Ravens' Suggs has a new role Checking their watches before peering intently at the words of a script, actors and actresses read aloud and paced as they awaited their turn during a packed casting call. Inside the Hyatt Place hotel near the Baltimore Ravens' training complex, they're about to audition for a director and her discerning executive producer: Pro Bowl outside linebacker Terrell Suggs. Suggs is the president and CEO of a small, independent Maryland film company called Team Sizzle Worldwide, which has produced the short film"Sisters" and other brief productions. With the NFL mired in its first work stoppage in nearly a quarter-century after the players' union decertified, the owners instituted a lockout and the two sides duking it out in federal court, Suggs has remained busy without football to occupy his time. "It's a Catch 22, it's a double-edged sword because I don't get football right now," Suggs told the Carroll County Times. "I get my little workouts in the morning, and then it's film all day. It's pretty fun. I love it. I'm definitely trying to build something that's special, like a dynasty that I can pass onto my children." It's not a surprise that Suggs has gotten heavily involved in the movie industry. For several years, the small television that sits in Suggs' locker room stall has operated as a mecca for teammates eager to watch the latest DVD releases, usually action movies, before and after practice. Growing up in Chicago and Minneapolis before the family settled in Arizona, Suggs and his family always watched movies together. "You start with the sports movies like 'The Program' or 'Blue Clips', and 'Above the Rim'," Suggs said. "That's what we did as a family, me and my dad and my brothers." A four-time Pro Bowl selection on the football field, Suggs is also extremely serious about film. His company presented "Sisters" at the American Black Film Festival last year in South Beach, Fla., and it was well-received by critics. Monica Mingo, who worked for acclaimed director Spike Lee on the film "Miracle at St. Anna," created a movie about two sisters going through an "emotional period of discovery, self realization and redefined love," according to the movie's press notes.