Ez Roberts

Ez Roberts is a documentary filmmaker, interested in character driven stories that explore how societal power plays out in every day life. 

They work as Shooting AP on documentaries, and an AD on music videos. 


Documentaries
Music Videos
Fashion Videos
Olly
Press shots
Queer Spaces
Rave
Photo diary
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The Dark Side of Swimming Clubs



More than 100,000 children train at swimming clubs across England, many hoping one day to compete at the Olympics. But do those dreams of gold medals come at too high a price? Panorama speaks to swimmers who developed eating disorders after being bullied about their weight by coaches and investigates the role of the sport’s regulator, who knew about allegations against senior coaches but did nothing. Swim England has apologised and promised to learn from past mistakes. Reporter Rebecca Woods also investigates the case of convicted rapist Antony James, a former Olympic swimmer who groomed young girls in plain sight at the club where he was a coach

Watch here, on BBC iPlayer.

Britain’s Mouldy Homes


Panorama investigates the condition of rented properties in the UK. The government says that in England alone the health of two million people is under threat from mould. After two-year-old Awaab Ishak died from prolonged exposure to mould in 2020, a new law was proposed to protect tenants. Despite being passed by the previous government in 2023, the law will not come into force until the autumn.

Reporter Rahil Sheikh speaks to families living with black mould in both social housing and private rented properties, and reveals how the home of one elderly couple, who say that damp and mould is impacting their health, is owned by one of Britain’s wealthiest landlords.

Watch here, on BBC iPlayer. 


The Riots That Shocked the Country



A knife attack on a Taylor Swift dance workshop in Southport left three children dead and eight others seriously injured. The killings then sparked the worst rioting on our streets for more than a decade. Police, mosques and hotels housing asylum seekers were targeted. Terrified residents were barricaded in their homes. The violence was stoked by far-right activists and fuelled by lies and disinformation online. Darragh MacIntyre reports from some of the worst affected towns and cities and asks what can be done to prevent such violence from happening again.

Watch here, on BBC iPlayer.


Can We Live Without Our Phones?


What happens when smartphones are taken away from kids for a week? With the help of two families and lots of remote cameras, Panorama finds out. Do they talk to their parents more, sleep better, or miss out on vital conversations with friends and the chance to discover something new?

With calls for smartphones to be banned for children, Marianna Spring speaks to parents, teenagers and social media company insiders to investigate whether the content pushed to their feeds is harming them

Watch here, on BBC iPlayer. 


Infected Blood: Time for Answers

Between 1970 and the early 1990s more than 30,000 people in the UK were infected with HIV and Hepatitis C through contaminated blood products and transfusions. It has been described as the worst treatment disaster in NHS history. Since then, around 3,000 of those infected have died, but many of their relatives have yet to receive any compensation. A public inquiry opened in 2018 to discover what really happened, and in May it will deliver its final report.

Reporter Jim Reed meets the families of some of the 380 children with bleeding disorders who were infected with HIV and talks to them about what they have lost, their campaign for justice, and what they hope for from the inquiry.

Watch here, on BBC iPlayer. 


Stephen Lawrence: The Sixth Suspect

This BBC News investigation by reporter Daniel De Simone identifies a new suspect in the Stephen Lawrence murder. Stephen’s killing in 1993 changed policing and race relations in Britain forever, and its shadow hangs over the Metropolitan Police to this day. For decades, five men have been suspected of the attack, and in 2012 two of them were found guilty. Daniel De Simone has seen secret evidence and spoken to dozens of witnesses to publicly identify a sixth suspect for the first time. Evidence uncovered in this investigation also further implicates other suspects in the attack, and raises serious question of the police handling of the case over many years.

Watch here, on BBC iPlayer. 


All work shot on a Sony A7s, BMPCC 4K, and Sony FX6.
Credit: Director of Photography








Credit: Assistant Director


Credit: Assistant Director

Credit: Assistant Director, Assistant Camera

Credit: Assistant Director

Credit: Assistant Director



s-wagon
Stills from fashion weeks video


24–09–2024


feeo press shots 
Four tracks, each flowing into the next, dwell on the idea of preparing for the end, the inevitable that nobody can escape. She believes that “as soon as life begins, it walks its way towards ending and there is nothing any of us can do to stop it.”


24–09–2024
Switch Rising




24–09–2024