Hamer turned to documentary filmmaking to address complex scientific and social issues often overlooked by the mainstream media. In 2005, he and partner
Joe Wilson formed Qwaves with the mission of producing "insightful and provocative films that emanate from the voices of those on the outside and compel us to question and to act." Their short films won multiple awards including winner of the PBS Independent Lens Shorts Festival and Seeds of Tolerance Award.
Out in the Silence, the first feature film from Qwaves, documented the controversy that was ignited by Hamer and Wilson's wedding announcement in Wilson's conservative small hometown in Pennsylvania The film was supported by the
Sundance Documentary Film Program and won an
Emmy Award for achievement in documentary. The Out in the Silence Youth Activism Award was initiated in 2011 to highlight the contributions of young people to achieving respect, inclusion and equality for lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender people. In 2011, Hamer and Wilson moved to
Hawaiʻi to begin a series of films about
Pacific Islander lives and voices and long tradition of acceptance of sexual and gender minorities. Their feature documentary
Kumu Hina, about
transgender native Hawaiian teacher and cultural icon
Hinaleimoana Wong-Kalu, was supported by
ITVS, Pacific Islanders in Communications and the
Ford Foundation and won the
GLAAD Media Award for Outstanding Documentary and the
Independent Lens Audience Award on
PBS In 2017, Hamer and Wilson, with Hinaleimoana Wong-Kalu as producer, released
Leitis in Waiting and
Lady Eva, which documented the lives of transgender women in the conservative South Pacific Kingdom of Tonga. This was followed in 2019 by
The Rogers, about transgender men in Samoa. These films became part of a campaign to decriminalize same-sex relationships across the Pacific. Hamer, Wilson and Wong-Kalu continued their collaboration in 2020 with the animated short film
Kapaemahu, based on the hidden history of four stones on Waikiki Beach placed there as a tribute to four legendary
mahu who first brought the healing arts from Tahiti to Hawaii. It premiered and won the Special Jury Prize at the
Tribeca Film Festival and was shortlisted for an Oscar as Best Animated Short Film at the
93rd Academy Awards. The animated film was followed by a children's book published by Kokila, a PBS feature documentary, a multimedia exhibition at the Bishop Museum, permanent display at the Hawaiʻi Convention center, and inclusion in new interpretative signage at the Kapaemahu monument in Waikiki. The team's most recent film is
Aikane, an animated short based on the Hawaiian term for intimate friends of the same sex. It won two Academy Award-qualifying film festival awards and was nationally distributed by
Conde Nast on the
Them platform. In 2024, Hamer initiated a multimedia community engagement and storytelling effort on the "Queer Histories of Hawaiʻi." Funded by the
Mellon Foundation, the project aims to document and memorialize gender and sexual diversity across the multicultural landscape of the Hawaiian islands. Hamer is a frequent guest on TV documentaries and news shows including
Good Morning America,
Nightline and
The Oprah Winfrey Show. He is featured in the
Barbara Walters' special
Heaven and
Bill Maher documentary
Religulous, and has been profiled in
Time magazine. ==Scholarly influence==