When I received the rough cut of my short film 10 years ago from an editor in Los Angeles, it still felt woefully unfinished and I was afraid I didn’t have anything that really worked. Inside, I was panicking. The guy in LA had bailed on the project right before it was finished, so I had to figure out how to finish locally.
I went to visit Ed Boutwell, the legendary founder of the local Boutwell Studios, down at his home in Shelby County. He watched my rough cut and told me I had something great, even though he disagreed with my libertarian satire since he was a progressive left guy. Because he thought it was good —and because he was eager to help a wannabe artist — he agreed to help me.
Ed told me I could get a local video editor to easily make the final picture cuts and credits but I mostly needed someone good to work with me on the audio recording, music selection and final audio mix.
Ed was retired, but he set me up to work with Courtney Haden, whose voice I had heard on Birmingham radio for years — mostly notably on Kicks 106 when it ruled local rock radio — and who was now co-owner of Boutwell Studios. Courtney had been a star of local FM rock morning drive radio at a couple of stations — and he still had the voice and personality I recognized.

Ethnic Indian wins Miss America? Who cares? Bigots seem upset
Living a sane and healthy life is now radical by world’s standards
What if people don’t really care about understanding each other?
Surgery report: It went very well, but first time is one too many for me
THE McELROY ZOO: Meet Thomas, the aloof loner of my menagerie
I don’t know how to be popular, and that hurts in a social world
Unexpected meeting forces me to believe I might fall in love again
Banning access to guns won’t prevent the evil in human hearts