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facts about cullen hoback.html

13 Facts About Cullen Hoback

facts about cullen hoback.html1.

Cullen James Hoback was born on July 15,1981 and is an American film producer and director.

2.

Cullen Hoback directed his first notable film, Monster Camp, in 2007.

3.

In 2013, Cullen Hoback released the documentary film Terms and Conditions May Apply, which premiered at the Slamdance Film Festival before going onto various film festivals including Seattle International, Hot Docs and Festival Do Rio.

4.

Cullen Hoback received a jury prize for best documentary feature at both the Newport Beach Film Festival and Sonoma International Film Festival.

5.

Cullen Hoback held a screening in Washington DC for a number of high-powered officials and policy-makers, hosted by Congressman Justin Amash.

6.

In 2018, Cullen Hoback theatrically released What Lies Upstream, a feature documentary focused on scientific regulatory agencies, and the government oversight of drinking water safety.

7.

Cullen Hoback directed and produced a docuseries about the QAnon conspiracy theory, titled Q: Into the Storm.

8.

Cullen Hoback began following the development of QAnon and working to discover the identity of Q in 2017.

9.

Cullen Hoback first received a grant from IDA Enterprise Documentary Fund, and later on Adam McKay came on board as executive producer for the series.

10.

Cullen Hoback was invited to speak on disinformation at the Truthseekers Summit, hosted by Variety and Rolling Stone, alongside leading documentary filmmakers and investigative reporters making an impact, including Errol Morris, Billy Ray, Dawn Porter and others.

11.

Cullen Hoback has been critical of the relationship between corporations and the government, arguing that they've been complicit in creating a surveillance system.

12.

Cullen Hoback has written several op-eds for The Guardian, one of which focused on how people need to reclaim control of their digital identities.

13.

In October 2014, Cullen Hoback was a featured speaker at the annual TED event in Jacksonville, titled We Don't Have a Privacy Problem.