Gonna Be An Engineer: Breaking Barriers In Music Production & Technology (Published in She Shreds Magazine)

I wrote about an event called “GONNA BE AN ENGINEER: Breaking Barriers in Music Production & Technology” that I attended in NYC in April 2018.  You can read it online on She Shreds.

The event was hosted by She Shreds Magazine curated by SADIE DUPUIS of Sad13 & Speedy Ortiz who moderated a panel discussion with mega badass babes EMILY LAZAR, DANIELLE DEPALMA, NATALIE HERNANDEZ & SUZI ANALOGUE

The night was super inspiring & I’m grateful for the opportunity to have attended and write about it for She Shreds Magazine Issue #15 (July 2018). I hope the stories & words of these amazing women also inspire many others!


 

Tales From Planet Earth Film Festival – Madison, Wisconsin

In 2009, Working Films partnered with the Nelson Institute for Environmental Studies at UW-Madison to help guide the Tales from Planet Earth Film Festival in its 2nd year. The festival connected with local nonprofits directly involved in issues explored by films created by UW-Madison student filmmakers.

  • A group that provides a shelter for the homeless and low-income housing strives to create stable jobs for its clients by marketing a line of home-grown specialty food products.
  • A local Latino organization seeks to steer at-risk youths toward positive social influences, to encourage them to set constructive goals, and to create opportunities for young people through immigration reform.
  • A Dane County wildlife rehabilitation center that operates on a shoestring works to save hundreds of injured and orphaned animals each year and promote the value of wildlife in human communities.

The film festival helps create greater community awareness and support for organizations and their work.

We worked with students to craft their own outreach campaign specifically unique to the issues covered in their films. As Social Media Strategist, my specialty was helping the students use digital and social media to promote, engage and document their campaigns. I got to attend various events and film screenings related to the festival and created the videos below:


Working Films is a national nonprofit organization that links film to cutting-edge activism. 

Growing a Healthy Community: gardens educate, unite residents

What originally started as an internship for Lynn Casper’s public sociology class has launched a community initiative to make Northside Resource Center the location of Wilmington’s latest community garden.

The University of North Carolina Wilmington senior already had an interest in gardening, and after reading up on progressive cities launching successful community gardens and the social benefits, she jumped at the idea of starting some in the Wilmington area.

Casper’s job as the Community Gardens Coordinator was to reach out to local organizations and build relationships to form a collaborative project.

“Our goal in doing this is to create awareness that community gardens and green space in general are beneficial for communities. So when other communities are being developed, space will be included for more garden space,” she said.

The project began in the fall of 2006 when the Kate B. Reynolds Foundation helped the Wilmington Housing Authority fund the garden and nutrition program through the Obesity Prevention Initiative. The goal is to provide residents in public housing access to healthy lifestyles. The community garden came up as an idea because past research has shown that such gardens bring residents together. In addition, it gives them access to fresh fruits and vegetables.

The first public housing community garden was started last year at Sunset South. That garden had proved successful so the initiative wanted to continue in different neighborhoods.

Resident Ernestine Walker, who participated in cultivating the Sunset South garden, said the project has helped not only as a social gathering but also in keeping the residents physically active.

Randolph Keaton of the Wilmington Housing Authority, who oversees Casper’s internship, said projects like these are an excellent way to bring the young and the elderly working together.

“It gives the kids a sense of ownership and pride and teaches them to care for the earth and their community,” he said.

Eight-year-old Nicolas Baldwin and younger brother Jalen planted anxiously and said they would be back as often as possible to check on the progress of the garden.

Community Garden Initiative partners include The Wilmington Housing Authority, University of North Carolina Wilmington public sociology students and faculty, Healthy Carolinians Obesity Prevention Initiative, New Hanover County Cooperative Extension, Northside Resource Center, Food Bank, Kids Making It, Tidal Creek Cooperative Market. 

Source: Star-News, 2007