Ondi Timoner is an internationally-acclaimed Emmy-nominated filmmaker whose work focuses on “impossible visionaries.” She has the rare distinction of being the only person to win the Grand Jury Prize at Sundance twice: for Dig! (2004), about the collision of art and commerce through the eyes of two rival rock bands, and for We Live in Public (2009), about the loss of privacy online. Both films were acquired by New York’s MoMA for its permanent collection. Ondi’s most personal film, Last Flight Home, about the extraordinary life and intentional death of her father, Eli Timoner, premiered at Sundance and Telluride in 2022, was Oscar-Shortlisted, awarded The Humanities for Best Documentary, nominated for the WGA Award for Best Documentary and for the Emmy for Exceptional Merit. Ondi’s 2023 film, The New Americans: Gaming a Revolution, is a visceral journey into the intersection of finance, media, and extremism which uncovers the explosive and irreversible ramifications of our digital future. It premiered at SXSW where it was acquired by Paramount, and it is currently on Netflix. Her new film Dig! XX (pronounced “DIG! 20”) will premiere at Sundance in 2024. It is a new enhanced, extended cut of her cult classic film Dig! in honor of its 20th anniversary and features a new narration and brings this timeless tale up to today. She is wrapping up features All God’s Children about her sister Rabbi Rachel Timoner’s partnership with Reverend Waterman and his Antioch Baptist Church to solve racism and anti-semitism in Brooklyn, and The Inn Between about the only hospice for the homeless in the United States. Ondi Timoner is the winner of the 2022 Visionary Award for Observational Filmmaker. She serves as the Chair of Nonfiction for Special Projects at the DGA, and is a member of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts & Sciences, the WGA, the IDA, Film Fatales, and Women in Film.