25 years ago, Steven Ascher and Jeanne Jordan began filming a documentary about a new, one-year-old organization and the family that founded it. That organization was called the ALS Therapy Development Foundation, and its mission was to find treatments for ALS. It was started by Jamie Heywood, whose brother Stephen had been diagnosed with the disease at the age of 29.
The film they made, So Much So Fast, came out in 2006. It received critical acclaim and was screened at the Sundance Film Festival. It documents five years in the lives of the Heywood family as they dealt with Stephen’s progressing disease while simultaneously building what would eventually become ALS TDI, the world’s most comprehensive drug discovery lab dedicated solely to ALS.
Today, on Endpoints, Steven and Jeanne join us to talk about what it was like during the earliest days of ALS TDI, what it's been like watching the organization evolve, and how their own story helped inspire the film.
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