top of page

Today is the 18th anniversary of my company Creative Impulse Entertainment, the home of the original Justice For Hire comic books. Creative Impulse laid the foundation for our current crowdsourced cinematic universe, the Justice For Hire TV series, as well as ReelwUrld, the social filmmaking startup that created the JFH app.



With Creative Impulse, I’ve been afforded the opportunity to produce and work with some of the world’s greatest talent across films, music videos, comics, animation, music, and even games. We wouldn’t be celebrating this without all of the wonderful people, artists, directors, producers, writers, and investors that helped us grow, especially my father, Jan C. Childress. Quick story on why this company exists because of him:


In 1999, my father was leaving the Marvel offices and walking downtown on Park Avenue when he saw a flag that read, “New York Film Academy.” He walked into the Union Square building and got information on their first high school program, brought it home to me and asked if I wanted to try making films for a summer. I thought for a moment at how disappointed I was in my initial dream to program video games, which I did the previous summer at Columbia University’s high school program, and thought to myself that perhaps this is how I’ll be able to make the epic action scenes I wanted to create come to life. I said yes and was immediately fast tracked to connect with my purpose. Even my teacher that summer, Mike Sandoval, would become a major part of my life (Mike walked me into NYU to the dean’s office, where I later went for college, hired me the next summer as a teaching assistant, and is now an advisor for ReelwUrld).


In March 2003, while a junior at NYU’s Tisch film school, my father surprised me again. Noting that I had expressed interest in forming my own company weeks prior (because every film student had vanity business cards for their production company they hoped to form one day, and I wanted mine to be “real”), Dad handed me my first corporate binder. I opened it and saw inside a certificate of incorporation for Creative Impulse Entertainment. I looked at dad in shock, because he did all the work to set up the company, and I felt the weight of what it meant and the long path attached to it. Dad never put pressure on me to own a company, but he equipped me with an understanding of the value of balancing business and creativity, especially given the challenges his mentor Jim Shooter faced at Marvel and Valiant. Even so, my hands would shake nervously when I would type my company email password in as a 20-year-old.



In 2011, moments before our premiere of the Justice For Hire animation at San Diego Comic Con, surrounded by 14 of my team members, I expressed to my father that I wondered if I was in the right place in life (because being an entertainment entrepreneur can be maddening). He told me that if I wanted to stop, I could walk away right now. That blew my mind, as he was a lead investor in the company, and we were working for years to build value across media verticals. His support of my freedom of choice empowered me to stay the course, and ride the company as a vehicle across entertainment. Along the way, I’ve at times forgotten my core motivation for being in media in the first place—to access the hearts and minds of people when they’re most vulnerable and remind them (and myself) of humanity’s innate divine power. If anything has cost me efficiency in energy expenditure over the years, it has been that forgetfulness.


Fast forward to now, I feel like my journey with Creative Impulse has come full circle through ReelwUrld and the success of Justice For Hire’s crowdsourced cinematic universe. Dad walked out of Marvel to the New York Film Academy, and ReelwUrld is using the cinematic universe storytelling model made popular by Marvel to empower anyone to make movies and shows together on our cinematic social network.


Whether you’ve been there since the beginning or are new to my/our story, THANK YOU everyone for the support on this journey. I would say “I’m just getting started,” but in fact, it’s the past experiences of Creative Impulse that are allowing me and our team to boldly go where no one has gone before with ReelwUrld.


Other quick bites: Justice For Hire episode 01 hit 6 million views on TikTok, the Justice For Hire app is live, our ReelwUrld vision video is in production (and it will melt your mind), and we’ve moved ReelwUrld’s equity crowdfunding campaign to WeFunder and will launch soon.


With Love,


Jan L.


PS

Updated: Mar 17, 2021

We’ve opened a portion of our Justice For Hire app to the public. Now, anyone can join the JFH cinematic universe as a Hero, Client, or Villain character role via our own platform. Heroes, you can also take on our 1st nationwide mission, Wash The Hate, and create content to stand in solidarity with the Asian American community. The full cast—Heroes, Clients, and Villains—will also have access to their profiles, and will be able see features to be released very soon.


Join the party here: JusticeForHire.app


Three JFH Heroes from our community have already united to answer Wash The Hate’s call. Directed by Vintij aka Vincent Wu, this short film is a powerful showcases of how to deal with anger. It’s also the best example of the kind of content we hope to see more of from the JFH community. When we say JFH is about “fictionalizing solutions to real world problems,” our aim is for people to use cinema to visualize how we can have a better world, and show us steps on how to get there. See how Vintij, Juice, and Tai Chi Wonder accomplished that below:



Quick update our TikTok virality: the first episode of JFH is at 5.1 Million views and counting, 383.1K likes, 3.1K comments, 3.6K shares, and we’re up to 46.1K followers, all from one video. Help us keep the momentum going by taking a look at the clip: https://vm.tiktok.com/ZMe2AbxHt/.


Exciting things in the works. Thanks for all of your support and we hope to see you in JFH.

We have a very important mission: #WashTheHate. In light of the startling number of hate crimes against Asian Americans due to ignorance and racism associated with COVID-19, we want you to show humans across the world how we can all do better. Fictionalize your solutions to the very real problem of hate crimes across the world. Do this through the lens of your original JFH hero.


#HeroesUnitingWorldwide has always been Justice For Hire’s slogan, and we’re honored to partner with an organization that is as devoted to making the world a better place as we are. A better future is just days away if we want it to be. Check out the video below for #WashTheHate mission details. We can’t wait to see what you come up with!



ALSO, join us this Saturday, February 20 at 11am PST/ 2pm EST for WarnerMedia’s Urban Action Showcase Virtual VR Expo to learn more about our partnership with #WashTheHate. The Justice For Hire team will be joined by #WashTheHate’s founder Telly Wong for what will no doubt be a very important conversation about how we can make the world a better place through entertainment, starting with our latest mission. Save this link to watch on Facebook Live.


As always, thank you for being a part of the community. If you haven’t already, we’d love for you to join Justice For Hire and film your very own #WashTheHate mission. You can also support us in pioneering social-filmmaking by investing in our equity crowdfunding campaign on Netcapital, or by simply spreading the message.


bottom of page