Posts by Brandon Talton | Today at Elon | 51±ŹÁÏÍű /u/news Thu, 18 Jun 2026 20:54:43 -0400 en-US hourly 1 Danielle Martinelli-Taylor ’12 shares her path to somatic boxing therapy on ‘Elon Beyond the Bricks’ /u/news/2026/06/15/danielle-martinelli-taylor-12-shares-her-path-to-somatic-boxing-therapy-on-elon-beyond-the-bricks/ Mon, 15 Jun 2026 16:02:00 +0000 /u/news/?p=1049101

Danielle Martinelli-Taylor ’12 has built her career around helping people move through pain toward healing. As the founder of Animo Counseling and Coaching in Denver, Colorado, she works with clients through a holistic mind-body approach to mental health, including somatic boxing therapy. In the latest episode of “Elon Beyond the Bricks,” President Connie Ledoux Book sits down with Martinelli-Taylor to explore the experiences that led her to a career in trauma counseling.

A graduate of Elon’s School of Communications, Martinelli-Taylor majored in strategic communications and minored in religious studies before her career turned toward mental health care. That shift began with moments she did not fully recognize at the time, including an Elon class on human trafficking that opened her eyes to the reality of trauma and stayed with her long after graduation.

“I think like a lot of things, there were moments, but I hadn’t added them up yet,” she said.

Danielle Martinelli-Taylor ’12 is a graduate of Elon’s School of Communications, where she majored in strategic communications and minored in religious studies.

After graduation, Martinelli-Taylor’s path moved through customer service at Wayfair, nonprofit work in London and continued reflection on the kind of work that felt meaningful. Each step helped her better understand what she was drawn to, what she needed to move away from and how service could become a throughline in her life and career.

That search eventually led her to counseling, where she began working with clients who had experienced trauma. She noticed that talk therapy alone was not always the right entry point, especially when asking clients to revisit painful stories could bring them back into that experience. From there, she began developing a new approach.

“What can we do that still heals or helps the body get rid of this distress, this intensity, this pain, but not necessarily just… talking about it?” she said.

Somatic boxing therapy grew from that question and from Martinelli-Taylor’s own experience using boxing to process the emotional weight of counseling work. Over time, she began incorporating pads and bilateral movement into sessions, helping clients reconnect with strength, courage and a sense of agency.

“Find your strength, find your resilience find that courage,” she said.

Danielle Martinelli-Taylor ’12 practices somatic boxing therapy with a patient.

While her work now sits in the mental health field, Martinelli-Taylor still sees clear connections to her Elon education. Her communications background has helped her explain a new therapeutic model, build a practice and share her work with clients and other professionals.

“I’m glad I had a marketing background. I’m glad I had a little bit of a PR background because so much, even though it’s counseling and mental health, it’s a lot of business,” she said.

Martinelli-Taylor’s story was featured in the 2025 President’s Report because of the meaningful impact she is creating through service to others. For Elon students and young alumni still trying to find direction, she encouraged patience and forward motion, even when the larger path is unclear.

“Just take one step,” she said. “Don’t try to figure it all out right now.”

Toward the end of the conversation, Martinelli-Taylor shared a quote from Frederick Buechner that has helped frame her own sense of calling:

“Maybe the place you’re called is where your deep gladness and the world’s deep hunger meet,” she said.

“For Martinelli-Taylor, that place has become the space where service, counseling and embodied healing meet. Her story is a reminder that purpose is often formed through the moments that stay with us and the courage to follow them into work that helps others heal.

Learn more about the podcast and listen to the episode here.

Learn more about the 2025 President’s Report and read it here.

