Christine Attanasio is an experienced Production Manager and Post-Production Supervisor. She excels in organizing shoots and voiceovers, assessing the scope and delivery timeline of projects, executing contracts, liaising with clients, and researching and pitching content. Christine is additionally well versed in managing and reconciling personnel and operating budgets, procurement, generating expense reports, and tax credit programs. Christine has worked on feature films, long-form videos, client ads, and animation.

c.t.attanasio@gmail.com
(845) 699-2945
Christine coordinated weekly visiting artist lectures to host noted artists, curators, critics, and historians to share their perspectives, expertise, and current work, and to give insight into contemporary issues facing artists and designers. She, additionally, worked with a team of student artists to create a series of poster designs each semester.

Lectures: 20-21, 21-22, 22-23
2030, the feature film, is named for the extraordinarily prescient futurist FM-2030, who has been cryonically suspended since his untimely death in 2000. He challenged the world to embrace a technology driven leap towards non-biological bodies and an end to aging and death. FM believed that one of the main barriers to those goals was our collective reluctance to pursue those goals openly. 

30 years after his body ceased to function, breakthroughs in neuroscience, genetics, life extension, artificial intelligence, robotics and other fields are blurring the lines between reality and the world that FM envisioned.

FM was filmmaker Johnny Boston’s real life dear friend. In 2030, Johnny interviews world acclaimed experts from a range of scientific and technological disciplines, uncovering the most pressing ethical and existential challenges we will confront in the coming decades. As the future FM envisioned draws near, 2030, the film explores what may lie just around the next bend. 

Center of Hope (Haiti) is the fulfillment of the vision of Emmanuel St. Juste, a native of Hinche, Haiti. Emmanuel, having witnessed worsening poverty and deprivation in Haiti, especially the growing number of children in extreme poverty, envisioned a place that would help children living in extreme poverty in Hinche.

Life at the Los Angeles Jewish Home - “It’s a Magical Place”

lajh.org​​​​​​​
Why are we often so wrong about how the future and future technology will reshape society and our personal lives? In this short piece, Gray Scott tells us why he thinks it is important to look at all aspects of the future.

In Unexpected Futurist, we profile the lesser known futurist side of influential individuals. This episode’s unexpected time-traveler: Benjamin Franklin. Ben Franklin was an inventor, observer, electricity pioneer, and serial experimenter, so it’s not entirely surprising he looked to the future. But it turns out he was looking to the far, far future. In 1780 he wrote a letter to a friend in which he lamented that he was born during the dawn of science.
Scientists based in Philadelphia unveiled an artificial womb undergoing testing on fetal lambs. With a prediction from one of the researchers that the technology could be ready for human testing in three to five years, artificial wombs suddenly became the most unexpected rage of 2017. But what sort of artificial wombs might realistically be a part of healthcare in the near future?
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