Journalism | Today at Elon | 51±ŹÁÏÍű /u/news Wed, 29 Apr 2026 18:24:14 -0400 en-US hourly 1 ENN racks up awards in SPJ Region 2 competition /u/news/2026/04/29/enn-racks-up-awards-in-spj-region-2-competition/ Wed, 29 Apr 2026 13:22:27 +0000 /u/news/?p=1045719 Students from Elon News Network earned numerous honors across a range of categories in the . In addition to individual recognitions, the organization received the region’s top honor for best newspaper.

Lilly Molina ’27 conducts an interview at Elon
Lilly Molina ’27, a journalism and media analytics double major, interviews a student during the university’s Summer Undergraduate Research Experience (SURE) showcase in July. The Elon junior was one of several Elon News Network students recognized in the Society of Professional Journalists Region 2 Mark of Excellence Awards.

SPJ’s Region 2 includes Delaware, Maryland, North Carolina, Virginia and the District of Columbia. First-place recipients advance to the national competition, where they will be judged alongside winners from SPJ’s 12 regions. National honorees will be recognized at the SPJ convention, scheduled for Oct. 1–4 in Columbus, Ohio.

Elon News Network earned seven first-place awards:

  • Best All-Around Student Newspaper | The Pendulum | April 9, 2025; April 30, 2025; and Dec. 10, 2025 editions
  • General News Reporting | Nia Bedard |
  • In-depth Reporting | Anjolina Fantaroni |
  • Feature Photography | Katrina Holtz | 
  • Television Feature Reporting | Charlotte Pfabe | 
  • Regional Political Reporting | Miles Hayford | and
  • Retail/Small Business Journalism | Lilly Molina | and

In addition, the organization earned five finalist nods:

  • Best Affiliated Website | Elon News Network | 
  • Best All-Around Television Newscast | ENN Tonight | Ìę±đ»ćŸ±łÙŸ±ŽÇČÔ
  • Best Use of Multimedia | Erin Martin |
  • Personality Profile Writing | Avery Sloan |
  • Sports Writing | Miles Hayford |
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elondocs students gain industry insight as Full Frame Fellows /u/news/2026/04/23/elondocs-students-gain-industry-insight-as-full-frame-fellows/ Thu, 23 Apr 2026 15:07:38 +0000 /u/news/?p=1045196 A group of Elon Comm people at Full Frame festival
Nicole Triche (from left), professor of cinema and television arts, joins elondocs students Trista Panagakos, Sandy Orozco-Rosaldo, Kaitlyn Dicataldo, Alice Morrissey, Julia Chan and Ashley Metzger at the Full Frame Documentary Film Festival, where they participated as Full Frame Fellows. Photo by Aaron Chan.

With an hour after watching “The Oldest Person in the World” open the , 51±ŹÁÏÍű students were talking with the film’s director, Sam Green, at the festival’s opening night party. It is a moment that captures the access and immersion of the students’ experience as Full Frame Fellows.

Each spring, elondocs students participate in the Full Frame Documentary Film Festival as Fellows, joining one of the nation’s leading documentary gatherings. Accompanied by Nicole Triche, professor of cinema and television arts, 11 Elon students spent four days last week attending film screenings, panels and social events, interacting with filmmakers and networking with industry professionals.

Elon students at Full Frame event
Evan Lukacs (from left), Morrissey and Sean Greenberg were among the elondocs students who traveled to the Durham film festival.

Throughout the festival, students attended screenings at the Carolina Theatre and Durham Convention Center, moving between venues to experience a wide range of films and engage in conversations with filmmakers and audiences. For many, the opportunity to interact directly with filmmakers – including conversations with Green – offered a deeper understanding of how documentaries are conceived, structured and brought to life.

“The Full Frame Fellows experience gives students a chance to see documentary as both an art form and a profession,” said Triche, who serves as faculty director of elondocs. “They are engaging with filmmakers, hearing how stories come together, which will help them with their own projects.”

Inside packed theaters, students experienced the collective energy of audiences engaging with documentary storytelling in real time.

“One of the most important takeaways was the fact that people are still excited and engaging with documentary as an art form,” said Trista Panagakos ’28, a journalism major from Staten Island, New York. “It brings me hope for my future when I see a theater full of people enjoying a documentary.”

For Sandy Orozco-Rosaldo ’28, a double major in cinema and television arts and strategic communications from Burlington, the experience also highlighted the power of cultural representation on screen.

“A personal highlight for me was seeing parts of my Mexican culture represented in a different light,” Orozco-Rosaldo said. “The film ‘Jaripeo’ by Efrain Mojica and Rebecca Zweig was something I had never seen in a cultural sense and in a cinematography sense, both beautifully executed.”

Orozco-Rosaldo also said the festival expanded her understanding of the documentary landscape.

