Documentaries
College Table Tennis
A documentary on NCTTA
College Table Tennis is a documentary that explores the world of collegiate table tennis in the United States through the 2025 NCTTA National Champion and Runner-up, alongside players from teams across the country. By following elite competitors and diverse university teams, the film captures both the intensity of high-level competition and the quieter moments that shape life inside the sport.
Beyond rankings and results, the documentary looks at how student-athletes balance academics, identity, and ambition within a largely overlooked collegiate sport. Through matches, training sessions, and moments off the table, College Table Tennis reveals a community driven by discipline, passion, and resilience, offering an intimate portrait of what it means to compete and belong in college table tennis in America.
When Chinatown Goes Online
A documentary on aging, technology, and community
When Chinatown Goes Online is a documentary that follows Golden Age, a community-based nonprofit in Boston’s Chinatown, as volunteers work with elderly residents to help them learn how to use smartphones and everyday digital tools. Through classroom scenes, one-on-one lessons, and daily interactions, the film documents how older adults navigate technologies such as mobile apps and digital maps, and how these tools reshape their access to the city around them.
At its core, the documentary is a portrait of Chinatown’s elderly community as they confront the challenges of an increasingly digital world. By capturing moments of confusion, patience, humor, and resilience, When Chinatown Goes Online explores the intersection of aging, technology, and cultural barriers. The film highlights how learning to use a phone becomes more than a technical skill — it becomes a way to maintain independence, connection, and dignity in everyday life.
Showreel
A collection of documentary and visual work
Showreel brings together selected documentary and visual journalism projects produced over the past two years. Drawing from work across sports, community stories, and everyday life, the reel highlights moments of competition, connection, and quiet observation, reflecting a consistent interest in real people and lived experience.
Rather than functioning as a technical montage, the showreel emphasizes rhythm, atmosphere, and emotional continuity. Through movement, sound, and pacing, it traces how individuals navigate pressure, routine, and shared spaces. Together, these fragments form a visual portrait of documentary practice grounded in presence, attention, and storytelling through observation.