Currently Fellowship Director at the Reducetarian Foundation and Program Coordinator at the NYU Mind, Ethics, and Policy Program and NYU Wild Animal Welfare Program. Previously at 80,000 Hours, BERI, Anima International, and Animal Charity Evaluators. Also an advisor to the board at BERI, and a mentor for Magnify Mentoring and FAST.
Points for a novel EA Forum topic! I also have pretty horrific nightmares pretty frequently, and have also lived a relatively good life/have nothing in my conscious lived experience that seems like it would be producing these. (Luckily I'm almost never enacting harm on people I love though—that's a level above, I'm really sorry that you repeatedly go through that.) Many of my nightmares essentially seem like they could be scenes from horror movies, but I don't watch horror movies (ever, at all) so this is pretty bizarre. I have actually considered trying to sell some of the images and events from my nightmares to horror filmmakers, though I haven't figured out exactly how I'd go about this. If I ever manage to do it, I will consider donating my profits to your potential future nightmare-prevention charity :)
Thanks Edward!
Yep I agree with you about the university EA groups being an awesome place to recruit from! I've shared the opportunity with the larger EA NYC group and am in the process of reaching out to all the EA clubs I can find at universities in the area. (But if you have specific groups/organizers in mind please let me know so I can make sure they're on my list!)
Additional animal welfare/plant-based food-related documentaries: Dominion, Unlocking the Cage, The Ghosts in Our Machine, Blackfish, The Cove, Food Inc., Vegucated, Cowspiracy, Seaspiracy (coming out soon), What the Health, Live and Let Live.
Of those, I've only seen Unlocking the Cage and Cowspiracy (which were fine) and Blackfish (which was very emotional).
From the trailer, Dominion looks like the most intense from a purely animal welfare perspective, especially if you're limiting to docs that include some content on factory farming.
For readers/prospective applicants: I just want to chime in here and say that I also really loved my time working at BERI. The org has very "The Little Engine That Could" energy. Everyone in the BERI ecosystem is extremely smart, motivated, and creative solution-seeking. I didn't overlap with Elizabeth on staff, but have interacted with her a little bit the past few years in my capacity as advisor to the board. She strikes me as incredibly driven and capable, and I suspect she'll be a great coworker for the person who takes this role, especially given her enthusiasm for small-team settings. This is a really exciting opportunity for an ops champ who wants to make an impact in a small crucial niche, so I just wanted to echo Elizabeth's encouragement for people to err on the side of applying if uncertain!