Interface Media Group's works can be found in documentaries and entertainment programs that have aired on CNN, ESPN, HBO,[2] PBS,[3][4][5] the Discovery Networks,[6] TLC, and the National Geographic Channel.
Incorporated on February 7, 1977, as Interface Video Systems, Inc., by Tom Angell, the company opened its door for business on May 2 of that year with three employees and one linear editing bay.
Notable projects include: Interface Media Group was approached with the task of coordinating the post production and finishing of philanthropist Ted Turner's film Avoiding Armageddon.
[13] The eight-hour documentary series was created to raise awareness of the dangers of nuclear, biological and chemical weapons and the growing access to them.
In the end, this program aired in the U.S. on PBS over four consecutive nights in early spring 2003 as the war in Iraq raged and the effects of weapons of mass destruction were at its peak.
[16] Premiering in the fall of 2003, K Street was a weekly Sunday night docudrama on HBO that mixed fiction and reality on the famous corridor in Washington, DC.
The challenge for IMG, one of the series' production studios,[18] was creating concepts each week based on real ongoing political news.
[20] IMG helped PBS Kids created teasers, promos, channel packaging and other branded content which totaled to over 220 elements for the roll out of the new station.