
We began filming in October 2023.
Since then, so much has shifted politically, environmentally, and personally that it’s taken time to understand what this project needed to become.
What’s now clear is that the film isn’t the endpoint. It’s the engine for a wider mission.


George MacCallum
Director
George is a filmmaker with over 20 years of experience creating documentaries and impact-driven media for charities, nonprofits, and grassroots movements.
His work centers on character-led, place-based narratives that connect lived experience to structural injustice. Bridging film, journalism, and advocacy, he uses storytelling to confront the systems that shape environmental, social, and public health outcomes.

CAMERON OGLESBY
IMPACT PRODUCER
Cameron is an internationally award-winning environmental justice organizer, strategist, journalist, and oral historian whose storytelling work centers histories of injustice, joy, resilience, and land stewardship in Black, Indigenous, rural, and southern communities.
Her passion lies in the integration of community-driven, place-based perspectives and narratives in conservation, environmental policy, modern media, and corporate decision-making.

CHANEL CAIN
SOCIAL MEDIA MANAGER
Chanel is a journalist and audience engagement producer with a mission to highlight the experiences of underrepresented communities.In her career, she has worked to expand the reach of independent filmmakers across the African diaspora and highlight the experiences of Black artists through her writing. She hopes to continue connecting people with the stories they need most.

CENTER FOR ENERGY EDUCATION
The Center for Energy Education is a nonprofit organization based in Halifax County, North Carolina, dedicated to expanding access to renewable energy education, workforce development, and community engagement. The Center works to ensure that rural communities can participate in and benefit from the transition to a clean energy economy.
As Keep on Marching moved into post-production, the Center for Energy Education joined the project to help sustain its connection to the communities and histories that shaped the environmental justice movement.

ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE ORAL HISTORY PROJECT
The Environmental Justice Oral History Project is a storytelling initiative dedicated to documenting the people, movements, and communities that have shaped the environmental justice movement. Through oral histories, journalism, and public storytelling, the project works to preserve movement history while amplifying the voices of organizers working on the frontlines today.
The Environmental Justice Oral History Project joined Keep on Marching to help extend the film’s reach within the environmental justice movement, supporting engagement and distribution among organizers, scholars, and advocacy networks throughout the U.S. South and countrywide.