Lee Fillingsness is known for Unfortunate Necessity (2021), A New Market (2020) and The Hand That Feeds (2021).
Lee Fitting is a senior vice president of production for ESPN, overseeing the company's NFL and college football properties. The 24-year ESPN veteran was promoted to his current position in 2019, adding ESPN's NFL studio operation to his robust portfolio, which already included Monday Night Football and college football's studio and game operation across all networks including the College Football Playoff, a 35-game bowl schedule and approximately 1,000 regular season games each year. The Long Island native was promoted to vice president of production in 2017 when he broadened his oversight to include Monday Night Football in addition to his existing portfolio of college sports. Fitting's ESPN's football operation oversight followed an impressive track record of success as Vice President of College Sports, a position he was elevated to in 2015. In his first executive role, Fitting was instrumental in the growth of the College Football Playoff and steered the ship on ESPN's industry leading college football and basketball regular season coverage, more than 20 NCAA Championships, thousands of games across ESPN networks each season, including its college networks - ACC Network, Longhorn Network and SEC Network. In addition to game duties, he led ESPN's college sports studio programming, including the eight=time Emmy Award winning College GameDay Built by The Home Depot. Fitting's history with College GameDay is extensive, having been named the producer in 2004 and then coordinating producer in 2008. During his College GameDay tenure, Fitting and his colleagues earned six Sports Emmy Awards for Outstanding Studio Show - Weekly (2008, 2010, 2011, 2014, 2015, 2016). Fitting produced his last episode of the company's flagship college studio show in week 1 of the 2016 college football season but continues to have executive oversight, including during the Sports Emmy Award winning seasons in '17 and '18. Fitting has been with the company since he joined ESPN's production assistant program in 1996. He steadily increased his responsibilities throughout the years working on such properties as SportsCenter and golf's major championships. In 2000, he became an associate producer for College GameDay. Two years later, he was promoted to feature producer for SportsCenter and College GameDay. A graduate of James Madison University, Fitting earned a B.S. in mass communication in 1996. He is a native of Orient, New York (the most eastern town on Long Island).
Lee Fitzjames is an actress and producer, known for Hold In (2022), Musta Been Bad (2022) and Con Artistes (2014).
Lee Fitzpatrick is an actress, known for Toss It (2019), The God Committee (2021) and Anniversary (2007).
Lee Fobert is known for Surge of Power: Revenge of the Sequel (2016), The Gap (2011) and Beverly Hills Ghost (2018).
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Christian "Lee" Foster has lived his entire life in the Greater Toronto Area. From a young age, he showed interest in cameras and film making, and throughout his teen years he frequently shot short films and pushed his filmmaking abilities. He attended the University of Toronto, and graduated with an honours degree in History and Film. During his time at U of T, he began working in the videography field as a freelance filmmaker and camera operator, and now runs his own business - Foster Films and continues to work in the field. Lee works on feature films and shorts, pushing to establish himself in the industry. Lee shot his first feature film in 2013, and has worked on a number of short films and webseries in the following years. He has won awards at six film festivals, placing First Place in the Orion Film Festival for 'Nefarious Prelation'(2008), and First Place at the AVA Video Awards for 'World of the Droid'(2011). He took Second Place in the Monoprice Film Festival(2012), and placed within the Top Ten at the STEAZ Film Festival for 'Art of Life'(2012). He also took Best Screenplay, and Lauren Molloy was awarded Best Actress, for his film 'Slow Shutter'(2008). Recently Lee's 48 Hour Film Race submission, 'Undone' was selected as one of the Top 12 submissions in Toronto for 2016. His film was also awarded Best Original Score (Gagan Singh) and Best Line Delivery (Aaron Heels). Lee now continues to create works of film, and aims to create works that both entertain and educate, focusing on the areas of social justice and understanding in the world today.
