Todd Camhe

Todd Camhe is an American producer and screenwriter for film, television and new media known for his work in The Last Run and Sister (2014). As a producer in branded content and commercial work, Camhe has produced entertainment projects for record labels Interscope Records and Shady Records and oversaw livestreams of Lady Gaga for Vevo.[1]

Todd Camhe
Born
Todd Camhe

New York City
NationalityAmerican
Alma materNew York University
OccupationProducer & writer
TitleWriter & Producer
Spouse(s)Lindsay Hotchkiss Camhe
Children2
Parent(s)

Education

Camhe completed his Masters in Film from the Tisch School of the Arts at N.Y.U. and received a Bachelor's Degree from Trinity College.[2]

Career

After selling screenplays to 20th Century Fox and Warner Bros. and a television pilot to FX (TV channel), Camhe wrote and produced the independent feature The Last Run starring Fred Savage and Amy Adams.

Camhe co-wrote and produced the film Sister along with director David Lascher and starring Reid Scott, Grace Hoffman,[3] Serinda Swan and Illeana Douglas. Sister premiered in 2014 at The Tribeca Film Festival and was financed by the non-profit Our Kids First Foundation in order to spread awareness of ADHD treatment options.[4][5][6][7][8][9][10]

In 2017 Camhe and Lascher collaborated again on a webseries with Jash and Group Nine Media that released in 2019 called "Cruisers and Shakers."[11][12]

As an entrepreneur and advisor, Camhe has helped start several companies. In 2006 he co-founded Outfit Media Group along with Mace Camhe and Patrick Curd as a production company for branded and digital content, commercials and music videos.[13][14] In 2011 Camhe co-founded Cordurouy along with Nathan Pettijohn as a marketing and management company for digital content.[15][16][17]

Personal

Camhe lives in the New York City area with his wife and two children. His mother Beverly Camhe is also a producer known for Junior, The Package, and In God We Trust.[18][19][20]

gollark: (because it's bad, and won't do that automatically)
gollark: (technically it also has some code to force it to respond to an instant-lose/instant-win situation)
gollark: It is funny that people keep losing to a fairly trivial piece of code which just decides how good a move is by playing 100 *entirely random games* starting from it and seeing how many it wins.
gollark: Okay, I am now decreasing my estimate of your programming competence.
gollark: I don't know if there's a general strategy. The main thing to exploit is that the AI can't really respond to two threats at once.

References

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