“I learned how vast of a documentary community there is here in North Carolina and beyond. I feel confident that there are people out there waiting to see great works not so far from my home and campus.”
– Sandy Orozco-Rosaldo ’28

Beyond the screenings and formal events, the fellowship also fostered connections within the elondocs cohort, as students reflected on films and shared insights throughout the experience.

“I really enjoyed spending time with the elondocs cohort,” Panagakos said. “Many of us drove to and from Full Frame together and watched the same movies. This brought us closer and allowed us to break down films together and experience each other outside of our meetings.”

Female Elon students at Full Frame
The trio of Metzger (from left), Orozco-Rosaldo and Panagakos enjoy a moment together while attending the 2026 Full Frame Documentary Film Festival.

For Triche, that connection between academic preparation and professional exposure is central to the program’s mission.

“When students can see themselves in these spaces, engaging with filmmakers and contributing to the conversation, it helps make their goals feel tangible,” she said.

In addition to Orozco-Rosaldo and Panagakos, other Elon students in attendance included Evan Lukacs, Mary Finch, Julia Chan, Lily Gooding, Kaitlyn Dicataldo, Ashley Metzger, Alice Morrissey, Amalia Zucker and Sean Greenberg.

The 2026 Full Frame Documentary Film Festival featured 49 films from 31 countries, selected from more than 1,100 submissions.

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Ethan Wu ’27 awarded Pulitzer Center Reporting Fellowship /u/news/2026/04/20/ethan-wu-27-awarded-pulitzer-center-reporting-fellowship/ Mon, 20 Apr 2026 15:14:29 +0000 /u/news/?p=1044664 has been awarded the 2026 Pulitzer Center Reporting Fellowship to investigate water pollution efforts near Beijing, returning to the region where he spent his childhood.

Elon student Ethan Wu in Baku, Azerbaijan
51±ŹÁÏÍű junior Ethan Wu joined faculty members Amanda Sturgill and Randy Piland in Baku, Azerbaijan, this September to help document the world’s top collegiate programmers in action at the International Collegiate Programming Contest (ICPC) World Finals. Photo by Piland.

A Virginia resident majoring in communication design, Wu grew up in the DaXing area near the capital city until age 12 and has closely followed efforts to clean up the LiangShui (Cold Water) River.

Judges for the Pulitzer Fellowship, a competitive international travel grant awarded to an Elon student journalist each year, noted that Wu’s proposal stood out for its background research and on-the-ground context.

A fluent Mandarin speaker with his own photography business, Wu noted that while air pollution in China receives much attention, less coverage has been given to water quality and to the impact of factory effluent, agricultural runoff, and untreated waste on the region’s rivers, lakes and groundwater. Wu believes much has changed since the conditions he observed in his childhood, when waterways were filled with algae blooms and litter.

51±ŹÁÏÍű junior Ethan Wu with camera
Wu regularly chronicles campus events through his work with Elon News Network, University Communications and the School of Communications. Here, he photographs the opening panel of the 2026 N.C. College Media Conference in February. Photo by Kelly Furnas.

“This is an example of when a community and its officials reach an agreement to improve a crucial resource to their well-being and actually work out a beneficial solution,” he said. “However, there are so many towns, especially rural ones, that lack the power, voice or physical ability to improve something as important as a shared waterway.”

51±ŹÁÏÍű is a long-standing member of the , a network of colleges and universities that support the center’s mission to promote journalism on critical global issues. The organization pairs students with mentors and advises student journalists through the reporting and publication phases. Students from the 39 participating campuses travel to Washington, D.C., to present their projects, and campus partners also benefit from professional journalist grantees who visit partner campuses.

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Among his professors and collaborators at Elon News Network, Wu has earned a reputation for being open to a variety of assignments and for his technical dexterity, said Randy Piland, associate teaching professor in Communication Design.

“Ethan’s always willing to take on any photo assignment,” Piland said. “He has a sense for quality. He’s taken it to another level.”

Lorraine Ahearn, assistant professor of journalism, serves as Elon’s liaison to the Pulitzer Center.

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Stephanie Moeller ’09: Growing an Emmy-nominated career from Elon Roots /u/news/2026/04/14/stephanie-moeller-09-growing-an-emmy-nominated-career-from-elon-roots/ Tue, 14 Apr 2026 13:02:26 +0000 /u/news/?p=1042688 “I’m 16 years in this business, and if anyone asks me about my path, I truly owe it all to 51±ŹÁÏÍű, as I wouldn’t be where I am in my career without it,” said Stephanie Moeller ’09.

Moeller has made a name for herself as a five-time Emmy-nominated senior producer at E! Entertainment Television, who now works as a producer at Entertainment Tonight.

Stephanie Moeller ’09 poses on the ET stage.

