May 13th, 2013

Nina Seavey, director of GW's Documentary Center, has recently won numerous awards for one of her productions, "The War at Home." The film provides at once a sweeping, yet intimate, look at the profound changes brought on by World War II, a transformation that ushered America into the modern era.

Produced for the National Park Service, "The War at Home" will be watched by thousands of people as they visit the National Historical Park in San Francisco, California. It will screen every hour for the next two decades in a theater specifically designed to immerse audiences in the emotional experience of the film.
The War at Home
Here's a listing of the awards the film has won so far:

Silver Telly (first place) - History/Biography
Silver Telly (first place) - Sound/Sound Mix
Bronze Telly (second place) - Set Design
Bronze Telly - (second place) - Screen Writing
Special Jury Prize - Best in Video and Film Production, Worldfest Houston
Gold Communicator Award of Excellence - Screen Writing, International Academy of the Visual Arts
Gold Communicator Award of Excellence - Use of Music, International Academy of the Visual Arts
Silver Communicator Award of Distinction - History/Biography, International Academy of the Visual Arts
Silver Communicator Award of Distinction - Set Design, International Academy of the Visual Arts

Click here for more information.


May 9th, 2013

By Sara Snyder
PCM '13

The end of last week marked the biggest and one of the final steps in my GW career as a graduating Political Communication major. I hosted my very first documentary preview screening for my film, "Verge of Existence." The piece, funded by the first ever Manheim-Sterling Undergraduate Research Prize, looks into the lives of LGBTQ homeless youth living in New York City. As I spent hours last week in the edit bays of the 5th floor, I couldn't help but realize that these may be some of the last moments I would edit here. And as the hours ticked by, I felt a strange sense of nostalgia for the many hours I had already spent in SMPA over the last four years.

Sara Snyder on panel

Sara sat on a panel as a student filmmaker.

While I may have been the kid who knew from the minute I stepped onto GW's campus that I wanted to come here, I couldn't have predicted the amazing opportunities and path I would take as an SMPA student. Thinking I was going to be a political reporter, I pursued my first internship with a local government as their communications intern. Almost as soon as I had signed on, I was ready to be done with this whole government thing. And this experience left me quickly without a dream job.

But with the support of some of the best SMPA faculty and the Internship Database, I began to find my footing right where my heart had been set the entire time. My mini-documentary from Jason Osder's class landed in the National Film Festival for Talented Youth in 2011, and I got to sit on a panel called "Out of the Closet, Onto the Screen" as an 'expert' student filmmaker. I traveled to Chattanooga, TN with Bridgett Lynn to see what made the newest Volkswagen Plant the first LEED Platinum Auto Plant in the world. I did all of this while interning with amazing companies like Prime Movers Media, Planet Forward, Spark Media, Believe Out Loud and National Geographic Society.

Sara Snyder at Preview Screening

Sara at her documentary's preview screening.

But none of these opportunities would have meant anything without having incredible peers in both Political Communication and Journalism who pushed me to be my best. Production partners, classmates, friends and colleagues have been some of my greatest collaborators, toughest critics and most loyal fans that I have grown to respect and admire. By the time you take Senior Seminar, it is no longer just a class but a weekly family gathering.

When the lights went down and the music started playing from my film, I was overwhelmed by how many familiar faces filled my audience. I have felt so much love and support from my classmates and all of the amazing professors that helped me reach my full potential in this program.

I have never felt more proud to be part of a community like SMPA. People always say that SMPA majors have more SMPA pride than GW pride, and I can certainly say that I've felt that last week. There is no place I have been more proud to call home than the School of Media and Public Affairs.


April 26th, 2013

Last night Professor Jason Osder's documentary, "Let the Fire Burn," won big at the Tribeca Film Festival, taking home the award for Best Editing in a Documentary Feature, as well as a special jury mention for Best New Documentary Director.

Let the Fire Burn

The jury said about the film: "'Let the Fire Burn' tells a story we were stunned to realize we didn't know. It offers a time capsule, taking us to a horrific moment in our nation's history with a masterfully structured edit that vividly mines a trove of blistering period archive images without voiceover narration. The film ensures that a criminal and senseless destruction that cost eleven deaths—five children, six adults—shakes us to our core and is remembered with utter visceral power."

