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Home / Fiscal Sponsorship / Dharma in a Two-Car Garage

Dharma in a Two-Car Garage

Dharma performs a joyful dance in an open field with colorful flags on a sunny day

 

A film for anyone who’s ever wondered about their ancestor’s immigrant journey, felt indebted to it … or for anyone who enjoys a story that inspires hope.

Kathleen Ermitage is a Colorado-based director and producer. She has directed and helped produce multiple documentaries, PBS programs, and network shows with a talented team of filmmakers. Their work includes official selections at the Telluride International Film Festival, Cleveland International Film Festival, Toronto International Film Festival, IDFA (Amsterdam), DOC NYC Film Festival, and many others—as well as theatrical releases all over the world and airing on major networks, including PBS’s Independent Lens.

Kathleen’s directorial debut was Mixtape Trilogy: Stories of the Power of Music. Greg Maurice, Executive at Filmhub said of the film: “As an immigrant who is passionate about music, the message strikes a chord with me, especially in the prism of how immigration and race are analyzed. Mixtape Trilogy brilliantly highlights the correlation between music and activism.”

Kathleen and her team will explore the themes of immigration, race, and activism once again, with themes of resilience, lightness, and humor that the main subject lives by. This is a Colorado story that reaches beyond the state’s borders and will resonate all over the world.

For more information about the film, film team, and exciting plans for this production, please inquire here:

Colorful stylized horse logo with text Demand a Horizon: info@demandahorizon.net

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The intended grantee is vetted and pre-approved by the fiscal sponsor prior to any fundraising for the purposes of the project. So long as the grantee has not breached the fiscal sponsorship agreement, the fiscal sponsor will ordinarily grant the funds raised for the project to the grantee, less some agreed upon amount it retains as an administrative fee. While the fiscal sponsor has the variance power to direct such funds to another organization to advance the same charitable purposes, it has a business reason not to exercise such power except under egregious circumstances.*