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Jana Lynn Patterson shares lessons from a career in student life on ‘Elon Beyond the Bricks’ /u/news/2026/05/06/jana-lynn-pattersons-shares-lessons-from-a-career-in-student-life-on-elon-beyond-the-bricks/ Wed, 06 May 2026 15:35:55 +0000 /u/news/?p=1046403 Jana Lynn Patterson has spent nearly four decades shaping the student experience at 51±ŹÁÏÍű. As associate vice president for student Llife and dean of student health and well-being, she has guided generations of students through moments of growth and discovery, building a legacy defined by her commitment to student well-being. In the latest episode of “Elon Beyond the Bricks,” President Connie Ledoux Book sits down with Patterson as she prepares to retire and reflect on a career that has become foundational to Elon’s identity.

Drawn by the strength of Elon’s student life program and the opportunity to grow professionally, Patterson arrived in 1986 planning to stay only a short time.

“The student life program at Elon was well-regarded at the state and in the region and in the country even back in 1986,” she said. “I saw it as an opportunity to be a part of that staff and to grow professionally. And then Elon just grew into our home.”

Over the years, Patterson witnessed Elon’s transformation from a small college into a nationally recognized university.

“What I didn’t appreciate at the beginning was how the physical transformation was really the precursor for the cultural transformation of the institution,” she said.

That cultural transformation is most visible in her work with students. Known affectionately as “Dean P,” Patterson built her leadership approach through relationships grounded in accessibility, respect and authenticity. She emphasized servant leadership, encouraging students to see leadership not as personal elevation, but as a contribution to a larger community.

“I was going to be a good listener with them, but also going to ask them the tough questions so that the decisions that they made were aligned with both their values and the values of the institution,” she said.

This approach also shaped her work with student government. Patterson balanced openness with accountability, pushing students to slow down, ask better questions and fully understand the implications of their ideas. Rather than reacting in the moment, students were expected to research, refine and sometimes rethink their positions.

“Before you bring this for legislation, I want you to do your homework,” she said. “Be thoughtful and be a critical thinker.”

For Patterson, the most enduring measure of her work is what students carry forward. Watching alumni grow into leaders, mentors and engaged citizens has reinforced her belief in higher education as both a space for learning and transformation.

As she steps into retirement, Patterson remains optimistic about Elon’s future. She points to the university’s ability to balance tradition with innovation while staying grounded in its values.

“I’m in my jubilee year, as we call it,” she said. “I get a little emotional at Elon Day and those things, but I’ve received the gift to be able to reflect in a place that has been such an integral part of my life and my family’s lives.”

For all of Patterson’s contributions over her 40-year career, from mentoring generations of students to strengthening the university’s focus on student health and well-being, her service reflects what President Book described as “a job well done.”

Learn more about the podcast and listen to the episode here.

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From the fast lane to values-driven leadership: A conversation with Mike Mooney ’93 /u/news/2026/03/17/from-the-fast-lane-to-values-driven-leadership-a-conversation-with-mike-mooney-93/ Tue, 17 Mar 2026 13:09:03 +0000 /u/news/?p=1041780 Elon alumnus Mike Mooney ’93 has spent a career moving at full speed. From more than two decades inside NASCAR, IndyCar, and Formula One to leading crisis response, brand storytelling, and executive development, Mooney has built a professional life grounded in adaptability and values-first leadership. In the of “Elon Beyond the Bricks,” President Connie Ledoux Book sits down with Mooney to explore the unexpected turns that shaped his path, which began with a career-ending injury just days into his first semester at Elon.

Originally a left-handed pitcher recruited to play baseball, Mooney’s plans shifted overnight when an injury sidelined him before he ever took the field. The setback pushed him into new experiences: student government, leadership fellows, Sigma Chi and a community of mentors who helped him recognize his potential beyond athletics.

“I was also very fortunate to have some amazing mentors on campus,” he said. “Whether that was, Fred Young and Ron Klepcyk, Gerald Gibson, Gerald Francis, Jana Lynn Patterson, Rex Waters, Dr. Jo Williams
 these were people that spoke into me that said, ‘We want you to learn.’”

Mooney carried that growth mindset into motorsports, eventually working with agencies, global brands, race teams and major sponsors. His roles gave him a rare 360-degree view of the business behind the sport in communications, partnerships, crisis management, and team operations across more than 850 races. He describes motorsports as a living case study in teamwork and continuous improvement.

