The People’s Cinema and Theatre Club explores political ideas through film and theatre. They aim to educate and encourage critical thought through visual media.
Alexandria Amaka Animba is a writer and creative consultant specialising in trend intelligence and brand strategy, drawing on history, culture and politics to inform culturally attuned research, creative direction and storytelling for brands, institutions and artists. She began the People's Cinema and Theatre Club as a way to educate through film and theatre.
By day, Nabil Al-Kinani is a built-environment professional and strategist with a keen interest in urbanism, placemaking, sustainable development and place vision. By night, he is a writer and producer that uses creativity to deliver works that draw focus on the relationship between spaces and stories. Other strands of his work includes the exploration of spatial politics, psychogeography, identity, culture and migration. To date, Nabil has authored various works, including; Privatise the Mandem (2021), To Free the Ends (2024), Naming Pains (2024), and much more.
Professor Andrew Prescott is a scholar and former British Library curator with extensive experience in manuscripts, digital humanities and research leadership. He has held senior academic roles at the University of Sheffield, University of Wales Lampeter and University of Glasgow, and has advised on major digital humanities projects in Britain and the US.
Montez Press Radio is an experimental broadcasting and performance platform founded in 2018 with the goal of fostering greater experimentation and conversation between artists, writers, and thinkers through the medium of radio. This platform invites different corners of the art world to interact with each other in person and on air—a place where media finally meets flesh. We’re drawn to art that exists in the unexpected, the authenticity of sharing without a script, the sounds of ideas in the making, conversation that forgets there’s an audience.