The Price Bandit (David Wadley) increases black homeownership by offering a nationwide database of nearly two million foreclosed homes updated twice daily. Some properties are available for less than $60,000. Homes are often listed at 30 to 50 percent below market value, and valuable resources are provided, such as state-specific laws, educational articles, and step-by-step guides for first-time h...The Price Bandit (David Wadley) increases black homeownership by offering a nationwide database of nearly two million foreclosed homes updated twice daily. Some properties are available for less than $60,000. Homes are often listed at 30 to 50 percent below market value, and valuable resources are provided, such as state-specific laws, educational articles, and step-by-step guides for first-time homebuyers. He is also the writer, producer, and director of Dark Angels, the first faith-based gangsta film, available on multiple streaming services, including Prime Video and Tubi.Wadley created Black Film School on YouTube, where filmmakers and digital creators can find FREE instructional videos presented by movie industry experts to assist them with writing, producing, directing, editing, distributing, and marketing professional projects for a global audience.Wadley has worked for Warner Bros. Studios, Sony Pictures, MGM Studios and is a member of the Motion Picture Editors Guild, IATSE Local 700. He was the Supervising Sound Editor on Soul Plane (2004) and a Production Assistant on the Hollywood sets of movies produced by Steven Spielberg, Spike Lee, Robert De Niro, and Melvin Van Peebles.Wadley was acknowledged with "Special Thanks" in the closing credits of The Invisible War (2012). Two days after watching this Academy Award-nominated documentary, former CIA Director and U.S. Secretary of Defense, Leon E. Panetta, directed military commanders to hand over all sexual assault investigations to a higher-ranking colonel and announced that each branch of the United States Armed Forces would establish a Special Victims Unit.Dark Angels (1998) was the first feature film released in what eventually became known as the Hard Faith film genre. Wadley, a pioneering African American filmmaker, ignored conventional Hollywood storytelling and broke new ground as the writer, producer, and director of Dark Angels.