Bleep contains a grab-bag of topics covering physics, neuroscience, new age spirituality, and a theme of overcoming addiction. But it also contains a presentation on philosophical topics. The philosophical subject of the documentary is that Free Will is embodied in quantum mechanics of particles, and therefore, we being made of those particles, inherit this Free Will, and so we create our own reality through exercising choice. The dramatized parts of Bleep show flashy computer graphics of expanding energy bubbles whenever the main character makes a life-altering choice ,to indicate that reality is snapping into the new direction. The presentation is not intended to be academic, since they never resort to naming the philosophical position, even when it has one. That would require that the experts being interviewed would mention the word "panpsychism". The word appears nowhere in the documentary.
Other philosophies follow suit in this regard. Panpsychism claims that all matter is mind, thus more complex living organisms inherit this pre-existing mind-property from matter itself, and come to express it more fully. Historical debates in the history of philosophy, such as the Mind/Body problem, are superficially laid to rest. Hylozoism is analogous, in claiming that all matter is in some sense alive, proto-alive , or containing a potential for alive-ness. Living complex organisms then inherit the proto-life substance/potentiality and come to express it more fully. Age-old questions, "Why is there life in the universe?", "Why did life emerge in the universe?" are laid to rest (superficially anyway).
Panexperientialism and so-called "quantum consciousness" are another example. By claiming that all matter everywhere is in some sense already containing internal phenomenal experience, then all living organisms, being made of that matter, in turn inherit this pre-existing property. This again appears to (superficially) solve the Hard Problem of Consciousness.
To see that all of the above philosophies share a common seed, one need only consider the contrary stance to them, which I will call Organizationalism. The author admits to coining a neologism here: Organizationalism. This epistemological commitment says that being alive is a property most directly caused by the organization of matter, not of its intrinsic physical properties. The rest of the afore-claimed properties also fall against this epistemology, one by one. If some entity in the world has a mind, it is due only to the organization of its constituent molecules. If a living entity is conscious, it is because of the organization and connectivity of the cells in its brain. If a living being engages in mental choices and acts on those choices, its free will is due mostly to the organization of its brain.

In addition to "they way things are put together" there is also the way a thing uses energy, and whether it takes in energy or not. That is to say, whether it is located in a spot in the universe in which energy goes into it perpetually. So both organizational and dynamical properties combine to support the epistemology of Organizationalism. This topic was raised (surprisingly on TV), when Charlie Rose interviewed roboticist Rodney Brooks. At the end of the interview, he asked if his research also had an aim to uncover whether all aspects of the human mind could be explained by "parts turning on parts". That is to say, the parts are not alive, the parts do not have minds, the parts are not conscious, and the parts do not make choices. Only by virtue of them turning on each other, dynamically, organizationally .... do all these higher, more noble, properties emerge.
Organizationalism was relied on by myself in other threads on this very forum. In one instance, I referred living cells in the body of humans as "blind, dumb, mechanical machines". This appears to be the case when immune cells react to the ebola virus. Further, all viral infection appears in support of this.
At the end of the day, there are two contrasting tracts of thought here; two philosophical ideologies at odds with one another. On one side is the hylozoism/panpsychism/conscious-matter Camp. And standing opposite them, is the Organizationalist Camp. I would say that both camps are completely valid and defend-able as philosophical positions. Both are valid ways of understanding the world around us.
This author can find bothersome, philosophical holes in both camps. A tireless, objective commitment to Organizationalism appears to raise more questions than it answers, and a person ends up having to rely on a multi-verse, that is, a collection of an infinite number of universes. That bothers me psychologically, because it smells very much like an explanation that goes: "The world is supported on the back of a turtle and it's turtles all the way down." A singular, self-contained universe like the one we occupy, seems more fitting if it is hylozoist in its nature.