Aaron Saidman
Aaron Saidman is an American creator-developer, documentary filmmaker and television producer known for creating or serving as an executive producer on a number of non-fiction television series and documentary feature films, including , Mind Field, Declassified: Untold Stories of American Spies, The Pitch, The Seven Five and Free Meek. Saidman is the President and Co-Founder of The Intellectual Property Corporation, which he created in 2016 with longtime producing partner Eli Holzman.
In 2017, The Hollywood Reporter named Saidman one of the "Top 10 Power Players" in reality television. Later that year, Saidman won a Primetime Emmy Award for Leah Remini: Scientology and the Aftermath, in the category of Outstanding Informational Series or Special, as well as a TCA Award for Outstanding Achievement in Reality Programming, and a Producers Guild of America Award for Best Non-Fiction Television for the first and second seasons of the series. Saidman and Holzman developed the high-profile Scientology series with actress Leah Remini after Saidman heard that Remini and her agents were interested in producing a documentary about her experience in the Church of Scientology.
In 2018, Saidman was named President of Industrial Media, following CORE Media Group’s acquisition of The Intellectual Property Corporation. Saidman is a member of the Board of Directors of the International Documentary Association.
In 2019, Saidman and Anna Chai co-directed the Netflix documentary series Living Undocumented, which Saidman executive produced with Eli Holzman, Selena Gomez, and her mother Mandy Teefey, Sean O’Grady and Anna Chai. The series follows eight undocumented immigrants living in the United States. In 2019, Living Undocumented was nominated for an IDA Award for "Best Episodic Series."
In 2020, Saidman was one of the executive producers for the Netflix unscripted television series Indian Matchmaking.