“Back in high school, I used to watch all the red carpets and read all the entertainment magazines,” she explained. “I knew I wanted to work in entertainment television, and I knew 51±ŹÁÏÍű had one of the best schools for communications in the country.”

Recognizing that Elon was the perfect fit for her academic and personal aspirations, it became clear that she had to attend. Upon arriving at the school, Moeller dove right into her classes and even picked up a minor she had never considered.

“I majored in broadcast communications and minored in theater arts because I was told the Theatre Arts minor would be helpful with an on-camera presence,” she said. “My junior year in 2007, I studied abroad in London, and I now credit an entire career in entertainment news, due to Elon helping me acquire an internship abroad.”

Moeller remembers Elon asking her to choose her top three companies she would want to work for in London, and E! Entertainment was her first pick. With Elon’s help, she secured exactly what she’d hoped for.

The initial internship with E! during her London study abroad changed her trajectory for the better.

“I kept in touch with the London office, so when I did Elon’s inaugural ‘Elon in LA’ program in the summer of 2008, I was able to land my second internship at E!,” she explained. “One week after graduation in 2009, I moved back to LA without a job. I hustled and kept in touch with the E! team, getting my first paying gig with them in 2010, working in the international department, all thanks to my first internship in London.”

Moeller made the switch from the international department to the domestic department at E! News and then rose through the ranks, from intern to senior producer. Over her 15 years at E! News, she was nominated for five Emmy Awards, and interviewed people like Steve Carell, Charlize Theron and 50 Cent. She also had the privilege of working on the red carpet at the Oscars and Golden Globes.

“I think one thing that’s gotten me far in this business is realizing celebrities are just normal people too, and they want to be treated that way,” she explained.  “When working with and writing scripts for celebs and hosts, I’ve always had success connecting with them on a personal level and not treating them like royalty.  They will always feel more comfortable around people who treat them normally and give them honest feedback, good or bad.”

Moeller credits her continued success to strong relationships with her coworkers, interviewees, and former hosts, always keeping in contact with them even after some of their shows had ended.

When reflecting on her favorite experiences so far in her career, she recalls being able to work on one of the biggest pop culture stages as a top moment.

“I recently worked the Golden Globes red carpet this year with our host Keltie Knight, and it was my first time doing a major awards show red carpet; we were positioned right at the limo drop where we saw all the celebs exiting their cars, like George and Amal Clooney, Julia Roberts, and Leslie Mann, to name a few.”

This unforgettable experience solidified for her that she was in the right career.
Another memorable project was producing live coverage for Kobe Bryant’s memorial service in 2020, outside of the Staples Center.

“It was just me, my host Will Marfuggi, and a cameraman. We were reporting live from downtown LA, getting footage and statements of the fans showing up to mourn his death.  It was a surreal experience to be in the presence of that historic moment,” she said.

Stephanie Moeller with the production team at E! News

Moeller’s journey at E! News was marked by steady growth in leadership, as she took on a variety of roles throughout her time at the company. When E! News was cancelled in September 2025, she unexpectedly lost her job. However, the strong professional relationships she had built over the years quickly became a source of support and opportunity.

“One meaningful connection I made along the way was with Jerry O’Connell, who at the time was hosting ‘The Talk.’ After our interview, he followed me on Instagram and has been a huge supporter of my career ever since. When E! News was cancelled in September, we went out to lunch to talk through opportunities and strategies. He even reposted my Instagram announcement when I shared that I had landed a new job at Entertainment Tonight,” said Moeller.

Building on her professional network, she transitioned from a freelance role at Entertainment Tonight in October to a full-time position in January of this year. She credits this milestone to her connections and a pivotal, “game-changing” internship in London.

Elon’s top-notch curriculum and amazing professors helped her feel prepared for the real world, knowing she could succeed outside the classroom. Elon’s study abroad center helped many students, including Moeller, afford transformative international experiences. Opening doors to life-changing internships and meaningful global connections while abroad.

Moeller has come a long way through courage and perseverance, and now she works for a nine-time Emmy Award-winning nationwide show.

“This business, especially out in LA, is 100% about who you know, but it’s how good you do that is what keeps you there,” she explained.

“My main advice is to take the internships, do the study abroad, make the connections, and always keep in contact with people and never burn bridges,” she said. “You never know who’s going to end up where and who can help you down the line. And when you’re on top, know that it can always change in an instant, so always be kind to the people below you, as one day you may be working for them.”

Do you know an alum who has an interesting story to tell, maybe even yourself? Please feel free to share your feedback or those stories online.

