Micheaux Media

Micheaux Media Micheaux Media is a boutique creative agency at the forefront of media and technology.

We exist to maximize the potential of media and creative brands by helping remove their barriers to success.

02/10/2026

Sundance 2026 has wrapped but does the festival still hold promise for truly independent filmmakers? Let’s check the stats.

How do you feel about the current state of the film/tv industry? Is there still a place for the truly indie creators?

01/29/2026

If you’re a fan of adult animated comedies we highly recommend you check out . This indie series centers on two childhood friends moving in together as adults while trying to navigate the chaos of their lives. Check out the first episode free on YouTube: https://youtu.be/Nbp_alulNMk

11/18/2025

Experience the essence and energy of Upstate New York through a global screening of its beauty and culture in THE AURA OF UPSTATE!

Our inspiration and the continuation of his legacy.
04/07/2024

Our inspiration and the continuation of his legacy.

FIRST MOVIE COMPANY OWNED AND CONTROLLED BY BLACK FILMMAKERS
Oscar Devereaux Micheaux(born Michaux; January 2, 1884 – March 25, 1951) was an American author, film director and independent producer of more than 44 films. Micheaux's Lincoln Motion Picture Company was the first movie company owned and controlled by black filmmakers, Oscar Micheaux is regarded as the first major Black feature filmmaker, the prominent producer of the so-called race film, and hailed as "the most successful Black filmmaker of the first half of the 20th century”. He produced both silent and sound films when the industry changed to incorporate speaking actors.
Micheaux was born on a farm in Metropolis, Illinois. In his later years, Micheaux added an "e" to his last name. As a young man, Micheaux worked odd jobs in and around Chicago, including as a Pullman porter. As he traveled the nation on a Pullman, he decided to homestead.
After Emancipation Blacks sought to build new lives, provide for their families, and educate their children. They especially sought to own their own land, and realize their long denied dreams of working their own farm. They knew how to farm, and saw land ownership as their way to support themselves and their families, and a symbol of their freedom and equality in the United States.
Oscar Micheaux traveled to South Dakota in 1904 to participate in a lottery run by the General Land Office to distribute homesteading lands on the Rosebud Reservation. However, with more than 100,000 claimants for only 2,400 homesteads, he was not able to obtain one directly in the lottery drawing. He hired a land locator for $80 and purchased a relinquished homestead. After some success as a homesteader on the Rosebud Indian Reservation, a three year drought destroyed his crops.
Oscar was in his field rain or shine, yielding only to frozen ground, plowing up 120 acres in his first year. His determination soon turned his neighbors laughter to a “grudging respect, then to acceptance, and finally to admiration, when they realized that he had broken many more acres of prairie than most of them.”
Micheaux married Orlean McCracken, a schoolteacher and daughter of a reverend from Chicago, in 1910. When Oscar traveled for work, Orlean felt abandoned. During one of the times he was away, Orlean suffered a miscarriage. Her family did not like having her on the homestead alone, so they traveled to South Dakota and took her back to Chicago with them. Orlean's father sold some of Micheaux's property and took the money. Micheaux tried unsuccessfully to get Orlean and his property back. They divorced in 1917.
Oscar began writing down his experiences as a homesteader as a way to cope with the hardships he was enduring. His writings were a mix of fiction and biography meant to tell his story of struggle with, and conquest of, the land. He soon had created a full length book that he appropriately titled The Conquest. He began traveling throughout the region selling the book to his friends and neighbors. This new enterprise soon led to a second novel titled The Homesteader. His self published novels were moderately successful, but more importantly they caught the attention of a production company that wanted to turn them into a movie.
In 1919, he adapted his story into a film, becoming the first known African-American filmmaker and director. Though The Homesteader (1919) is considered to be a “lost film”, it launched Micheaux’s career.
Over 30 years he made more than 44 films, and his work has been preserved by the Library of Congress and the National Film Registry as “culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant.” Micheaux’s films featured contemporary African-American life. His works highlighted and worked to combat racism and racial inequality. Black actors in Micheaux's films played the roles of doctors, businessman, detectives, and lawyers. His movies provided a window into black life and the African American perspective on race.
Oscar Micheaux remarried in 1926 to actress Alice B. Russell. She appeared in six of his films. Oscar passed away of heart failure on March 25, 1951 at the age of 67, in Charlotte, North Carolina on a business trip. Oscar was buried in Great Bend, Kansas. His grave stone reads “A Man Ahead of his Time.”

Hilarious film. Go check it out if you haven't already.
03/22/2024

Hilarious film. Go check it out if you haven't already.

Five spellbinding stories that use magic in unexpected ways.

This is looking to be an amazing project.
02/09/2024

This is looking to be an amazing project.

Francis Ford Coppola has unveiled a first look at his long-anticipated project, "Megalopolis," a sci-fi dystopian drama set in a post-apocalyptic New York City.

https://blexmedia.com/first-glimpse-megalopolis/

02/08/2024
To The many creators, curators and taste makers chasing a vision and a dream for your future. understand that no heroes ...
01/05/2024

To The many creators, curators and taste makers chasing a vision and a dream for your future. understand that no heroes journey is complete without The dark night of the soul. We must go and grow through the low points in order to reach our highest aspirations. The top of one mountain is the bottom of another.

Whats your favorite song on the album?
10/20/2023

Whats your favorite song on the album?

You need to play some MF DOOM today because it's been 24 years since the release of his 'Operation: Doomsday' CLASSIC 💿🙌🏾

If you had to put a friend on to only one song from this album, which one would you choose? bit.ly/2M8XBVi

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