Features
- āThe highlights of my career have been when events Iāve producedāand intimately been involved ināhave united people and a region, more than the game itself,ā says ESPN's Vice President of Production Jay Rothman (Jourā84).
- When Savannah Sellers (Jour'13) graduated from CU six years ago, her current job didn't exist. That changed in 2017, when NBC News took the bold step of creating Stay Tuned, the first daily news show produced for Snapchat.
- As the 75th anniversary of the end of World War II approaches and airwaves begin to ļ¬ll with stories of distant battles won and the brave men who fought them, Kathleen M. Ryan, a documentary ļ¬lmmaker and associate professor of journalism, is focused on the veteran women who helped make those victories possible.
- The same qualities that draw student Hunter Rief to advertisingāan ability to embrace spontaneity and delve into the unknownāare at the heart of his main extracurricular activity: bolting across Folsom field with one of Americaās most famous buffaloes, CU Boulderās Ralphie.
- With smartphones and social media fueling a new era of video activism, Assistant Professor Sandra Ristovska says itās time we give images their due respect.
- To information science doctoral student Jordan Wirfs-Brock (MJourā10), data points on a graph and cascading notes on a piano can tell similar stories.
- Updates on our exceptional alumni, from the 1946 grad who wrote one of journalismās most seminal textbooks, to the 2018 grad who is CMCIās first-ever Department of Information Science alum.
- Scholars at the Center for Media, Religion and Culture look back through the decades to examine how media, religion and culture converge, from a 1956 box office record breaker to a confession app.