Between 2005 and 2008, Lindsay worked in the film and music industries as a documentary filmmaker, film editor, and composer at
MTV, the
Sundance Channel, and several independent post-production facilities. She served as an assistant story editor on the MTV reality show
8th & Ocean and Atmosphere Picture's
Trek Nation, a biographical documentary about
Star Trek creator
Gene Roddenberry. She worked as an assistant editor with Zak Tucker on
The Garden (Harbor Picture), previously known as
Body & Soul, by Swede Films. Furthermore, she founded and directed Get Thee to Nunnery Productions, an independent film company active from 2005 to 2017. In 2016, she co-founded So Fare Films in Rome, where she currently serves as director. In 2011, she wrote, produced, and directed
Jilbab, a 36-minute documentary on veiling trends for Muslim women in
Jogjakarta,
Indonesia. It has been screened in Boston University classrooms, as well as in the Muslim Women and the Challenge of Authority Lecture Series (2011), the
American Academy of Religion Mid-Atlantic Regional Meeting (2012), the American Academy of Religion Annual Meeting Film Series (Chicago 2012), and the
International Society for the Sociology of Religion Film Series (2013). In July 2012, she led a film team to produce a short film about the International Political Camp at Agape Centro Ecumenico, which included interviews on topics related to environmental and grassroots activism. Between 2013 and 2018, Lindsay was the staff documentarian for the Center for Mind and Culture and the Institute for the Bio-Cultural Study of Religion, producing short films for CMAC and IBCSR about the center's projects, thematically centered around the scientific study of religion, the nexus of brain, mind, and culture, and interdisciplinary scholarship. During that period, she completed
From Alef to Zayin: A Secular Jewish Education (2013), a 21-minute documentary about bar mitzvah students in a
secular humanist Jewish community. The film is intended to stimulate thinking about the role of Jewish identity, the idea of non-religious Judaism, and how the students understand and negotiate their own identities. It screened in San Diego, California at the
Society for Psychological Anthropology/Anthropology of Children and Youth Interest Group Annual Meeting in January 2013, and at the International Society for the Sociology of Religion in Louvain-la-Neuve, Belgium, in July 2015. In 2015, she completed
IBCSR: The Institute for the Bio-Cultural Study of Religion (2015), a 52-minute documentary about the Institute for the Bio-Cultural Study of Religion in Boston. Lindsay uses documentary film techniques to explore and explain the institute's research projects, and the dialogues between religion and science. Then, she worked on
Il Presepe di Calcata (2016), a 21-minute ethnographic documentary film about the Italian village of
Calcata and its residents, and follows the handmade Nativity scene (presepe in Italian) of the Dutch sculptor Marijcke van der Maden, a resident of Calcata since 1984. In 2020, Lindsay produced the award-winning documentary film
Quarantined Faith about the suspension of religious gatherings in Rome due to the
COVID-19 national lockdown in Italy during
Passover,
Easter, and
Ramadan. Also in 2020, Lindsay produced a short collection of
video journalism called
Quarantena alla Romana, which was selected for screening by the COVIDaVINCI Film Festival and the X World Short Film Festival. As of 2022, Lindsay is in production with
The Modeling Religion Project, Minding Shadows and
ShalOM, and in post-production with the documentary
Simulating Religious Violence.
The Modeling Religion Project is an 8-episode
docuseries about how scholars understand religion, how computer models help us understand the world we live in, and the art of working together across disciplines.
Minding Shadows tells the story of a Buddhist monk from Africa who survived the
Rwandan genocide in 1994 and grew up to teach mindfulness and healing practices globally.
ShalOM is a documentary partially funded by
KAICIID Dialogue Centre that recounts the story of dialogues between world leaders of Judaism and Hinduism, between 2007 and 2009.
Simulating Religious Violence is about how computer simulation can reveal solutions to worldwide humanitarian crises, following an international crew of computer scientists and religious scholars that develop a technology to prevent terrorist attacks. Lindsay has written about her use of documentary film as an anthropological method and how she uses her films as classroom teaching tools. ==Awards won by Quarantined Faith==