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Charlotte Pfabe ’27 aims to redefine ENN’s relationship with the community /u/news/2026/04/13/charlotte-pfabe-27-aims-to-redefine-enns-relationship-with-the-community/ Mon, 13 Apr 2026 18:50:23 +0000 /u/news/?p=1044045 When Charlotte Pfabe ’27 first visited 51±ŹÁÏÍű, the facilities caught her eye. Coming from Maryland, she was looking for a journalism program that offered more than what she could find close to home, and the minute she stepped into Jane and Brian Williams Studio, she knew she had found her place.

Headshot of Charlotte Pfabe
Charlotte Pfabe ’27 is serving as the executive director for Elon News Network for the 2026-27 academic year. (Photographer: Ethan Wu)

Now a junior journalism major, Pfabe has been elected the executive director of Elon News Network for the 2026-27 academic year. Her path to the top leadership spot was a fast one, starting with a variety of roles in broadcast, web, and print. By the spring of her first year, she was already helping others get started as a new member coordinator.

“I helped new students get acclimated to ENN, responded to emails, and acted like I knew what I was doing,” Pfabe said.

Her passion for the craft actually goes back to her childhood. While she briefly considered psychology because she loved learning why people act the way they do, she realized journalism was a better way to learn others’ stories. She did morning announcements in elementary school and even acted as a reporter for Junior Achievement BizTown, which combines in-class learning with a day-long visit to a simulated town.

“I think local news is one of the pillars of local community and society,” Pfabe said. “People trust their local news more than they trust their national news. There is such a value in having people that are constantly around and making those connections to tell stories, especially ones that don’t get told often.”

Pfabe finds inspiration in local reporters she grew up watching in Baltimore, like investigative reporter David Collins. She recalled being starstruck when she finally met him during an internship. She also looks up to Elon alumni who started exactly where she is now, such as Gary Grumbach ’16, a legal affairs reporter for NBC News, and Maya Eaglin ’19, an on-air reporter for MSNOW.

“They started where we’re starting, and their Elon education helped them get there,” Pfabe said. “That is so phenomenal.”

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As she looks toward her new role, Pfabe wants to shift the focus toward community-facing initiatives. She plans to lead ENN in more outreach and volunteer events throughout Burlington and Graham to build relationships that are not just transactional.

“You’re going, and you’re volunteering in your community. You’re doing good, and you’re not getting a story out of it,” Pfabe said. “You’re just doing something for the community.”

Transparency is another major goal for the upcoming year. Pfabe said she wants to break down the mystery of how news is made and show the campus that the staff is juggling many responsibilities at once.

“There is this idea that we are journalists first and students second, but we’re journalists and students at the same time,” Pfabe said. “We are still learning, and we’re still doing schoolwork at the same time as we’re doing our stories. We have classes with the same people we’re interviewing.”

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Gabriela Alvarez ’28 builds community and purpose at Elon through her scholarship programs /u/news/2026/04/07/gabriela-alvarez-28-builds-community-and-purpose-at-elon-through-her-scholarship-programs/ Tue, 07 Apr 2026 14:57:16 +0000 /u/news/?p=1042587 headshot of Gabriela Alvarez on gray background
Gabriela Alvarez ’28

Gabriela Alvarez ’28 built her Elon experience around connection, opportunity and identity. As a first-generation college student, she has embraced campus communities that strengthen her character while also discovering her passion for strategic communications.

In her junior year of high school in Westchester, New York, Alvarez signed up for the Immersion experience through the Emerging Journalists Program at 51±ŹÁÏÍű, where she was flown to Elon for a week to gain experience in her passion for news and broadcasting. Before the program, Elon had not been on Alvarez’s radar.

“The program changed my view of Elon. I had a really good time and connected with the professors and the cohort I was in. So, I decided to come see Elon as a result,” said Alvarez, who notes communications faculty Colin Donohue, Kelly Furnas and Israel Balderas were influential in her experience.

Her campus tour was on Homecoming & Reunion weekend, where she spoke up about her interest in journalism, which resulted in the tour guide encouraging her to explore the newsroom. There, she was able to chat with alumni from the School of Communications, who shared their positive experiences from their time at Elon.

After touring the communications facilities and connecting with these alumni, she knew Elon was the place for her.

Her first year here, Alvarez was a journalism major, and joining Live Oak Communications Agency became a turning point in her communications career. After contributing to the agency, Alvarez realized her passions aligned more with the strategic communications major.

A large group of students pose together outside a building with a colorful mural reading “Imagination is Everything,” smiling for a group photo.
Alvarez’s Communications Fellows cohort visited Digital Brew, a video production company specializing in creative storytelling, during her Winter Term trip in Florida.

“I fell in love with agency life. I liked strategic communications better because there was more creative freedom for me. I enjoy helping businesses that are someone’s life’s work, blossom even further,” she said.

As a part of the Communications Fellows cohort, Alvarez was able to attend a Winter Term Florida trip in her first year. She notes that this trip gave her the opportunity to explore different fields within communications, which reinforced her passion for strategic communications.

