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Humans Being Media

  • About
  • Clients
  • Documentaries
  • Time Together
  • Capital Campaigns
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Time Together

“A moving and thought-provoking documentary series. Its honest portrayal of vulnerability creates a deeply genuine impact. The cinematography is exceptional, complemented by a carefully curated soundtrack and impeccable editing, these documentaries are a testament to the transformative power of dialogue and human connection - inviting us to reflect on how we can make positive changes in our justice system.” 

Time Together is an award-winning series in the Human & Civil Rights category for the Webby’s 5th annual Anthem Awards 2025.

Time Together

“A moving and thought-provoking documentary series. Its honest portrayal of vulnerability creates a deeply genuine impact. The cinematography is exceptional, complemented by a carefully curated soundtrack and impeccable editing, these documentaries are a testament to the transformative power of dialogue and human connection - inviting us to reflect on how we can make positive changes in our justice system.” 

Time Together is an award-winning series in the Human & Civil Rights category for the Webby’s 5th annual Anthem Awards 2025.

Time Together: How Can I Trust Him? (Episode #1 with Eddie & Steve)

This is the first episode in the YouTube series that is about a groundbreaking prison-based rehabilitation program. These mini docs capture the transformative journey of incarcerated individuals and public volunteers who come together through Empathy in Action. Over the course of eight weeks, deep bonds form, emotional walls break down, and profound healing begins to take shape—on both sides of the prison gate.

With exclusive access to the Correctional Training Facility in Soledad, California, filmmakers captured a rare, unfiltered look inside the prison as participants engage in raw dialogue, reflection, and human connection.

These mini docs reveal what rehabilitation in action look like, especially when we lead with courage, empathy, and an open-mind.

Time Together: The Power of Presence (Episode #2 with JP)

This is the second episode in the YouTube series that tells the stories of our Brothers In Blue that are part of the prison-based rehabilitation program: Empathy In Action. It features JP, a participant whose quiet strength, honesty, and evolution remind us that presence is not passive — it's achieved through concerted effort, perspective, patience, and courage. Incarcerated at 20 and recently found suitable for parole after 28 years, JP is a man ready to return home.

These mini docs capture the transformative journey of incarcerated individuals and public volunteers who come together over the course of eight weeks. Deep bonds form, emotional walls break down, and profound healing begins to take shape—on both sides of the prison gate.

With exclusive access to the Correctional Training Facility in Soledad, California, filmmakers capture a rare, unfiltered look inside the prison as participants engage in raw dialogue, reflection, and human connection.

This series reveals what rehabilitation in action look like, especially when we lead with courage, empathy, and an open-mind.

Time Together: Someone To Listen (Episode #3 with Marisa)

This is the third episode of a YouTube series that delves into the stories of our Brothers In Blue who are part of the prison-based rehabilitation program Empathy In Action. It features Marisa, an Empathy in Action volunteer who has found profound healing in giving back as a volunteer in the program. She speaks to her own journey of rehabilitation from addiction and breaking the intergenerational cycles of incarceration.

These mini docs capture the transformative journey of incarcerated individuals and public volunteers who come together over the course of eight weeks. Deep bonds form, emotional walls break down, and profound healing begins to take shape—on both sides of the prison gate.

With exclusive access to the Correctional Training Facility in Soledad, California, filmmakers capture a rare, unfiltered look inside the prison as participants engage in raw dialogue, reflection, and human connection.

This series reveals what rehabilitation in action look like, especially when we lead with courage, empathy, and an open-mind.

Time Together: Hope in Humanity (Episode #4 with William)

William was convicted of his crime as a teenager. He takes us inside his prison cell and gives us an insight into his previous life as a gang member. His father did time in the same prison, a living testament to the intergenerational cycles of incarceration.

This is the fourth episode of our YouTube series that delves into another story from our Brothers In Blue who are part of the prison-based rehabilitation program Empathy In Action.

These mini docs capture the transformative journey of incarcerated individuals and public volunteers who come together over the course of eight weeks. Deep bonds form, emotional walls break down, and profound healing begins to take shape—on both sides of the prison gate.

With exclusive access to the Correctional Training Facility in Soledad, California, we capture a rare, unfiltered look inside the prison as participants engage in raw dialogue, reflection, and human connection.

This series reveals what rehabilitation in action look like, especially when we lead with courage, empathy, and an open-mind.

Time Together: Prison Is A Journey (Episode #5 with Darrick)

“Empathy in Action holds a simple but radical belief: every person—regardless of guilt, innocence, or past action—deserves to be seen and treated with dignity, respect, and kindness.

In this 5th short film of our 8-part Time Together series—a collaboration between the Transformative Justice Center’s Empathy in Action and Humans Being Media—we invite you to meet Darrick Booker.

Darrick is a man of deep integrity. He is also a man who has unwaveringly maintained his innocence since day one. You can watch the video at the link below, and also learn more about Darrick’s case and the ongoing innocence investigation.

There is something especially unbearable about locking someone away for decades for a crime they did not commit. We invite you to step into Darrick’s shoes. Imagine living year after year in a cold, dark, isolated cell knowing, without a shadow of a doubt, that you are innocent.