“Even if you won on Sunday, Monday morning was, ‘Okay, what are we going to do differently? What are we going to improve on?’” he said.

After 25 years, Mooney made another shift by leaving the constant travel of racing to launch Mooney Consulting Group and support the development of Pocono Organics. He describes the transition as both the most challenging and most necessary chapter of his life, driven by a need for sustainable pace, deeper family presence, and renewed purpose.

“What if the last ten, 15, 20 years of your life were the setup for the next 20, 25 years of your life?” he asked.

Much of Mooney’s current work centers on values-based leadership and proactive reputation building, themes that anchor his book “Reputation Shift.” Drawing on years of crisis response inside motorsports, he encourages leaders to live their values out loud, strengthening reputation before it is tested.

“It hit me that, you know, reputation was always reactive. It was a, ‘What now?’” he said. “If we could live our values out loud, you probably wouldn’t have an issue with reputation because it’s coming from a place that’s truly yours.”

President Book and Mooney also reflect on defining early experiences, which include their shared memories of working at Kmart as teenagers, and how small moments of integrity and decision-making become early milestones in a leadership journey.

This episode captures the energy, humility, and clarity that have guided Mooney’s work. His path from unexpected change to purposeful leadership serves as a reminder that transformation begins the moment you decide to change lanes.

Listen to the full episode on , or .

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Exploring public opinion research with Stephanie Marken ’08 on a new episode of “Elon Beyond the Bricks” /u/news/2026/02/12/exploring-public-opinion-research-with-stephanie-marken-08-on-a-new-episode-of-elon-beyond-the-bricks/ Thu, 12 Feb 2026 17:05:27 +0000 /u/news/?p=1038659 When Stephanie Marken ’08 talks about public opinion, she speaks with the precision of a researcher and the conviction of someone who believes deeply in listening. Marken is currently a senior partner at Gallup, where she leads national research initiatives focused on higher education and public opinion, placing her at the center of conversations shaping the sector today.

At Gallup, Marken oversees longitudinal research in partnership with organizations such as the Lumina Foundation. Her work surveys current students, students who have temporarily left college and people who have never enrolled in postsecondary education. The goal is not advocacy but clarity on attitudes, beliefs and confidence levels across a rapidly changing educational landscape.

That focus reflects Gallup’s broader mission, one Marken feels deeply connected to. “We always say our mission at Gallup is to help people be heard,” she said. “It’s really a pollster’s privilege to actually report what people share to them.”

Even as response rates decline and methodologies evolve, Marken views participation as a signal of trust that must be taken seriously. Marken’s commitment to listening began during her time at Elon. A first-generation college student who arrived undecided, she credits faculty mentorship with shaping her academic and professional direction.

“An extra ten minutes with a student can truly be transformative,” she said, recalling conversations that led her to major in political science and pursue graduate studies during the 2008 financial crisis.

Her work with the Elon Poll proved especially formative.

“It was really humbling to call somebody during dinner and ask them to step away from their meal and their family and answer incredibly private questions,” Marken said. The experience built resilience and respect for respondents—lessons that continue to inform her approach to research leadership.

Today, Marken’s portfolio extends beyond higher education to global research on democracy, climate, water and well-being in more than 120 countries. Yet the throughline remains consistent: ensuring people are included in conversations that too often happen without them.

“There’s so many conversations we have nationally that are about people, but not with people,” she said.

For Marken, the goal is not to diminish higher education but to strengthen it through honesty, access and careful listening. By pairing rigorous data with a belief in human transformation, her work encourages institutions to understand better the voices they serve and respond with intention.

Learn more about the podcast and listen to the episode here.