“I think the Fellows is an amazing program. It’s given me some of my best friends, and it opened doors for me to connect with professors,” said Alvarez. “I’m so glad I met Professor (Vanessa) Bravo through a Communications Fellows networking event because, like me, she is Hispanic, and that’s very important to my identity. I connected with her, and I joined the Unity in Communications club that helped me connect with other people who are interested in diversity in the communications world.”

Alvarez is also a proud first-generation college student. As the secretary for Elon’s First-Generation Society, she is consistently making the most out of the opportunities offered to her.

“I really love being first-generation,” she said. “It’s a big part of my identity. I try to do as much as I can to make my parents proud and make their sacrifices worth it.”

In addition, she is also a Bill and Sue Smith Odyssey Scholar. Through attending workshops on financial literacy, discussions on how to stay motivated, and even mental health checks.

“Odyssey has pushed me to be a better person and a better leader who is not afraid to ask for help or try new things. I’ve become more aware of how to succeed in the future, and I feel prepared for post-graduate,” she said.

Six students stand together outdoors on a brick walkway, smiling with their arms around each other in a casual campus setting.
Alvarez’s Odyssey mentor group during Odyssey Week. From left to right: Alexis Rodriguez Soriano ’28, Valery Montes Cruz ’28, Julian Trinetto ’28, Maisa Valerio ’27 (mentor), Gabriela Maldonado ’28 and Rheanna Scott ’28.

Through the many communities and cohorts Alvarez is committed to, she has found belonging and purpose on Elon’s campus.

“I think being a part of these communities, like Odyssey, First Phoenix and Unity in Communications, is a way for me to stay true to myself,” she explained. “I grew up in a Hispanic-centered community, so coming to a predominantly white institution was a bit intimidating, but joining these communities helped me connect to others who have similar backgrounds and qualities as me. It’s important to stay true to the characteristics that are important to you and what makes you, you.”

Her scholarships have been a “weight off her shoulders” throughout her experience at Elon, allowing her the opportunity to see her dreams realized.

“Being able to tell my family they don’t have to worry so much about me and that I’ve worked hard in school and will continue to work hard is very rewarding. I’m very proud of myself. I’m proud to make my parents happy,” she said. “I’m willing to fight for dreams and fight for what I’m passionate about, and my scholarships have made that possible for me.”

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Student filmmakers to premiere feature-length ‘Valediction’ April 8 /u/news/2026/04/03/student-filmmakers-to-premiere-feature-length-valediction-april-8/ Fri, 03 Apr 2026 13:35:18 +0000 /u/news/?p=1043065 Hope Hynes Love (Eliza), Katharyn MacDonald (Sam) and Jeff Alguire (Dr. Whistler)
Katharyn MacDonald ’27 (center), a strategic communications and journalism double major, plays the lead role of Sam in the student film “Valediction.” She appears alongside her on-screen parents, Hope Hynes Love (Eliza) and Jeff Alguire (Dr. Whistler).

Inspired by real-world stories about the high-stakes race for valedictorian, student filmmakers and spent the past several years bringing to life “Valediction,” a feature-length film set to premiere on Wednesday, April 8, in .

A twisted coming-of-age comedy, this first-ever feature film by Elon undergraduates explores the dangers of apathy and obsession. The screening, scheduled from 7 to 9 p.m., will be followed by an informal reception.

“Valediction” movie poster
“Valediction” is a dark coming-of-age comedy co-directed and co-written by Hammond Sherouse ’27 and Talula Martin ’27. The film premieres Wednesday, April 8, at 7 p.m. in Turner Theatre.

“I think people should be excited for the screening because it’s the culmination of so many Elon students and faculty’s hard work over these past two and a half years,” said Martin, a strategic communications and cinema and television arts double major. “No matter your major, you will almost certainly see a familiar face or two onscreen or in the credits.”

What began as a concept rooted in academic pressure quickly expanded into a genre-bending, feature-length production – an uncommon scope for undergraduate filmmakers. Sherouse, a cinema and television arts BFA major, and Martin collaborated to develop an intricate story and cast of characters, ultimately committing to a longer format to fully realize their vision.

At the center of their story is Sam, played by , an isolated overachiever who fights her classmates tooth and nail for the title of valedictorian. The film draws inspiration from the competition surrounding academic achievement, a dynamic explored in Margaret Talbot’s 2005 New Yorker article that examines how the pursuit of valedictorian status can push students to extremes. Sherouse said he read the article years ago, and the subject stayed with him long after.

“To include everything we wanted in the story, it became clear to us that ‘Valediction’ had to be feature-length, rather than a short film like most Elon productions,” Sherouse said. “We knew it would be a long and arduous process, but worth it to bring this story to life.”