Osder

The documentary explores the events leading up to and during the 1985 standoff between the extremist African-American MOVE organization and Philadelphia authorities. The police dropped two pounds of military explosives onto a city row house occupied by members of MOVE; even though firefighters were on site, the fire was not fought for over an hour. The clash between groups, destruction of 61 homes and deaths of 11 people devastated the community.

Zeba Blay of Indiewire wrote, "There have been many documentaries comprised entirely out of archival footage, but few as powerfully and masterfully structured as this one... a visually textured and fascinating piece of storytelling that steers clear of editorialization and manipulation by allowing the content to speak for itself."


November 15th, 2012

By Zinhle Essamuah

Though the District air was at a frigid 40-something degrees on Tuesday night, the inside of Lisner Auditorium was buzzing with anticipation. On November 13, filmmaker and co-founder of Invisible Children, Jason Russell, spoke publicly for the first time since his streaking incident that occurred shortly after his KONY2012 video - the most viral video in Internet history - was released.

Lisner Auditorium was far from full, but the event was highly interactive and audience members were encouraged to write, email or text any questions they had for Russell. Before Russell spoke, Invisible Children's newest video, "MOVE," was aired.

The video has gained around 26,000 views over the past two weeks, a small number when one considers the success of the first KONY2012 movie. Still, Russell remains optimistic and dedicated to his cause - emphasizing the idea that every human life is valuable and every human interaction is a way of someone asking:

"Do you see me? Do you hear me? Does what I say mean anything to you?"

Russell was reverent about his streaking incident and apologized to anyone he may have offended, confused or disappointed. After his apology Russell discussed the power we, as the dubbed "millennial generation," have to make positive change in the world. He then proceeded to answer select audience questions, including: "What would you have done differently about the KONY2012 movement and video?"

Russell stated that he would have prepared the Invisible Children website more adequately. The site crashed as a result of the unprecedented amount of viewers and the Invisible Children organization could only communicate via Tumblr. Russell attributed this to much of the miscommunication and misinformation that occurred in the days following the video's release.

Currently, the organization is promoting and prepping for its big end-of-the-year KONY2012 events, LOBBY: DC and MOVE: DC, happening this Friday, November 16 and Saturday, November 17. These events are projected to have 10,000 people from around the world in attendance.

Zinhle with Jason Russell.

A group from the GW's Invisible Children Chapter will be leaving from Kogan Plaza at 7:15 a.m. Saturday morning to attend the event. The chapter connects with students through its Facebook and Twitter pages.

Whatever your qualms, questions or criticisms are regarding the KONY2012 movement, as media students we should see the work of Jason Russell as a reminder of our potential. He successfully made the most viral video in Internet history and has empowered youth across the world to believe they have the power to be the change-makers of today. As the end of the semester approaches, let his work remind us that we are attending GW not just to earn a degree, but to learn how to be effective journalists and political communicators who can make positive social change through media. Thank you, Jason Russell, for sharing your story and passion with us.


July 2nd, 2012

Although many of our students have departed from campus for summer break, SMPA never takes a vacation from collecting accolades. Recently, the Global Media Institute won top prize at the New York Festivals’ 30th Annual Radio Awards and Professor Nina Seavey was named one of the top fifty journalism and communications professors in the country!

Professor Nina Seavey was named a top professor of journalism.

Professor Seavey, director of The Documentary Center, received her latest honor from journalismdegree.org, a career website.  The list of professors, many of whom are internationally recognized experts in the field, were honored for their ability to  “inspire future reporters and communicators to explore the field of journalism.” Professor Seavey founded the Center in 1990 and has produced many highly acclaimed documentaries on a variety of subjects. Her work has won many awards including an Emmy, the Erik Barnouw Prize for Best Historical Film of the Year, and the Golden Hugo. Seavey also served as the founding director and executive producer of SILVERDOCS: AFI/Discovery Channel Documentary Festival, the largest documentary festival in the US.

