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  1. Jeff Lieberman was born in 1947 in the Brooklyn borough of New York City. He made his feature film debut as the writer and director of the nature horror film Squirm (1976), about earthworms inundating a small Southern town and wreaking havoc. [3]

  2. Jeff Lieberman is a Brooklyn-born filmmaker who has made quirky and creative horror films such as Squirm, Blue Sunshine, and Satan's Little Helper. He also wrote and directed TV movies, commercials, and a TV series called Love You to Death.

    • January 1, 1
    • Writer, Director, Producer
    • Brooklyn, New York, USA
    • Jeff Lieberman
  3. Zucker Hillside Hospital. Jeffrey Alan Lieberman (born 1948) is an American psychiatrist who specializes in schizophrenia and related psychoses and their associated neuroscience (biology) and pharmacological treatment ( psychiatric drugs ). He was principal investigator for CATIE, the largest and longest independent study ever funded by the ...

  4. Feb 23, 2022 · The chair of the Columbia University Department of Psychiatry, Jeffrey Lieberman, apologized for a tweet he described as “racist and sexist.”. Brittainy Newman for The New York Times. By Lola ...

    • Lola Fadulu
  5. Jeff Lieberman. Writer: Satan's Little Helper. Writer-director Jeff Lieberman has crafted a handful of highly quirky, creative, and distinctive horror movies that are much enjoyed and appreciated by fans of offbeat and imaginative fright-film fare. His pictures are distinguished by their novel oddball plots and an amusingly eccentric sense of off-center humor. Born in Brooklyn, New York, in 1947, Lieberman attended the School of Visual Arts in New York City. Lieberman's...

    • October 16, 1947
  6. The official web site of Jeff Lieberman Squirm Blue Sunshine Remote Control Just Before Dawn Satan's Little Helper

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  8. Jeff L. Lieberman. Jeff L. Lieberman is a film director, screenwriter and producer of both narrative and documentary films. He is the founder of Re-Emerging Films and the filmmaker of Bella!, The Amazing Nina Simone, Re-Emerging: The Jews of Nigeria. [1] Bella! was a joint winner of the 2022 Library of Congress Lavine/Ken Burns Prize for Film.