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ABOUT

PHOTOGRAPHER
WRITER
PRODUCER
Joshua  - Photos for Website.jpeg

Joshua grew up in the entertainment business in New York and Los Angeles. He appeared in his first commercial at the age of five and had his own sports radio show at the age of twelve. He graduated with a degree in English from U.C.L.A. He went on to become an award winning television writer and producer. He has written for such successful shows as Law & Order, Chicago Hope and Judging Amy. His biggest break came with the landmark show Resurrection Blvd. on Showtime; the first television show to feature an all Latino cast. While on staff he won several awards, including two GLAAD awards for writing. He wrote, produced and directed two short films which combined to appear in over 30 festivals worldwide. Joshua has written plays, features, TV pilots, developed a digital series for Rosario Dawson and published a non-fiction book 365 Ways to Teach Your Children How to Love Themselves. 

 

Recently he has turned his focus into producing full time and has an expansive slate of projects in varying stages of development and production for the U.S. and international marketplace including The Fethering Mysteries in the UK, Sheriff Hank Worth Mystery for the INSP network, and many others. 

 

Joshua’s interest in photography, specifically street shooting, was born out of taking pictures with his iPhone while traveling. It led to his first photography exhibition at the Santa Monica Hangar Gallery in 2019. It was a natural progression to more advanced camera equipment and after shooting on a Fuji T-30 for almost two years he has found his soulmate in the Leica Q2 Monochrom camera. Joshua prefers to shoot almost predominantly in black & white because of its timeless quality and rich textures. He’s about to embark shooting on film with a Hasselblad 500 C/M. Hopefully it’s results will make it on to the website soon. He’s an original member of the photography collective Street L.A. run by Julia Dean and he produced Projecting LA 22 with Dan Sackheim. He counts Margaret Bourke-White, Gordon Parks, Bruce Davidson and Vivian Maier as some of his many photography heroes.

 

 

“You can look at a picture for a week and never think of it again. You can also look at the picture for a second and think of it all your life.”

                    -- Joan Miro

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