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Behind the ‘Stranger Things’ Broadway break for Sean Mikesh ’25 on the latest “Elon Beyond the Bricks” episode /u/news/2026/01/21/behind-the-stranger-things-broadway-break-for-sean-mikesh-25-on-the-latest-elon-beyond-the-bricks-episode/ Wed, 21 Jan 2026 16:31:51 +0000 /u/news/?p=1037010 When President Connie Ledoux Book asked Sean Mikesh ’25 how he landed a role in “Stranger Things: The First Shadow” on Broadway, he described his story as “a bit of a crazy one.” As he tells it in the latest episode of “Elon Beyond the Bricks,” it started during the spring break of his senior year.

While his classmates left campus for places like Cancun and California, Sean had his own plans. “I, on the other hand,” he shared, “went home to get my wisdom teeth removed.”

Two days into his recovery, he received an urgent email from Jim Carnahan Casting, a casting company that he connected with through his Senior Showcase.

In the email, he learned that “Stranger Things: The First Shadow” needed an immediate replacement on Broadway. With a swollen mouth, Sean sent in an audition tape, had an in-person callback in New York City a few days later and received a phone call following his callback.

As Sean vividly remembers being told on the phone, “We are so sorry to tell you that you cannot go home because we need you in rehearsal tomorrow.”

Since that moment in late March, Mikesh has performed nightly as an ensemble member and understudy for the Charles Sinclair character. The roles have challenged him in ways both technical and transformative, shifting between nuanced character work, mastering tight backstage choreography and even stepping into the production’s iconic Demogorgon suit.

Not even a year out from graduation, Mikesh described to Book how surreal the transition has been relocating to New York City, negotiating contracts and performing on Broadway. Through it all, he emphasized the community that has anchored him. He credited Associate Professor of Performing Arts Kim Shively at Elon for helping him step confidently into the professional industry, and his fellow Elon alumni and students in New York, like Erik Houck ’25 and Campy Rodriguez ’26, who is currently in “Aladdin” on Broadway.

“It’s been such a beacon of support,” he said. “It’s like a hug, the way Elon felt when I first visited the campus
 And when you come out to New York, we’re in a new space, beautiful in a different way, but the people are still there and that hug is still there.”

Towards the end of Sean’s conversation with President Book, which ranged from the surprise commencement ceremony she held for Sean last May in New York City to the importance of staying present, Sean offered advice for Elon students whose dream it is to perform on a Broadway stage.

It was a quote he returned to throughout his audition process that framed his experience: “Luck is when opportunity meets preparation.”

Preparation, for him, came through years of Meisner, Stanislavski, and Chekhov-based training under Professors Kevin Otos and Kim Shively; roles in on-campus productions of “Paradise Lost” and “The Antipodes;” and the lessons he absorbed across classrooms and disciplines on campus.

For someone whose story to Broadway began with wisdom teeth surgery, an unexpected email and a callback in New York City, Mikesh’s journey makes one thing clear: when opportunity arrived, he was prepared.

Learn more about the podcast and listen to the episode online.

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Inside Spotify Wrapped with Simone Earle ’16 on the latest ‘Elon Beyond the Bricks’ episode /u/news/2025/12/09/inside-spotify-wrapped-with-simone-earle-16-on-the-latest-elon-beyond-the-bricks-episode/ Tue, 09 Dec 2025 19:37:38 +0000 /u/news/?p=1034902 In the latest episode of Elon Beyond the Bricks, marketing leader Simone Earle ’16 reflects on the experiences that guided her from the track at Elon to her role shaping global brand initiatives at Spotify.

Returning to campus to receive Elon’s Top 10 Under 10 Alumni Award earlier this year, Earle described the moment as both grounding and reflective: “It was very humbling to come back to campus to receive this award.”

Surrounded by her family and closest friends, she found herself looking back with new clarity. “I spent so long just really reflecting on my experience in a way that I don’t think I had before.”

At Spotify, Earle has played a key role in the annual rollout of Spotify Wrapped, a digital event that has grown into a global cultural phenomenon. Wrapped resonates, she explained, because it gives listeners a personal narrative of their year.

“It is so personal, in the sense where you’re able to reflect on something that is true to you,” she said.

Its impact comes from the intersection of identity and data.

