Ask. is a podcast series that explores curiosity with more curiosity. We start by asking. The people we speak to are among the best in their fields - technologists, photographers, entrepreneurs, submarine commanders. Anyone can read their bios, so we dive in on their motivations, deep history, failures, what makes them tick and what defines their true passions as human beings. 
Many people have the impression that the Riot Grrrl movement in the mid-90s was the end-all, be-all of female involvement in DIY punk. This is definitely not the case! Plenty of amazing ladies prior to this era paved the way for it, and plenty of amazing ladies continue to help keep DIY together today. This documentary chronicles the past 30 years of female involvement in DIY punk, and has interviews with over 30 women from across the country, ages 17 to 40.

Dotted with palm trees and coral reefs, Guam is United States territory where military men and Japanese tourists abound. A seemingly perfect backdrop for a strip club, the island should sound ideal to any girl coming from Portland, Atlanta, or Anchorage to work as an exotic dancer.

In a buttoned-up city like DC, what happens when drag queens go rogue? LIPSTICK AND LEATHER explores the “alt-drag” community in the nation’s capital, and how these performers are spreading their influence across the east coast. 
CALASAG follows two first-generation Filipino-American entrepreneurs , exploring culture and identity through cuisine, as they work to bring Filipino food traditions to Baltimore. 
At the beginning of 2019 I started a series called Women at Work. I wanted to display the strength of women while at work. The series started in Tanzania in March and will continue for another two years.  After the two years I will put together a traveling exhibition.

While walking through the streets of  Stonetown Zanzibar I saw this couple. I aked would it be ok to capture a few images of them. So here is a few of my favorites from the collection. All of these images were taken November 2019.
In 2003, my parents and I moved from midtown Manhattan to suburban Maryland. Over a year later, in 2004, my mother passed away from her second battle with breast cancer. It was just my father and I now. I was 13 and it was the loneliest I ever felt.