Francis Delia

[4] In 1960, Delia and his three of brothers — Mike, Al and Joe — formed the garage band The Bruthers and toured colleges for several years.

[3][13] Delia worked as a photographer for Hustler magazine, along with creative director Stephen Sayadian and writer Jerry Stahl.

[5] After the move, the trio formed an art design company that created posters and one sheets for films, such as The Fog (1980), Dressed to Kill (1980), The Exterminator (1980) and Escape from New York (1981).

including trailers for the films A Night In Heaven and Revenge of the Nerds, which were both directed by Delia, but within a couple of years the company's focus shifted to mostly music video production.

[6] The band were longtime friends of Delia's and their practice space was in the same building as the art studio he shared with Sayadian and Stahl.

[16] Some of the other songs for which he directed videos include "The Real World" by The Bangles, "A Million Miles Away" by The Plimsouls, "Somebody's Watching Me" by Rockwell, "Heard The News" by David Johansen, "Colored Lights" by The Blasters, "The Right to Rock" by Keel and "Love Always" by El DeBarge.

Records label, in addition to a film of Gary Numan in concert and a series of public service announcements for the campaign titled "Fight the Fear with Facts" by the AIDS Project Los Angeles.

[9][10] He directed the 1993 crime comedy-drama film Trouble Bound, starring Patricia Arquette, Billy Bob Thornton and Michael Madsen.