LEE FRIEDLANDER DIRECTOR An east coast native and theater actor/director, Friedlander moved to LA and was a natural producer bringing to fruition over a dozen independent films. In 2008 she directed the award-winning short, The Ten Rules: A Lesbian Survival Guie which formed the basis of the Logo/MTV/Viacom television series Exes & Ohs, a half-hour single camera comedy about lesbian dating. Lee co-created, executive produced and directed the pilot, which aired for two seasons and was nominated for several GLAAD Awards. Lee has worked extensively in the television long-form world, including directing four Lifetime films-Babysitters Black Book, Double Daddy, A Giftwrapped Christmas,and Killer Coach. She is a go-to director/writer for cable force The Hallmark Channel. She executive produced Snow Bride and Ice Sculpture Christmas. She co-wrote and directed, All For Love, starring Sara Rue and Switched For Christmas based on her original idea starring Candace Cameron Bure who plays twins, and featuring Avril Lavigne's cover of Baby It's Cold Outside. 'Switched' aired Thanksgiving weekend 2017 and reached 7.3 million unduplicated viewers - the largest unduplicated audience for any Hallmark Channel telecast EVER in network history. She has continued on to direct Love Of Course, Sailing Into Love and Royally Ever After for Hallmark Channel. Lee has also directed Avril Lavigne's Give You What You Like Music video in conjunction with Babysitter's Black Book, and collaborated on Avril's most recent Warrior Video. Most recently Lee directed two episodes of NBC's hit dramedy Good Girls, starring Christina Hendricks (Mad Men). She will be directing upcoming episodes of New Amsterdam and The Good Doctor. In addition, she has just been tapped to write and direct two more features for Hallmark.
Lee Frost rates highly as one of the best, most talented and versatile filmmakers in the annals of exploitation cinema. Frost was born on August 14, 1935, in Globe, Arizona. He grew up in Glendale, California, and Oahu, Hawaii. He eventually wound up in Hollywood, where he started his career making TV commercials for the studio Telepics. Frost made his film debut with the early 1960s nudie cutie Surftide 77 (1962). He went on to make a slew of films in many different genres: tongue-in-cheek horror comedy (House on Bare Mountain (1962)), mondo shock documentaries (Hollywood's World of Flesh (1963), Mondo Bizarro (1966), Mondo Freudo (1966)), perverse softcore roughies (The Defilers (1965), The Animal (1968)), crime drama (The Pick-Up (1968)), westerns (Hot Spur (1968), The Scavengers (1969)) and even Nazisploitation (Love Camp 7 (1969), which has been widely cited as the prototype for the notorious Ilsa: She Wolf of the SS (1975)). A majority of Frost's 1960s features were made for legendary trash flick producer Bob Cresse. Moreover, Lee added sex inserts into such foreign films as London in the Raw (1964), La femme spectacle (1964) and Angeli bianchi... angeli neri (1969). Frost continued cranking out entertainingly sleazy drive-in items throughout the 1970s; they include the startling psycho sniper outing Zero in and Scream (1971), the passable biker opus Chrome and Hot Leather (1971), the gritty Chain Gang Women (1971), the hilariously campy The Thing with Two Heads (1972), the immensely enjoyable Policewomen (1974), the gnarly blaxploitation winner The Black Gestapo (1975), the rowdy redneck romp Dixie Dynamite (1976) and the jolting roughie porno shocker A Climax of Blue Power (1974). Frost often cast former football player Phil Hoover in his 1970s movies and frequently collaborated with producer/screenwriter Wes Bishop (in addition to their own pictures, Frost and Bishop wrote the script for Jack Starrett's terrific Race with the Devil (1975), which Frost was originally supposed to direct as well). Both Frost and Bishop often appear as actors, usually in small parts, in Frost's films. Lee worked as an editor on industrial movies for a film laboratory throughout the 1980s and early 1990s. His last feature was the straight-to-video Shannon Whirry erotic thriller Private Obsession (1995). Lee Frost died at age 71 on May 25, 2007.
Lee Fulkerson wrote, directed, and starred in the award winning and highly acclaimed feature documentary film "Forks Over Knives," and was a featured guest on the Dr. Oz television show. He has written, produced, directed or supervised nearly 170 hours of documentary programming, and has won 19 international awards for his work. These include the prestigious CINE Special Jury Award for Best Broadcast Historical Program of 2003, network or cable, awarded for his pilot episode of the series, "The Color of War." He wrote "Seven Signs of the Apocalypse," a two-hour documentary special for the History Channel. Previously, he was Executive Producer and head writer of the seven-hour series "Showdown: Air Combat," for the Discovery Military Channel. He was the Series Producer of the 17-hour "The Color of War" series and the 35-hour "The Great Ships" series for the History Channel. He wrote, produced and directed the 90-minute special "The Crash of Flight 191" for the History Channel, and co-wrote "The Long March," a two-hour special for History International. He also wrote or produced 11 episodes of the Biography series for A&E, that included programs on Michelangelo, George Washington, and Benjamin Franklin. In the realm of fiction, Lee Fulkerson co-wrote the screen story "Ascent" in the television drama series "The Dead Zone" for the USA Television Network.