But here’s what’s extraordinary: in this video, Darrick doesn’t talk about his case. He doesn’t mention his innocence. Instead, he talks about the hard work of healing in prison, the effort it takes to grow, to transform, to reclaim a sense of worth and hope. He speaks about how, when people inside are given the right tools, guidance, and support, they rise, they become better people.

He asks us not to give up on anyone. Most people don’t want to live a life without purpose. Most people long for connection and progress. And while Darrick is quite exceptional—eloquent, grounded, and real—he is not the exception. There are millions of people behind bars in this country with something of value to say, with wisdom to share, and with hearts ready to heal.

Empathy in Action is about listening. Bearing witness. If you are moved by Darrick’s story—or any of the previous four videos in this series—we invite you to stand with this work. Please consider making a donation to Empathy in Action or better yet, volunteer to come inside. Because our prison system is, in many ways, a warzone—and we need warriors of goodness and peace. People with courage. People like you.

Thank you for your time, your presence, and your belief in the power of redemption.”

Time Together: Healed People Heal People (Episode #6 with Juju)

Empathy in Action holds a simple but radical belief: every person—regardless of guilt, innocence, or past action—deserves to be seen and treated with dignity, respect, and kindness.

In this 6th short film of our 8-part Time Together series—a collaboration between the Transformative Justice Center’s Empathy in Action and Humans Being Media—we invite you to meet Juju, one of our amazing volunteers.

Juju has done 4 rounds of Empathy in Action. With a passion for transformative and restorative justice, and victim offender dialogues, she volunteers with other organizations as well. She has a deep respect for the work of Empathy in Action and the incarcerated men who are doing the hard work of healing. The men, in turn, have nothing but respect and admiration for her kind and open heart.

We also introduce Antwane, one of the presenters of the 'We Care' Youth Program, created and run by incarcerated men who want to have a profoundly positive impact on young men who may be in similar circumstances to what they faced in their youth. With raw honesty and vulnerability, they share their own stories and show the brutal realities of prison. Finally, the brothers in blue entreat the young men to consider their actions, and to show up differently than they did.

Empathy in Action is about listening. Bearing witness. If you are moved by this, or any of the previous videos in this series, we invite you to stand with this work. Please consider making a donation to Empathy in Action or better yet, volunteer to come inside. Because our prison system is, in many ways, a warzone—and we need warriors of goodness and peace. People with courage. People like you.

Thank you for your time, your presence, and your belief in the power of redemption.

Time Together: Put Myself In Your Shoes (Episode #7 with Henry Miles)

Henry Miles just turned 52 years old inside the walls of CTF Soledad. He’s been incarcerated since he was 24— a young man, sentenced to 55 years to life.

Today, he's not just serving time—he’s transforming it.

Known simply as “Miles” to most, he’s the Empathy in Action internal coordinator and the force behind this week’s 7th episode of our Time Together documentary series, created in collaboration with Humans Being Media and the TJC.

Since the very beginning of the program, Miles has shown up—coordinating, troubleshooting, guiding. Thanks to the Community Resource Management team who named him our official “helper,” Empathy in Action wouldn’t run the way it does without him. He’s been instrumental to our success and to the sense of trust, flow, and consistency we’re able to offer every week.

Prison is complex. There are unspoken systems, power dynamics, and codes that only someone on the inside can truly understand and navigate. Miles does this with clarity, calculation, and deep care.

In this week’s film, you can see it in his eyes. You can hear it in his voice.

He’s passionate about the work—work that he has been foundational in building over the last three years. He’s not just a participant; he’s a leader, a steward, a facilitator, and a bridge between worlds.

This episode is a tribute to his vision, his humility, and his quiet power.

We invite you to witness the man behind the scenes.

To hear his story.

To feel his heart.

You won’t forget him.

Time Together: From Trauma To Triumph (Episode #8 with Junior)

We meet Jose 'Junior' Guzman in this 8th and final episode of our Time Together documentary series, a collaboration between Humans Being Media and the Transformative Justice Center's Empathy in Action program.

Raised in a community rife with gang violence, bullying, and addiction, Junior found himself on a path shaped by trauma, normal by his standards. From a young age, he was not only subjected to discrimination and abuse but also introduced to drugs at the age of 14. As a young immigrant in a gang-infested neighborhood, Junior was not given the tools to process or heal from his trauma, which led to behaviors that, while understandable, would eventually result in a conviction for a crime he didn’t commit with a sentence of 32 years to life.

Yet, this is not the end of Junior’s story. It is, in fact, a story of healing and hope. Through programs like Empathy in Action, Junior has begun the long and difficult process of transforming his pain. He has used his past not as a weight that holds him back, but as a tool for growth and understanding.

Junior’s participation in Empathy in Action is helping him shift from victimhood to survivor, from punishment to healing. His reflections on the generational trauma that shaped his life—on how the system failed him and countless others—remind us that when we offer people the chance to heal, to process their trauma, they can transform not just their own lives, but the world around them.

Please witness Junior in this final episode of Time Together, as he shares his own empathy in action. And as he says: "I hope to watch this video five, ten years down the line and look back at myself and say, this is where it all started.”