While records indicating precisely when Newland entered film production have not surfaced, newspaper publicity for his
Hero films credited him with producing one-reelers with
Mary Pickford, James Kirkwood,
Flora Finch and
John Bunny. Since Bunny died in 1915, Newland would have started in films while still a teenager. He also was credited with directing comedies for
Mack Sennett. In the early 1920s, Newland began the frenetic itinerant work that would take him all over the United States capturing communities and their citizens in
two-reeler comedies that used the same simple, customizable plot. Operating as the Consolidated Film Producing Co. of Los Angeles, California, he was generally commissioned by local newspapers to produce the films, which always contained the role of a reporter and a prominent look at how the local newspaper was produced – although the papers often stressed that the project was not an advertising film. Contests were frequently held in each community to determine who the "leading lady" would be. Filming usually took place in no more than three days, with Newland directing a cameraman and one or two crew members. A standard bit of action was to stage a head-on car crash on a city street using "
trick photography;" two cars would be placed bumper to bumper and a smoke bomb released under the radiators. The cars would then be backed away from each other and the film, when developed and reversed, would appear to show a head-on collision. Developing and editing took another couple of days, and within a week of Newland's arrival in town, the
Hero film would be shown to the community at a local
movie theater. When sound pictures became the standard after 1929, Newland adjusted to meet the technological advance. It is believed that only one print of each of his films was made. Some have survived and enjoyed revivals in the communities in which they were shot. Currently only four of these "Hero" films are known to exist. These films are ''Janesville's Hero
(1926), Belvidere's Hero
(1926), Huntingdon's Hero
(April 1934), and Tyrone's Hero
(May 1934). With Towanda's Queen,'' a total of five Newland films survive. ==Personal life==