Her work has been described as having “a bracing, assertive style” (Variety[1]), "emotional intelligence" (Los Angeles Times[2]), and as “cementing the reign over highly stylized, sexually progressive dramas” (Slant[3]).
In her unscripted show for Vice Media,[8] Every Woman, she lived and worked as a stripper in a truck-stop in New Mexico, which she discovered while location scouting for Bare.
[9] She went on to create a pilot for a Vice TV series with a similar concept in which she would immerse herself in different female-centric worlds as a form of first-person investigative journalism.
Her directorial debut, Bare, stars Dianna Agron, Paz de la Huerta, Chris Zylka, and Louisa Krause.
The film has been described as a "David Fincher-style thriller,"[13] "bravely tackling the dark side of empowerment,"[14] and as "an angry as hell piece of pulpy and politicized pop cinema.