Interview with Ava Richesin-Dodd, Producer of The Bowl

Last month, we interviewed Eli Yetter-Bowman, director of the new Ethics Bowl film, The Bowl. Following a team of young women from North Carolina to NHSEB nationals at UNC, the film is an excellent recruitment tool for new participants, as well as a fun way to affirm the value and benefits of Ethics Bowl. In this follow-up interview, we talk to Ava Richesin-Dodd, producer at Ethereal Films.

Where have you held screenings so far, and how is the film being received? 

This past September, the film premiered during the opening night at the BEYOND Cary Film Festival. This was a surreal experience for everyone, especially the students, as this was their first time watching the completed version. The film was shot in the spring of 2023, so all of the students are now in college. Personally, I would be mortified to watch a documentary about me in high school, but all the girls are so brilliant and articulate that everyone who watched the film left impressed by their skills and moved by the program. One audience member even came up to the team afterwards and expressed how, after a hard week, watching the film really lifted their spirits. Since the premiere, various institutions have purchased a license and held internal screenings across the country. The feedback has been positive across the board. I think this story represents hope and optimism, which many people are looking for right now. 

Where and when can folks see the film? Have details clarified on when it will air on PBS? 

As of right now, there’s no set date for when the film will be released on PBS. We know it will be sometime this fall, though. In the meantime, students and educators can request an educational license through their school’s acquisition librarian. Their librarian can then order the film at this link. The film can be ordered for a one-time screening event or a lifetime license for Ethics Bowl recruiting and/or teaching. Additionally, every order will include an event-planning and classroom guide. 

What’s been most memorable, surprising, or cool for you since The Bowl came out?

This entire project has been memorable and cool. I am so proud and lucky to have worked on this. This was notably the first documentary in which I played a leading role in editing and producing. When our director, Eli, first told me about it, I was immediately hooked, not only because I’d never heard of Ethics Bowl before, but also because the team we followed was all young women. The more I dove into the footage, the more in awe I became with the team and the clear benefits Ethics Bowl had for these students. The Ethics Bowl gave these girls the time, space, and agency to parse out difficult yet relevant issues. In watching them develop their cases and opinions, I also saw them develop confidence and trust in themselves and each other. 

It’s worth mentioning that I was mostly absent for the film’s shooting, so I primarily saw and, in some sense, got to know these students by watching and editing over 30 hours of footage of them. I had almost developed a parasocial relationship with the team, so when the film finally premiered, it was a bit of a shock to see these girls in person and how much they had grown over the years. Conversely, for them, it was a bit strange to meet and talk with someone who had spent so much time watching raw footage of them in high school. (Again, I’d be mortified). 

That said, it was important to me that the students felt they were portrayed in a way they could look back on with pride, rather than embarrassment. One of the girls, Cristina, came up to me afterwards and affirmed this for me. That is, by far, the most special thing that has happened to me since the film came out. 

Anything else you’d like to share with EthicsBowl.org readers at this point?

Working on this film has left me deeply wishing this program had been available to me when I was in school. I genuinely think that if I had watched The Bowl as a student, I would’ve been inspired to join Ethics Bowl, or at least to try to get involved in more philosophy classes where democratic deliberation was taught and nurtured. If you’re an educator or student who is interested in showing this film, please request a copy from your library! Even if you’re not involved with Ethics Bowl, please share with any colleagues who you think would be interested. We want this film to be as accessible as possible! 

Interview with Eli Yetter-Bowman, Director of The Bowl

The talented HSEB team from “The Bowl” discussing a case.

I recently interviewed Eli Yetter-Bowman, founder of Ethereal Films and lead documentarian for the new film, The Bowl, about a team of young women who compete in the National High School Ethics Bowl nationals at UNC. An amazing Ethics Bowl outreach tool, check out the trailer and order an institutional license at the film’s project page here.

Eli, I understand you’ve been involved with Ethics Bowl for many years as a judge. Why did you initially get involved and why have you continued? What have you found toughest about judging? What have you found most rewarding?

I got involved about ten years ago as an undergraduate Philosophy student at UNC who unwittingly took a class that had me mentor a local high school. I immediately fell in love because it was the first experience I had at Carolina that felt rooted in direct community engagement. I volunteered every year that I could because I still find it to be the absolute best activity at the UNC Philosophy department by a longshot. So much of Philosophy is abstracted from society, whereas this is directly benefiting local students by making them more careful, considerate and independent thinkers. I haven’t been able to volunteer since filming the Bowl as I was removed from the mailing list but hope to be reconnected. 