That extended scope also shaped how the story is told. A balance of satire and suspense drives the film’s tone, blending humor with unexpected twists.

Sherouse (left) and Martin
Sherouse (left) and Martin collaborated on “Valediction” over several years, shaping the story, production and creative direction of the student film.

“‘Valediction’ is simply a movie that’s meant to be seen by a large audience,” Sherouse said. “There are laughs, scares and shocking turns – a whole emotional rollercoaster that’s best experienced with friends. I guarantee there are some twists you won’t see coming.”

As the premiere approaches, the scale of that effort is giving way to reflection.

Martin expressed pride in what the team accomplished and excitement to share the finished film, while Sherouse acknowledged the mix of anticipation and nerves that comes with completing a nearly three-year creative process.

Produced through , “Valediction” drew on support from faculty across campus.

Assistant Professor of Cinema and Television Arts Kai Swanson served as the project’s primary faculty sponsor, while Director of Technology, Operations and Multimedia Projects Bryan Baker and Assistant Professor of Cinema and Television Arts Youssef Osman provided mentorship and feedback throughout development and production. Baker also assisted with securing equipment for principal photography.

Faculty also stepped into the story itself. Several faculty members appear in the film, including Assistant Professor of Journalism Israel Balderas, Assistant Professor of Classical Languages Tedd Wimperis, Associate Professor of English Scott Proudfit and former journalism professor Susan Ladd – many trying their hand at acting for the first time.

Several mentors praised the students’ ambition and execution in bringing a feature-length film to the screen.

“I had the chance to see a rough cut and was very impressed with their ability, passion and perseverance in completing an entire feature film on their own,” Osman said. “The film is a fun, highly stylized and engaging dark comedy.”

Swanson noted that the project originated as a student pitch and has grown into ESTV’s first made-for-TV movie.

“The students have put an incredible amount of work into this project, from development through production and post,” Swanson said. “It’s a great example of the kind of ambitious, long-form work students are starting to pursue.”

Credits

Roof Rat Productions (creative team)

  • Talula Martin – co-director, co-writer, producer, actress
  • Hammond Sherouse – co-director, co-writer
  • Althea Muldrew – producer
  • Katharyn MacDonald – lead actress, associate producer

Crew

  • JJ Duckworth – production sound mixer, actor
  • Karter Evans – makeup artist
  • Lauren Nesbit – costume designer
  • Gabi Emerson & B Underhill-Reed – composers

Cast

  • Katharyn MacDonald – Sam
  • Hope Hynes Love – Eliza (Sam’s mother)
  • Jeff Alguire – Dr. Whistler (Sam’s father)
  • Grace Minton – Deidre (Sam’s friend)
  • JJ Duckworth – Ben (politician)
  • Monty Lewis – Henry (student reporter)
  • Amelia Brinson – Abe (theater kid)
  • Graham Boggess – Nate (jock)
  • Ryan Voisard – Charlie (stranger)
  • Susan Ladd – Mrs. Garden (psychology teacher)
  • Hank Heimlich – Seth (theater kid)
  • Talula Martin – Jeremy (theater kid)
  • J. Israel Balderas – Mr. Haruspex (principal)
  • Jackson Bennett – Patrick (student reporter)
  • Maverick Powell – Nora (student reporter)
  • Rose Fyffe – Sarah (theater kid)
  • Tedd Wimperis – Dr. Franklin (scientist)
  • Wrigley Koch – Ms. Burnesse (guidance counselor)
  • Scott Proudfit – Dr. Miles (scientist)
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NC News & Information Summit draws record attendance, spotlights AI’s impact on local news /u/news/2026/04/01/nc-news-information-summit-draws-record-attendance-spotlights-ais-impact-on-local-news/ Wed, 01 Apr 2026 18:36:21 +0000 /u/news/?p=1042864 2026 Summit opening panelists on stage
How is AI reshaping journalism in North Carolina? The 2026 NC News & Information Summit opened with a timely conversation on its impact on news, information and communities across the state. Moderated by Alex Mahadevan (far left) of the Poynter Institute, the panel featured Dr. Siobahn Day Grady, Ricky Leung and investigative reporter Lisa Sorg.

Tickets sold out for the fifth annual on March 27 at NC State University. Nearly 300 attendees participated in 28 sessions that addressed topics like innovating student journalism, navigating state elections, covering climate change, and reporting on immigration emergencies. WUNC’s program hosted a live broadcast during the Summit’s lunch hour.

Attendees walk by a Summit poster.
The 2026 NC News and Information Summit – a partnership between the NC Open Government Coalition and NC Local – sold out a week in advance.