“Wrapped is data-driven. It’s really objective and it tells a story about you and how you interact with content.”

And while Spotify prepares all year, the culture around it is audience-built: “Honestly, the best content with this experience doesn’t even come from us.”  

For Earle, authenticity is central to modern marketing. She noted that people expect brands to understand them.

“People don’t want to be marketed to,” she said. That expectation requires deep listening and cultural fluency.

“It is extremely important to be authentic and really understanding who your audience is,” said Earle.

Her creative leadership style is rooted in lessons from track and field, where individual performance always serves the larger team goal. The discipline of showing up, adjusting, and striving carried into her professional life.

“I have to run my race. I have to show up for the people around me,” she said.

Reflecting on her journey, Earle emphasized the importance of self-knowledge as students enter a rapidly changing industry.

“Your resume is really only going to get you but so far. You really have to be able to truly know yourself.”

Her gratitude for Elon remained evident throughout the conversation, from the mentors who shaped her to the experiences that continue to guide her as a creative leader.

Learn more about the podcast and listen to the episode.

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Wyn Ferrell ’09 shares entrepreneurial journey and creative philosophy on latest “Elon Beyond the Bricks” podcast episode /u/news/2025/09/02/wyn-ferrell-09-shares-entrepreneurial-journey-and-creative-philosophy-on-latest-elon-beyond-the-bricks-podcast-episode/ Tue, 02 Sep 2025 18:28:04 +0000 /u/news/?p=1026259 In the latest episode of Elon Beyond the Bricks, entrepreneur and distillery owner Wyn Ferrell ’09 reflects on the winding journey that took him from a career in finance to launching a nationally acclaimed spirits brand rooted in craft, community and creativity.

Ferrell is the co-founder and owner of Mile High Spirits, a Denver-based distillery and tasting room known for its award-winning bourbon, unique cocktails and strong connections to the community. On the podcast, hosted by 51±ŹÁÏÍű President Connie Ledoux Book, Ferrell talks about the entrepreneurial leaps and learning curves that led him to where he is today.

“I wasn’t really able to use any of my creative side in finance,” Ferrell said. “It’s very rigid and structured… So I started in sales for a distillery. I went in and asked for a job, and they were very frank and said, ‘We’re going out of business. We can’t pay you.’ And I said, ‘Well, then don’t pay me.’”

That leap of faith led the Elon alum to start his own company at just 23 years old, acquiring equipment as payment from the closing distillery and launching dozens of private-label spirits before opening Mile High in 2011. From the beginning, his goal was to build a brand that stood for more than just a product.

“When we enter a market, we want to go an inch wide and a mile deep,” Ferrell explained. “We want to hit the same neighborhoods every time. I want to be the owner that said, ‘I’ll be back in two months,’ to every account and came back in two months to every account.”

Mile High Spirits has continued to evolve alongside the city it calls home. In 2024, Ferrell led a full-scale reimagining of the space, pivoting from a nightclub-style venue to a refined tasting experience that showcases the distillery’s award-winning spirits, including bourbons that have earned Double Gold at the San Francisco World Spirits Competition.

“Now we’re coming out with seven, eight, nine-year-old bourbons, and we’re winning double gold 
 and I just said, you know, there’s something not right here. We need to boil this down to a place now for people that are looking for more high-end spirits and more touch points on cocktails,” said Ferrell.

The team’s ambition doesn’t stop there. With accolades stacking up and a revamped cocktail program taking shape, Ferrell has his sights set on one of the industry’s highest honors: a James Beard Award. With cocktails now part of the prestigious foundation’s recognition, he sees it as a natural next step for the brand. “It’s always good to have lofty goals,” he said.

Reflecting on the path that brought him here, from finance in New York to crafting spirits in Colorado, Ferrell is quick to credit his alma mater for nurturing the curiosity and team mindset that continue to shape his approach as a business owner. As he puts it:

“Whenever I go back, I’m always honored to have been a graduate of Elon.”

Learn more about the podcast and listen to the episode here.

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