Who We Are
Founded in 1997, Fly On The Wall Productions creates documentaries, feature videos, and multi-media projects that all share one distinctive element – our strong journalistic roots.
Joe Fox and James Nubile, the creative team behind Fly On The Wall, are respected and veteran journalists with a decade each of journalistic expertise, having worked for some of the most respected publications in this country.
It is this journalistic background that sets Fly On The Wall apart, enabling us to tell your story. To tell the story that your company or organization is most proud of.
It is our journalistic expertise that enables us to shape your story and to produce vignette, documentary-driven videos that are honest and real, but also entertaining, accessible and EFFECTIVE. Videos that will make your audience sit up and listen. Videos that will make your audience respond and take action.
In 2008, our feature length documentary, Passing Poston, was screened in theaters nationwide to critical acclaim. It is scheduled to air on PBS stations in February 2010. To learn more about Passing Poston, please visit the film’s website.
JOE FOX
Prior to Fly On The Wall Productions, Fox wrote regularly for USA Today as well as for numerous other national publications. Articles have included features on Rwanda, the Middle East, South Africa, Northern Ireland and Chernobyl.
In 1996, his series “Voices Of Peace” (a four part series for USA Today on the peace process in Northern Ireland, South Africa and Israel) was chosen as that paper’s submission for the Pulitzer Prize.
Fox is also a playwright whose most recent play on adoption – PRISM VIEW – was produced as an off-Broadway workshop. His previous play, AND IT NEVER RAINS, about the Los Angeles riots was produced at the Los Angeles Theater Center and was awarded the Special Merit Citation by the city of Los Angeles.
JAMES NUBILE
James Nubile’s work has been featured in numerous national and international publications, including: The New York Times Magazine, Los Angeles Times Magazine, Newsweek, Time, US News and World Report and USA Today. In recent years he has lived in and traveled to the Middle East, Former Soviet Union, Central Asia, Bosnia, Rwanda, Northern Ireland and Southeast Asia as well as covering various domestic stories on the social issues of the day.
He has been twice recognized by the Columbia School of Journalism for Best Magazine Feature Picture and has participated in a number of exhibitions worldwide. Recently, he taught a photography workshop in Damascus, Syria and participates in a mentoring program at the International Center of Photography that aims to help young, inner-city photographers pursue their passion for photography.