Volunteering for so long I’ve seen that the most practical issues for judges are that the center organizing is relying on volunteers but struggles with outreach. This was a key reason I invested so much time and energy into creating this film to provide a community lift, but it has been incredibly difficult truth be told. Judging holds a great deal of power in dictating the outcome of matches despite a severe lack of heterogeneity among judges. I personally spend a lot of time preparing and considering all elements of matches when making those decisions, but that’s been developed over years of doing the activity. My hope would be that greater exposure to the program would broaden the net of judge volunteers to improve the fairness and quality of the pool.

Towards the end of the film, one of the students vaguely recalls a form she filled out for producers on how the team might or might not want to be portrayed. Was that real? If so, what sorts of questions were included and what was the purpose behind them?

No, as the student says this was a dream. However, all students and their parents, since many were under 18 at the time, completed general release forms. Still, it was more of a priority for the filmmakers to create an environment where, if any of the students were ever uncomfortable, they felt safe to voice it to the crew. The students feeling safe and able to be themselves on camera was extremely important, and without that trust, I don’t think the film would feel as special as it does.

What’s been the initial response to the film and how can interested folks view it?

Resoundingly described as HEARTWARMING. The students are truly exceptional in their intelligence, patience, and charisma throughout our journey. It’s amazing to have a story that leaves people feeling better off while also teaching them about such an important activity. The film is available now for educational & institutional screenings – simply submitting a request to your school library, public library, or allied business/non-profit on the project page. Educational licenses allow us to give the film to educators for free to use forever, while supporting the ~3 years of labor that went into making this film.

Thank you, Eli, for the interview and the awesome film! We’ll soon follow up with producer Ava Roan Richesin-Dodd. In the meantime, check out the trailer if you haven’t!

Brand New Ethics Bowl Documentary

“The Bowl” is a new upbeat documentary by Ethereal Films and lead filmmaker Eli Yetter-Bowman that the Ethics Bowl community will be able to use as a recruitment tool for years to come. It’s already received screening requests from 40+ institutions including Stanford and Harvard. And this wasn’t something thrown together by an outsider—Eli has volunteered as an Ethics Bowl judge for the past decade, fully gets Ethics Bowl’s mission and value, and beautifully conveys its draw in the film. According to the filmmakers’ website, spreading the good news about Ethics Bowl is the whole idea.

“We want to drastically expand awareness and participation of the program to schools across the US. It already exists as an amazing resource to support young people but the program lacks mass communication/representation to attract more schools. Further, we believe this type of program offers value for people of all kinds so a secondary goal is to encourage this type of thinking across society in general.”

While full release will come through PBS sometime in 2026, I was granted an advance viewing opportunity and loved it. The Bowl follows a HSEB team from North Carolina to the National Championships at UNC, inviting viewers to share in their excitement, anxieties, thrills, and disappointments. A talented and thoughtful group of young women, coached by an understanding and understated teacher, the team navigates preparation stress, post-round regrets, and the added weirdness of being filmed.

I interviewed Yetter-Bowman and will share our exchange in an upcoming post. But for now, check out the trailer and consider helping spread the word with your coaches, judges, moderators, teams, friends, colleagues, and network. And if your school, nonprofit or business might be interested in an institutional license, simply fill out the form on the film’s project page. School libraries often have budgets for this sort of thing and may take care of the rest if you ask yours nicely.

Ethics Bowl at Concerned Philosophers for Peace Conference

Fellow Pellissippi State Community College philosophy professor Court Lewis and I had a great time talking about Ethics Bowl’s potential for promoting domestic and international peace at the annual conference of the Concerned Philosophers for Peace over the weekend. Hosted by Texas State University in San Marcos and attended by scholars from all over the world including Poland, Albania, Australia, Canada, and India, with two speakers Zooming in live from Ecuador and Mali (Africa), roughly a third of the audience was already involved with Ethics Bowl (no surprise, right?), and the rest were inspired by Ethics Bowl’s focus on collaboration, mutual respect, principled solutions, and proactive engagement with a reasonable critic.

As we know, while traditional debate artificially divides participants into hostile factions, orders them to think and argue a particular close-minded way, and forbids them from agreeing, Ethic Bowl empowers teams to take ownership of their views, to cooperatively balance their moral intuitions against the best ethical arguments, to remain open to the possibility that they might have more to learn, and to view the other team as equals and thought partners rather than enemies. Ethics Bowl’s reasonable, elevated, conciliatory style paired with accelerating growth around the world, makes it a natural and powerful ally of anyone seeking principled peace.

Many thanks to CPP leadership and conference organizers for welcoming the discussion. And be on the lookout for a longer post at the Blog of the American Philosophical Association soon.