expression?

Thank you for asking. I studied classical music in China and the United States. The similarities of pursuing music and media production is that one needs to work with discipline, consistency, patience, and passion. I used to practice the violin for three hours daily when I was 11. When preparing concerts and auditions, I practiced six hours every day.

I really enjoy making videos and editing films. The storytelling in media is different from playing classical music. Making films is my way of composing, while playing the music of Bach or Beethoven is to interpret the composer’s work the best I could. As a classical musician, I mainly played other people’s compositions. However, these days, I fiddle on a five-string electronic violin so I can go wild on the color, timber, texture, and the sound projection.

 

 

What is the best advice you ever received? And the worst?

My viola teacher Csaba Erdelyi suggested me to enter the Guranna International Viola Competition in 1988. I commented, “I don’t think I would win.” He said: “Don’t think about winning or losing. You need to be heard!” I ended up winning $10,000, and I bought my first video camera that year. (Now you know how old I am.)

What is the worst advice? When I wanted to move to New York City, people said, “Don’t go to NYC, you will be starved.” I came to NYC with no job, no money, and no family 23 years ago and I still made it.

 

 

What inspired you to join NYWIFT?

Filmmaker and family friend Dawn Young has been talking about NYWIFT to me for years. Nora Armani, the founding director of the Socially Relevant Film Festival also highly recommended your organization. Meeting you, Katie, at the screening of the My Yang Gang Diary in March 2022, inspired me further to join NYWIFT. I am very impressed by the programing and the opportunities to networking with women artists. I wish I joined you earlier.

 

We are so happy to have you! And what is next for you?

I am cooking up a feature documentary about classical music, China/US, twisted family drama, and unforgettable celebrations. I am going to Germany to film part of it in August 2022.

 

Learn more about Ching Juhl’s documentary feature My Yang Gang Diary at  myyanggangdiary.com and watch it now on Vimeo-on-Demand.

Connect with Ching Juhl across social media:  

On Facebook, LinkedIn, and Twitter at @chingjuhl

And Clubhouse, Instagram, YouTube, and TikTok at @juhlmedia

PUBLISHED BY

Katie Chambers

Katie Chambers Katie Chambers is the Senior Director of Community & Public Relations at New York Women in Film & Television (NYWIFT). She is also a regular contributing writer for From Day One, an outlet focused on innovations in HR. She serves on othe Board of Directors of the New Jersey State Federation of Women's Clubs and is a freelance writer, copyeditor, and digital marketing strategist. Follow her @KatieGChambers.

View all posts by Katie Chambers

Comments are closed

Related Posts

Meet the New NYWIFT Member: Stephanie Lynn Jones

Welcome to NYWIFT, Stephanie Lynn Jones! Stephanie is a filmmaker, TV writer, and multi-disciplinary creative with two decades in screen and stage storytelling. She directed the short doc memoir The Jones Twins: Bebop Souls in a Muzak™ World (BRIC TV) and launched her film career on Spike Lee’s production teams. An Emmy nominee for Nickelodeon’s Gullah Gullah Island, she has developed her own TV projects with Universal Kids, PBS Kids, and TIME Studios.  With her twin, Suzanne, The Jones Twins’ performance work has appeared at major venues in NYC and beyond; they also lent their vocals to the Slamdance Festival award-winning film System Noise. Stephanie holds a B.A. from Howard University and an MFA from NYU Tisch. Read on to get to know Stephanie, learn about her roots in the industry, and get a preview of her short documentary film, The Jones Twins!

READ MORE

Meet the New NYWIFT Member: Elizabeth K. Budion

Welcome to NYWIFT, Elizabeth K. Budion! A member of SAG-AFTRA since 2014, Elizabeth got her taste of the film industry by doing background and stand-in work for notable shows such as Orange is the New Black, Broad City, How to Be Single, and The Path. After several years in that space, she dabbled in casting for shows such as Law & Order: SVU, before switching gears to join the Peace Corps in 2018.  While living in The Gambia, she focused on elevating the societal status of women, expanding their horizons and potential through education. Elizabeth also built a library and wrote various water grants, while learning the local language of Wolof. Returning to the states in 2020, Elizabeth then received her Master's from New York University, in Global Affairs with a focus on international development and women’s rights.  Returning to film, Elizabeth recently wrote, produced, and edited a short animated film titled You. Matter.. starring Tony Award winner Laura Benanti. In addition, Elizabeth is currently collaborating with her filmmaker husband to pen a feature titled RetroViewer. When not working on films, Elizabeth enjoys having new adventures with her adorable 16-month-old son Louis Joseph, or “LouJay!” Read on to learn more about Elizabeth, how she got started in the film industry, and her experience in the Peace Corps!

READ MORE

Meet the New NYWIFT Member: Lauren Hale-Rieckhoff

Welcome to NYWIFT, Lauren Hale-Rieckhoff! Lauren is a Strategic Advisor and Producer of feature films and documentaries. She began her career as a Casting Associate on HBO’s Sex and the City, then spent over ten years at Creative Artists Agency (CAA), where she represented talent across music, film, TV, and sports, facilitating over $200 million in deals for A-list clients like Ron Howard, Jamie Foxx, Hilary Swank, Eva Longoria, John Legend, Dwyane Wade, and Sarah Jessica Parker. In 2017, she co-founded WilyfoXX Collective, a boutique agency advising, among others, tech giants and legacy fashion brands, with a client portfolio exceeding $10 million. Now, as the founder of Andiamo Pictures, Lauren is producing The Florist, starring Carla Gugino as Vivien Leigh, and has upcoming projects including Savage House (Paramount, 2025) and a documentary on Dita Von Teese. Her film financing and production approach combines industry experience with a talent-first, future-focused philosophy. Lauren shares her journey in the film industry, beginning as a Casting Associate and progressing to producing her own films.

READ MORE

Meet the New NYWIFT Member: Catherine Craig

Welcome to NYWIFT, Catherine Craig! Catherine Craig was George Lucas's Industrial Light and Magic's first animation FX camerawoman, later becoming a digital artist at ILM. A highly regarded film archivist, Craig designed the Coppola film archive and implemented Zoetrope's domestic and international film distribution. As an early female entrepreneur, Craig founded her own award-winning, union and guild-affiliated film company, specializing in high-end industrial and commercial productions. Her vast experience spans all aspects of filmmaking: she's worked as a director, producer, camera operator, concept artist, storyboard artist, special FX artist, sound recordist, and more. Her screenplay OddFX was accepted into the NYWIFT-affiliated The Writers Lab. The film follows a mother living in a women's shelter, battling a physically abusive husband and a broken support system, who enlists the help of a special FX film crew. Catherine discusses her groundbreaking work with ILM, her drive to tell her own stories, and her film currently in development, OddFX!

READ MORE
JOIN OUR NEWSLETTER
css.php