<div><font color="#000000"><font face="arial, helvetica, sans-serif"><span style="font-size: small; ">Mariachi High Co-producer Carol DeVoe is a veteran multimedia producer whose career started as a staff assistant on the nightly news program Freeman Reports on CNN. She worked at Ogilvy & Mather as a broadcast producer for a decade before applying her media skills to help raise awareness about the HIV/Aids Pandemic in Africa. Her first documentary, produced with Globalvision, Nkosi: A Voice of Africas AIDS Orphans aired on PBS in 2002 and screened at the Vermont Film Festival. The film was shown at the World Economic Forum in Davos in 2003 and was widely used by UN agencies as an educational tool. </span></font></font><span style="color: rgb(0, 0, 0); font-family: arial, helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: small; ">In 2007 Carol joined Talking Eyes Media as an associate producer and contributed to the creation of a number of award-winning multimedia projects including The Sandwich Generation, the Inner Wounds of War - produced for Discovery and many other films. She was associate producer and co-editor on the multi-media component of the Heart Gallery of New Jersey's 100 Waiting Kids campaign, which included videography and editing of profiles of almost 100 foster kids, many of whom received permanent homes as a result. She was an editor on HR676, a video primer on single-payer health care, featuring Michael Moore and Rep. John Conyers. Moore included the film as a DVD extra on his landmark film "Sicko." Most recently Carol was an associate producer on the one hour documentary Firestorm, produced by Talking Eyes Media, which examines the impact of Los Angeles' ailing emergency medical care system through the lens of Los Angeles firefighters. Firestorm's broadcast premiere was on KQED in San Francisco, and was nominated for a Northern California Emmy Award in 2011. In July 2011 Firestorm had a national broadcast premiere on The Documentary Channel.</span><br></div>