Courtesy of the New York Festivals

Also recently, SMPA's Global Media Institute was honored with a Grand Jury Trophy for Best Talk/Interview Special for its production of The Kalb Report: Anchoring 9/11.  In this special edition of The Kalb Report, moderator and legendary journalist Marvin Kalb discussed the decade following September 11th with a panel of journalists who covered that tragic day: Charles Gibson (ABC), Dan Rather (CBS), Brit Hume (FOX), and SMPA Director Frank Sesno, who, in 2001, was serving as CNN’s Washington bureau chief. The program, which airs nationally on both Sirius XM Satellite Radio and public television stations, beat out hundreds of broadcasts submitted from around the world to win top honors.

Professor Michael Freedman, executive producer of The Kalb Report, attended the awards ceremony with Kalb to accept the prize—a trophy resembling an art deco radio microphone—on behalf of the Global Media Institute.

“We are deeply touched to be recognized by The New York Festivals which celebrates the most enduring and endearing medium of all – radio,” said Freedman.  “To see our students light up when they first feel the magic of the medium is so very special and to have their efforts rewarded with an honor of this magnitude can only deepen their commitment to raise the bar for the next generation.”

This Just In!, another program produced by the Global Media Institute, received a Gold World Medal at the ceremony. The winning entry included a master class conducted last summer by Professor Freedman and Richard C. Hottelet, the remaining living "Murrow Boy."

The Kalb Report: Anchoring 9/11 can be watched below.


May 25th, 2012

As their final project for Professor Jason Osder's Spring 2012 Introduction to Digital Media Production class, students Matthew Kwiecinski (JMC '14), Max Schwager (JMC '14), and Zoe Valentine (PCM '14) created a short documentary about Twitter use on the campus of The George Washington University. For the film, the students interviewed Peter Konwerski, Dean of Students, Tim Miller, Associate Dean of Students (CSE), and Lorraine Voles, Vice President for External Relations.

Watch #GWU: A Mini-Documentary below.


April 20th, 2012

Beth Murphy, a 1992 alumna of The Documentary Center, will be premiering her latest documentary at the prestigious Tribeca Film Festival this weekend.

Her film, The List, details the struggles of Kirk Johnson to help former Iraqi co-workers escape their war-torn country.  Johnson worked for the United States Agency for International Development rebuilding Iraqi infrastructures destroyed in the war. However, upon his return home from the Middle East, he received word of former Iraqi co-workers being targeted as “traitors” to their country for having worked with Americans.  Johnson immediately began compiling a list of threatened Iraqis and attempting to secure their safe passage out of Iraq.  The List follows his efforts over the course of four years, highlighting the stories of Iraqis he has helped.

How did Murphy choose this subject to be the focus of her next documentary project?  She serves on the board of the International Institute of New England, an organization that helps settle refugees in the Boston area.  In early 2007, the organization was told to prepare for a large influx of Iraqi refugees, especially those who had worked directly for the United States government who were being kidnapped and killed by fellow Iraqis.  This expected flood of refugees, however, never arrived.  Murphy called the State Department to find answers, and her investigation led her to Johnson.  Less than a month after meeting him, Murphy began filming. To document the story, Murphy traveled from Iraq to Egypt, Jordan, and Syria, braving war zones and hostile attitudes.

“Wherever he was going with his remarkable one-man fight, I wanted to document it,” Murphy explains.  “To me, Kirk Johnson represents the best of America – who we want to be or imagine ourselves to be when we engage in the world.”

This is not Beth’s first Tribeca experience.  Her first feature, Beyond Belief, premiered at Tribeca in 2007.

“I’m looking forward to having the film’s world premiere in an environment that truly feels like family,” says Murphy.

When asked what advice she could give to aspiring documentary filmmakers, she shared this bit of wisdom: “The most important thing I learned is to just stay true to the story you’re trying to tell," she says. This lesson recently was reiterated by her former teacher, SMPA research professor and director of The Documentary Center, Nina Seavey.

“One of the most profound things I heard during production came from Nina," says Murphy. "Since I studied at The Documentary Center, Nina has been a mentor and friend, and she served as story consultant for The List. I had been editing for weeks to establish the film’s narrative structure, and knew I’d finally had an important breakthrough.  Nina said, 'The story—as it wants to be told—is revealing itself to you.'  And I love what that says about documentary filmmaking and about life itself."

Seavey has enjoyed watching Murphy develop into a skilled filmmaker.

