Susan Gard was recently nominated for two 2025 Suncoast Emmy® Awards for WGCU Untold Stories: Sanibel Island's Store (Documentary - Historical) and Rising: Surviving the Surge (Documentary - Topical). Susan is an associate producer at WGCU, a small local PBS/NPR station in Fort Myers, Florida while pursuing the online MA Media Producing program. Read our interview with Susan to learn more about her:
How long have you been a producer?
I have been producing professionally since 2008.
Did you always want to be a producer or did your creative work and experiences lead you in that direction?
I have wanted to be a producer since high school. I have always loved films, and I have a very analytical way of thinking, so I want to know how something works. When I learned how many moving parts it takes to make a film, I was hooked because it seemed like the ultimate challenge. I’m sure that sounds odd, but in my experience, the best, most rewarding moments in life have come with a great deal of hard work. When I tell people what I do, they think it’s so easy and fun to be in a creative field, but they have no idea how hard the work can really be. That being said, I think this work is the most fun when the pressure is on.
As an associate producer in the documentary unit of WGCU, please tell us about your process for bringing those important stories and narratives to life.
WGCU is a small local PBS/NPR station in Fort Myers, FL. While we benefit from the monikers of PBS and NPR, it is entirely up to us to secure funding and an audience for our programming. Typically, our documentaries are funded through grants and individual donations. We choose our topics based on the educational and historical importance of each story, and we usually go with evergreen issues that affect our broadcast area — 12 counties in Southwest Florida. While the exact process for each doc varies, it always starts with interviewing as many people as possible and seeing if they have any visuals to accompany their stories. With frequent storms and a population that moves frequently, Florida's history is notoriously difficult to visually represent. That said, there is an incredible state archive we use often, but we always prefer first-hand visuals.

