She received an Emmy Award in 2008 for Made in L.A., which was praised by The New York Times as "an excellent documentary about the most basic human dignity.
She and Robert Bahar are co-owners of the Brooklyn-based Semilla Verde Productions Ltd.[3] In 2009, after the success of their documentary Made in L.A., she received the Estela Award from the National Association of Latino Independent Producers (NALIP), and in the following years she obtained scholarships from several organizations that support film and documentary production: United States Artists (2009), Sundance Institute and Time Warner Foundation (2012),[4] Creative Capital (2012), and a Guggenheim Fellowship in the Creative Arts (2015).
[7] In 2024, Carracedo and Bahar's documentary You Are Not Alone: Fighting the Wolf Pack [es], on the La Manada rape case, premiered on Netflix and in Spanish theaters.
[8] Carracedo has been a juror at numerous festivals, including the Valladolid International Film Week (SEMINCI), Silverdocs, and the Santiago International Documentary Festival, as well as a delegate of the documentary section at the Association of Women Filmmakers and Audiovisual Media [es].
In parts of our lives, there are moments where we have to fight for our dignity, whether it's at work or at home with our political views, our sexual orientation.