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Documentary Media alum lands game-changing broadcast deal with PBS

How Michelle Melles鈥 documentary is challenging conventional narratives around mental health
September 09, 2024

Documentary Media alum Michelle Melles is helping to rewrite the narrative around mental health. Her documentary thesis, , has achieved a major milestone, securing a national broadcast deal in the U.S.A. through NETA, which will bring it to PBS stations across the country.

The film, which shines a light on the complexities of mental health, is set to reach millions of viewers across the United States during Mental Health Awareness Month in May 2025. For Melles, this achievement is not just a professional triumph but a deeply personal victory in her ongoing mission to spark meaningful conversations about mental health on a global stage.

A hand holds a printed photo of a girl jumping on a lake shore. The printed photo is held against the backdrop of a similar looking lake shore.

Image from Drunk on Too Much Life

Drunk on Too Much Life is centered around Melles daughter, Corrina, and her experience from locked-down psych wards and diagnostic labels to expansive worlds of creativity, connection and greater meaning.

Originally released in 2021, Melles recently secured a game-changing opportunity to share the film鈥檚 important message to a wider audience, with an official deal to broadcast the documentary to millions of people across PBS outlets early next year.

鈥淭he idea behind the film has always been to spark dialogue around mental health, trauma, and recovery, and the PBS platform provides an excellent avenue for this mission,鈥 says Melles.

Rewriting the narrative on mental health

Modern medical modalities have largely treated and framed mental health issues as purely biological problems that can only be solved with modern medicine. Melles' film challenges these entrenched, conventional and often fear-based narratives surrounding mental illness by highlighting a new mental health paradigm that rejects the idea that every mental illness inherently needs fixing and that they can be neatly labeled and cured.

Drunk on Too Much Life advocates for a new paradigm in mental health care鈥攐ne that is person-centered, holistic, recovery-oriented, and trauma-informed. It's about celebrating each person鈥檚 full humanity and their right to make meaning of their experiences,鈥 says Melles.

A mother and daughter taking a selfie together against the backdrop of a sun kissed tree and vivid blue sky.

Michelle and her daughter, Corrina

A hand holds up a printed photo of a girl with a large smile and a snake loosely wrapped around her neck. The backdrop behind the printed photo is a busy downtown street.

Image from Drunk on Too Much Life

Rather than accept that label, as American activist, writer and clinician Sasha DuBrul mentions in Melles鈥 film, these experiences shouldn鈥檛 be viewed as a disease that needs to be cured, but as a dangerous gift鈥攐ne that can be cultivated and taken care of to create new forms of meaning.

鈥淚 want viewers to see that these experiences鈥攚hat some may call 鈥榤adness鈥欌攃an be powerful and meaningful aspects of the human condition,鈥 states Melles.

Putting theory into practice 

While work on the project began back in 2017, the film only truly took form as Melles鈥  documentary thesis project for her MFA in Documentary Media. There, under the supervision of professors Michal Conford and Gerda Cammaer鈥攚ho helped shape the film鈥檚 content and guide Melles vision鈥攕he was able to realize the documentary鈥檚 award-winning full potential.

鈥淭he program was invaluable in helping me transition from producing short TV documentaries to becoming a feature documentary filmmaker,鈥 Melles noted, highlighting the importance of this academic grounding in shaping the film鈥檚 content.

But beyond all the recognition for the countless people who supported the film, Melle is especially grateful for her daughter, Corrina, whose powerful experience鈥攚hen viewed as a dangerous gift鈥攕et the basis for a larger and more meaningful conversation surrounding mental health on the international stage.

鈥淚t鈥檚 been an incredible journey to get to this point, and I'm deeply grateful for the support of everyone involved, especially, my daughter Corrina, who has courageously shared her story with the world in the hope of changing the treatment and perception of mental illness,鈥 states Melles.

Interested in learning more? Watch the trailer of Drunk on Too Much Life or the feature documentary on , or !

  

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