Bountifull Podcast
In this episode, I'm joined by Christopher Seward, a documentary filmmaker and editor whose work includes Fahrenheit 9/11, Sicko, Ariel Phenomenon (UFOs), One Child Nation, and more than 40 documentary films. Christopher edited top-grossing documentaries including Fahrenheit 9/11, winner of the Palme d'Or at Cannes, and Sicko, both earning him American Cinema Editors Guild awards for Best Documentary Editor of the Year. He has also served as supervising and consulting editor on The Food Cure, Fat, Sick & Nearly Dead, Wake Up, and Fire in the Blood. Christopher's work sits at the intersection of truth, emotion, curiosity, and perspective. As an editor, he has spent his career shaping complex, confronting stories into films that people can watch, feel, and understand. This conversation explores the craft of documentary storytelling, and goes much deeper than film. We discuss curiosity as a way of moving through the world, the difference between facts and emotional truth, the role of humour in difficult stories, and why being seen may be one of the deepest human needs we share. Christopher also shares his own story, from growing up surrounded by art, nature, and service, to the Navy, time on the Navajo reservation, studying cinematography at NYU, and building a life rooted in community, gratitude, and creative purpose. In This Episode, You’ll Discover * Why curiosity can create common ground, even when people disagree. * How Christopher thinks about finding the universal human thread inside complex stories. * Why facts alone are not always enough in a post-truth world. * The role of emotional truth in documentary filmmaking. * How humour can help people stay with difficult or painful subjects. * Why documentaries need space, rhythm, and moments of relief. * How Christopher’s time on the Navajo reservation shaped his spirituality and view of nature. * What losing his father young taught him about impermanence, process, and savouring life. * Why community requires showing up, not just belonging. * How nature helps Christopher process the intensity of his work. * Why a bountiful life may begin with changing how we define bounty. Timestamps 00:00 – Opening reflection on truth, purpose, and being seen 01:20 – Introduction to Christopher Seward 02:39 – Growing up with art, nature, service, and imagination 06:44 – Spirituality, church, curiosity, and questioning 09:18 – What it means to live a bountiful life 12:30 – Advice to his 25-year-old self 14:34 – Self-trust, intuition, and learning to listen to your gut 17:00 – Losing his father young and learning impermanence 19:30 – Time on the Navajo reservation and indigenous wisdom 26:10 – Studying cinematography and finding documentary editing 30:13 – How to shape complex stories 32:39 – Facts, emotional truth, and storytelling in a post-truth world 35:34 – Working on intense documentaries and difficult subjects 38:24 – Nature, perspective, and staying well while telling hard stories 40:10 – Ariel Phenomenon and the power of first-person storytelling 45:08 – Authenticity over spectacle 46:02 – What Christopher looks for in a story 48:25 – Humour, pain, pacing, and making hard subjects watchable 51:04 – Tentpole scenes and the gravity of story 55:37 – Nature as our operating system 58:36 – Community, homecoming, and building belonging 01:04:42 – Quickfire round Guest Bio Christopher Seward is a documentary filmmaker and editor whose work spans more than 40 documentary films. His credits include Fahrenheit 9/11, Sicko, Ariel Phenomenon, One Child Nation, and many other projects exploring politics, human rights, social issues, identity, and the unseen stories that shape our world. His work is grounded in curiosity, emotional truth, and a deep interest in helping people see complex subjects through a more human lens. Bountifull Podcast Bountifull is a personal growth and wellbeing podcast exploring what it means to live a joyful and meaningful life.
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