Freedman also produced three feature films, Money for Nothing (John Cusak, 1999), To Walk with Lions (Richard Harris, 1999) and A Brief History of Time (1991).
Freedman, then a student at Michigan University, drove to Washington, D.C. and stood in line at 5:30 am every morning to listen to the hearings.
Freedman created the archive in response to the Special Counsel investigation into Trump's ties to Russia and Russian interference in the United States elections.
[11] Freedman was a signatory on a statement about the legacy and ongoing mission of the committee authored by legal scholar Erwin Chemerinsky.
[12] The reunion and archive was organized during the US House Select Committee on the January 6 Attack, to address ongoing concerns about checks and balances in American politics and mechanisms to protect the democratic process from "runaway chief executive power.
Freedman flew to New Jersey to gather 7,000 pages of transcripts and documents, as well as videotapes from ABC's networks, which formed the basis of the script.
[19] In 1991, he produced the documentary film adaptation of Stephen Hawking's A Brief History of Time, which was directed by Errol Morris.
He said "You've got to understand that to negotiate a deal with the man who holds Isaac Newton's seat at Oxford [University] is a very difficult job.
[23] In 1990, Freedman co-wrote Winter of Fire with Richard O. Collin, which dealt with US Army general James L. Dozier's kidnapping by the Italian terrorist group the Red Brigades.
[26] From 1996 to 1999, Freedman served as director for business development at California State University's Centre for Science, Technology, and Information Resources.
Freedman was vice president of Knowledge Exchange, a media publishing company which he co-founded with Michael Milken in 1994.