How To Open a Straw

Short Film - Educational Comedy - 2009


It's hot.  You're thirsty.  Looks like you need a drink.  You have a cup full of a tasty liquid, but how do you get it into your face?  Folks spend far too much of their straw opening time cramming the flimsy plastic on a counter.  Not only is that method barbaric, but it often leaves the straw cracked and useless.  For shame!


The time has come for a paradigm shift.  Join Casey on a fun and informative journey to learn what it takes to open a straw the right way.  Take it from those who have experienced Casey's teachings: you will never look at opening a straw the same way again.

Latest Film from Quiet Sight Productions & New Eagle Productions

Snow Lake

Documentary Feature - Coming Soon


Sixty years ago a small town grew up around a gold mine among the evergreens of northern Manitoba – Snow Lake: Jewel of the North.  Today the town fights for its life.  Having survived the ups and downs of the mining cycle over several decades, how will the community band together when the prominent New Britannia mine shuts down . . . possibly forever?

On the Trail of a Killer

Documentary Feature - Coming Summer 2010


April 1947.  In the quiet stretches of the Texas panhandle, a darkening horizon foreshadowed the terrible night to come.  Oklahoma storyteller Captain Jack Parker journeys down the path of a storm that produced one of the deadliest tornadoes in history.  Hear from survivors, historians, and weather experts in order to understand the pain, the struggles and the heroics that lie on the trail of a killer.

Also visit the MEDIA page for Videos and Photo Galleries from these and other projects.

The Copper Scroll Project

Documentary Feature - Coming Soon


In the Judaean desert, a scroll was found that has baffled researchers for decades.  The Copper Scroll, unearthed in 1952 among the Dead Sea Scrolls, is different from other documents in that it is not a literary work nor a work of Scripture.  Instead, it is a verbal treasure map leading to what could be the greatest archaeological find in history.