The keynote, “North Carolina’s AI Crossroads: Innovation, Investigation, and the Public Interest,” was moderated by Alex Mahadevan, director of the Poynter Institute’s MediaWise and AI Innovation Lab. It included an expert panel: Dr. Siobahn Day Grady of NC Central University’s Institute for Artificial Intelligence and Emerging Research, Ricky Leung of Code the Dream and investigative reporter Lisa Sorg of Inside Climate News.

To see photos of the Summit, visit this .

The , based in Elon’s School of Communications, also presented its annual Sunshine Awards. Categories recognize public servants, journalists, student reporters and advocates who have demonstrated extraordinary commitment to government transparency, press freedom and the public’s right to know.

“It’s never been more important to honor individuals and organizations who embody the principles of open government and freedom of information,” said Pate McMichael, director of the NC Open Government Coalition. “Their work ensures that citizens, journalists, advocates and communities can access the information they need to hold power accountable.”

Sunshine Award for Advocacy

Raleigh attorney Hugh Stevens, a founding board member and past president of the NC Open Government Coalition, was honored for a lifetime of exceptional open government advocacy in North Carolina.

Hugh Stevens accepts an award at the Summit
During the Summit, Hugh Stevens (left) was honored for a lifetime of exceptional open government advocacy. Also pictured is Pate McMichael, director of the North Carolina Open Government Coalition.

“I am extremely grateful for this award,” Stevens said, “not only because I was privileged to be a founding director of the North Carolina Open Government Coalition, but also because the Coalition’s home is at 51±ŹÁÏÍű.”

Stevens explained how the partnership started.

“Fortunately, Elon’s emerging School of Communications, in the person of its newly appointed Dean Paul Parsons, raised a welcoming and visionary hand,” Stevens continued. “It was during our initial conversations with Paul and his colleagues that I met Connie Book, who was then a member of the School of Communications faculty and is now the dynamic and much-lauded president of 51±ŹÁÏÍű. Connie has supported the Sunshine Center from its infancy, and I am delighted to be both her admirer and her friend.”

Jeff Tiberii, co-host of "Due South," at the Summit
Jeff Tiberii, co-host of “Due South,” a weekday radio show and podcast produced by WUNC, speaks with attendees during the Summit’s lunch session.

Stevens practiced law in North Carolina for six decades and served as the NC Press Association’s legal counsel for 20 years. A founding partner of , Stevens has mentored generations of media lawyers and journalists. In 2006, he was inducted into the NC Journalism & Media Hall of Fame.

Amanda Martin, supervising attorney of Duke Law’s First Amendment Clinic and a Coalition board member, presented Stevens — her mentor and friend — with the award. Beth Soja, senior staff attorney at Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press, provided the nomination.

“In addition to counseling hundreds of journalists, editors and publishers over the years,” Soja wrote, “every transparency and media law attorney in the state of North Carolina has benefitted from Hugh’s mentorship. His guidance and example have shaped the lives and careers of every government transparency advocate in our state, and consequently, every journalist and every member of the public.”

Sunshine Awards for Public Service

Lexington was honored for his exemplary commitment to supporting local journalism, civic dialogue and the essential role of a free and independent press. Antionette Kerr, publisher of , nominated Hayes for his commitment to transparency.

“In recognition of his exemplary commitment to supporting local journalism, civic dialogue, and the essential role of a free and independent press,” Kerr wrote. “In an era when misinformation spreads quickly and trust in institutions is fragile, Mayor Hayes stands out as a public servant who values the role of local journalism not simply when it is flattering, but when it holds power accountable.”

Public Records Officer Joel Ferdon & Records Analyst Samantha Rivenbark,

Public Records Officer Joel Ferdon and Records Analyst Samantha Rivenbark were recognized for their outstanding public records management at Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools. By the end of 2025, the Charlotte-Mecklenburg Board of Education had received 710 public records requests and released more than 12,000 records. acknowledged that Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools had supplied all relevant records requested by the newspaper since the beginning of 2025.

Sunshine Awards for Journalism

The Sunshine Award in Journalism recognizes journalists and news organizations that have effectively utilized public records to tell stories of significant importance to their communities. Judges included Kate Martin of APM Reports, Lorraine Ahearn, assistant professor of journalism at 51±ŹÁÏÍű, Natalie Jennings, senior managing editor of Wake Forest Magazine, Amanda Sturgill, associate professor of journalism at 51±ŹÁÏÍű, and McMichael.

Doug Bock Clark, ProPublica —

Clark was recognized for his sweeping investigative series on North Carolina’s judicial and political landscape, including investigations into how conservative court-packing reshaped state government and how a legislative power grab diverted funds meant for sexual abuse survivors.

Clark filed dozens of public records requests to numerous North Carolina institutions, ultimately amassing thousands of pages of emails, calendars, contracts, budgets, and other records. When state court officials attempted to block access to certain documents, ProPublica successfully compelled their release, illuminating how the legislative maneuver had harmed victims of sexual violence.

