Lichtenstein founded the Peabody Award-winning Lichtenstein Creative Media, Inc., in 1990. The company produced the "Voices of an Illness" documentary series, which featured people who were living with, and recovered from, serious mental illness. Lichtenstein Creative Media produced the documentary "If I Get Out Alive", narrated by Academy Award-winning actress and youth advocate
Diane Keaton, which revealed the harsh conditions and brutality faced by young people incarcerated in the adult correctional system. The program was honored with a National Headliner Award and a Casey Medal for Meritorious Journalism. Bill Lichtenstein produced and was director of photography of the award-winning documentary film,
West 47th Street, which aired on
PBS'
P.O.V., and was called "must see" by
Newsweek. The film won the
Atlanta and
DC Independent Film Festivals., and an Honorable Mention at the
Woodstock Film Festival. Lichtenstein created and was senior executive producer of the national, one-hour weekly series,
The Infinite Mind, which for a decade starting in 1998 was public radio's most honored and listened to health and science program. The Infinite Mind examined all aspects of
neuroscience,
mental health, and the
mind, including "how the brain works, and why it sometimes does not from a scientific, cultural and policy perspectives,".
The Infinite Mind was hosted by Dr. Fred Goodwin, the former head of the National Institute of Mental Health; Dr.
Peter Kramer, author of "
Listening to Prozac, and
John Hockenberry, and broke ground and news on such topics as: addiction;
Asperger syndrome;
Alzheimer's disease; bullying;
chronic fatigue syndrome; depression; mental health and immigrants;
posttraumatic stress disorder;
postpartum depression; and
teen suicide. The national broadcast was widely hailed for its coverage of the mental health impact of the
9/11 attacks, and for providing needed resources to public radio listeners. In addition to leading researchers and experts,
The Infinite Mind included notable guests, on a wide variety of topics including
John Updike (sleep); actors including
Carrie Fisher (living with bipolar); comedians
Richard Lewis (addiction) and
Lewis Black (anger); the
Firesign Theater (humor); author
William Styron and his wife Rose Styron (depression); baseball batting champ
Wade Boggs (
sports psychology); former First Lady
Rosalynn Carter (stigma); and live performances and discussions with musicians including
Aimee Mann,
Jessye Norman,
Judy Collins,
Suzanne Vega,
Loudon Wainwright III,
Philip Glass, and
Emanuel Ax. The decade-long series received major funding from the
MacArthur Foundation, the
National Science Foundation, the National Institutes of Health. the National Leadership Council of the National Alliance for Research on Schizophrenia and Depression (now known as the
Brain & Behavior Research Foundation); the advisory council of the Center for the Advancement of Children's Mental Health at
Columbia University; review committees at the National Institutes of Health and the National Science Foundation; and advisory boards of Families for Depression Awareness and the Parents/Professionals Advocacy League. Lichtenstein's work, and that of Lichtenstein Creative Media, has been honored with the top media awards from the major national mental health organizations, including the National Institute of Mental Health;
American Psychiatric Association; National Mental Health Association; National Alliance on Mental Illness; American College of Neuropsychopharmacology; and the National Alliance for Research on Schizophrenia and Depression. ==New York Times Op-Ed==