"Becoming a filmmaker is not about even making one film, or many, it is about exploring the world around you in an honest, truthful, and engaging way," says Seavey.  "Over the years, Beth has grown and matured so much in these critical areas as she has been finding her own, unique voice as a filmmaker.  It has been a privilege for me to be part of that discovery."

The List premieres on Saturday, April 21, 2012.  The documentary is one of twelve films competing in the "World Documentary" category. Watch the film's trailer below.


April 10th, 2012

SMPA Journalism & Mass Communication senior Reid Davenport dreamed of studying abroad in Italy during his junior year.  After GW accepted his application, he was informed by the study abroad administrators in Florence that much of the country was not wheelchair accessible. Davenport, who often relies on a wheelchair due to cerebral palsy, was discouraged from traveling abroad.  Rather than give up, Davenport decided to confront the issue with a camera.

Utilizing the skills he learned in School of Media and Public Affairs’ assistant professor Jason Osder’s “Introduction to Digital Media Production” course, Davenport choose to create a documentary exploring the lack of handicapped accessibility in Europe.  He resolved to travel to Europe on his own to complete the project.

To fund his documentary and the traveling it would require, Davenport first applied for and received a $5,000 Luther Rice Collaborative Fellowship from the Columbian College of Arts and Sciences.  He then sought to raise a matching amount of funds using Kickstarter, a website that crowdsources funding for creative projects. The online fundraising campaign exceeded his expectations, raising over $8,000 from more than 150 donors.

“He has exceeded expectations at every juncture,” says Professor Osder, who serves as Davenport’s faculty advisor.  “Reid is very much an overachiever.”

Thanks to the support he received, Davenport spent three weeks in January with a cameraman traveling to Dublin, Brussels, Naples, Florence, and Paris to document the challenges of navigating Europe in a wheelchair.  He also interviewed 13 Europeans knowledgeable about the issue, ranging from a fellow college student in a wheelchair to a director of a disability advocacy group, to explore the problems and potential solutions further.

His trip was not without struggles.  While there, he grappled with airport security, a broken wheelchair, and finding handicapped-accessible public transportation and taxis.

“I experienced my fair share of overwhelming challenges during my trip,” says Davenport.  “I hoped to capture and portray those challenges in the documentary.”

When asked what he hopes to achieve with his film, titled Wheelchair Diaries, Davenport explains, “I want to share with viewers the experience of living with a disability, and try to catalyze change for accessibility.  I also hope viewers not only get a sense of how different it is to be disabled, but despite our differences, see how much we all are the same.”

Davenport currently is editing the final version of the film, but it already has garnered praise.  During GW Research Days last week, he presented his documentary’s rough cut, which earned him the third-place prize in the Undergraduate Humanities and Creative Arts poster contest for his work. He is planning a premiere screening in late-April for his donors and friends to see the finished product. Professor Osder believes it will be a great success.

Wheelchair Diaries truly is an extraordinary project,” he says.  “I feel confident we will see his documentary in many film festivals in the future.”


April 6th, 2012

The School of Media and Public Affairs, Planet Forward, and National Geographic have partnered on a new project called National Geographic Virtual Studios.  Using media from National Geographic's scientists and explorers, students are able to create short web videos highlighting topics ranging from conservation to exploration.  The ultimate goal of the project is to inspire others to care more about our planet.

Gabriella Demczuk, a student in SMPA Director Frank Sesno's Planet Forward class, has created the first Virtual Studio video.  Using footage and interviews from National Geographic's archives, she produced “Deforestation: Saving Madagascar's Forests,” demonstrating how National Geographic's Dr. Luke Dollar works to save the rare planets and animals that make the forests their home.  Her video can be viewed on National Geographic's website.


February 24th, 2012

I Am, a documentary short created by junior Sara Snyder (PCM '13) and SMPA alumnus Stephen Molldrem (PCM '11) has been selected to be screened at the 2012 Undergraduate Ethics Symposium at DePauw University.

Students from across the country were invited to submit their work to the symposium, and Snyder has been chosen as one of only 30 students to attend the symposium to showcase the film.  I Am explores gender identity, sexual orientation, and LGBTQ culture.  It previously was screened at GW's Transnational Queer Film Studies Symposium.

Watch the documentary short below.