Benjamin Jeffrey Steinbauer (born July 28, 1977) is an American director, showrunner, writer, and producer who directed the feature documentary Winnebago Man (2009). Steinbauer also directed the documentary Chop & Steele (2022),[1] which premiered at the Tribeca Film Festival,[2] and was the showrunner and director of the episodic television show High Hopes[3] for Jimmy Kimmel's Kimmelot. He directed the PBS show Stories of the Mind,[4] and the CBS docuseries, Pink Collar Crimes.[5]
Ben Steinbauer graduated from Edmond Memorial High School in Edmond, Oklahoma, in 1995 and earned a B.A. in Theatre and Film from The University of Kansas in 2001,[6] where he sits on the Professional Advisory Board of K.U. Film.[7]
While attending college, Steinbauer began his filmmaking career by producing documentaries and music videos for Forty Minutes of Hell; Everest; and The Danny Pound Band.[8] In 2002, he was a camera operator and editor on Bradley Beesley's documentary "The Fearless Freaks", which focuses on the band The Flaming Lips.[9][10]
In 2004, Steinbauer attended the graduate film program at the University of Texas at Austin.[11] His pre-thesis film, "The Next Tim Day", received the best documentary award at Cinema Texas.[12] In 2006, he was awarded a Princess Grace Award for Filmmaking for his graduate thesis film,[13] which developed into the documentary "Winnebago Man."[14]
After completing his studies, Steinbauer served as a faculty member at the University of Texas at Austin, where he taught Intro To Filmmaking[15] and was recognized as Teacher of the Year for the College of Communications.[16]
Steinbauer co-owns the production company The Bear, which was founded in 2007, with writer and director Berndt Mader.[17]
Steinbauer directed the short documentary Brute Force (2012)[24] which premiered at the South by Southwest Film Festival in 2012.[25] In 2012, he co-directed Calls To Okies: The Park Grubbs Story (2015) with Bradley Beesley.[26] The short premiered at the South by Southwest Film Festival in 2015[27] and was awarded a Vimeo Staff Pick.[28] Steinbauer produced and directed the short documentary, The Superlative Light (2016),[29] which was shot in both traditional 2D as well as in virtual reality (VR),[30] His virtual reality film, The Superlative Light (2016),[31] also premiered at the South by Southwest Film Festival in 2016.[32][33] He discussed the production of The Superlative Light in a news magazine[34] and this short documentary was featured in Short of the Week.[35] Steinbauer directed episodes of the PBS series Stories of the Mind in 2016, which won multiple Emmys.[36] His 2016 documentary, Slow To Show, was acquired by The New York Times[37] and awarded a Vimeo Staff Pick.[38]
After Hurricane Harvey, Steinbauer worked with Texas Monthly to make Heroes From the Storm (2017),[39] which was recognized with a Vimeo Staff Pick[40] and selected for the U.S. State Department's American Film Showcase.[41] In 2018, Steinbauer directed eight episodes of the CBS comedic docuseries Pink Collar Crimes,[42] hosted by Marcia Clark.[43] Steinbauer's documentary Siren Song, which he co-directed with Berndt Mader, premiered at the 2019 Austin Film Festival.[44]
Steinbauer was the show-runner and director of the Hulu Original doc comedy series, High Hopes for Jimmy Kimmel's company Kimmelot. The series is about two brothers who were born in Belarus Slava and Mishka, and their stoned group going through a lot of trouble as they work on growing and expanding their cannabis business.[46]
Ben Steinbauer's production company The Bear makes commercials for clients including Capital One, Whole Foods, Yeti, Indeed, Ram, Alfa Romeo, Southwest Airlines, Dell, U.S. Air Force, Tito's Vodka, Budweiser, Keystone Light, Crate & Barrel, and more.[47]