Chris Peschken about his charity work:

Chris Peschken describes his hands on experience starting in a ministry in Los Angeles to help homeless people, documenting the harsh realities of homelessness in contrast to the extreme wealth nearby. This experience, including seeing stark disparities between homeless camps and lavish movie sets, led him to question societal values and the pursuit of wealth and the pursuit of wealth as main objective in life.

Peschken about impact of movies:

Chris Peschken believes that movies have a significant impact on people’s minds, similar to the influence of commercials from major companies like Coca-Cola and McDonalds’s, which invest heavily because they know their ads affect viewers.

Peschken about the responsibillity for content:

Chris Peschken believes that filmmakers have a responsibility to maintain ethical and moral boundaries, especially when creating content for young audiences. He argues that the power of imagination is often more impactful than explicit depictions of sex and violence, and that audiences are more intelligent than some producers assume. While respecting others’ choices, he decided to avoid creating content that he feels diminishes the value of human experience, prioritizes meaningful storytelling over sensationalism, and overloaded CGI and Ai.