Kyle Ingram, The News & Observer —

Ingram was honored for his data-driven reporting on the Judge Griffin election challenge, which revealed that Black North Carolina voters were twice as likely to have their ballots contested as white voters — a disparity that persisted regardless of party affiliation. Ingram’s analysis of the demographics of more than 100,000 voters on the state’s challenged-voter list also found a disproportionate impact on young voters and those unaffiliated with any party.

Frank Barrows Award for Excellence in Collegiate Journalism

Student journalists from Duke University’s 9th Street Journal smile with a Summit plaque
Student journalists from Duke University’s 9th Street Journal received the Frank Barrows Award for Excellence in Collegiate Journalism for their series “Durham’s Most Reliable Voters share a belief in the power of democracy.”

The 9th Street Journal at Duke University was honored for its series: “” Student journalists Katelyn Cai, Valentina Garbelotto, Reece MacKinney, Paige Stevens, Noor Nazir and Jack Regan dug through public records and wrote in-depth portraits of longtime voters — including a 113-year-old Durham resident who has voted consistently since 1945.

“Through this series, our students brought attention to a group of citizens who show their dedication to democracy in a simple yet critical way, by casting their votes season after season, election after election,” adviser Alison Jones wrote in her nomination.

51±ŹÁÏÍű the NC Open Government Coalition

The unites organizations interested in ensuring and enhancing the public’s access to government activity, records and meetings. The nonpartisan coalition educates people about their rights to gain access to records and meetings that are considered public under North Carolina law. Through educational programming and public service, the coalition advocates for the principles and benefits of open government at all levels. Learn more at or .

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Lorraine Ahearn presents civil rights media history talk at sit-in museum /u/news/2026/03/13/lorraine-ahearn-presents-civil-rights-media-history-talk-at-sit-in-museum/ Fri, 13 Mar 2026 17:12:45 +0000 /u/news/?p=1041500 Journalist Skip Foreman and Elon professor Lorraine Ahearn
Veteran journalist Skip Foreman (left) presented with Assistant Professor of Journalism Lorraine Ahearn at the International Civil Rights Center & Museum.

The little-known history of Greensboro, North Carolina’s 1938 movie theater boycott protesting Jim Crow censorship was the topic of a March 6 public talk by Assistant Professor of Journalism Lorraine Ahearn at the city’s

The event at the museum, site of the pivotal Woolworth sit-in protests of 1960, also featured a presentation on North Carolina’s first commercially produced movie, 1948’s “Pitch a Boogie Woogie.” Veteran Associated Press reporter Skip Foreman talked about the once-lost featurette and the role his father, Tom Foreman, Sr., played in the all-Black cast.

International Civil Rights Center & Museum graphic“These two events expand our understanding of film history and the long journey of screen representation of African Americans,” Ahearn said. “They reveal Black people in North Carolina both resisting and negotiating Jim Crow conventions during two decades not often emphasized in this struggle.”

In 1938, students at Greensboro’s Bennett College for Women, an HBCU, organized a community boycott of white movie theaters. The students discovered that white exhibitors in the South were censoring out scenes casting Black performers on an equal social footing with whites, violating Jim Crow-era typecasting that relegated Black actors to subservient or comic stereotypes. The Black press was instrumental in covering the months-long boycott.

Ahearn first wrote about the forgotten incident as a newspaper reporter, then extended the research as a chapter in a scholarly anthology edited by Naeemah Clark, Elon’s Associate Provost for Academic Inclusive Excellence.

“The ‘38 boycott is noteworthy on a couple of counts,” Ahearn said. “For one, it comes a whole generation before Woolworth’s, lengthening the timeline of direct action initiated — once again — by college students. Equally important, the movie boycott turned not on the issue of where Black people were physically allowed to sit or eat, but on how Black people were allowed to be depicted to white audiences in the most powerful new medium of the time, Hollywood movies.”

A decade later, “Pitch a Boogie Woogie,” captured the disappearing genre of tented Black vaudeville and traveling minstrel shows in a complex post-war era of social and musical evolution. Black actors, musicians and dancers played all the parts in the short movie a white Greenville producer made exclusively for Black audiences and scored by the popular Greensboro band The Rhythm Vets. The band members were veterans of the World War II-era US Navy B-1 Band, among the first African Americans to hold Navy ranks above that of mess officer.

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Elon News Network wins 11 awards at national college media conference /u/news/2026/03/10/elon-news-network-wins-11-awards-at-national-college-media-conference/ Tue, 10 Mar 2026 13:41:04 +0000 /u/news/?p=1041285 Elon News Network staff members at Associated Collegiate Press’ 2026 National College Media Conference
Elon News Network staff members (from left) Megan Walsh ’28, Trista Panagakos ’28, Nolan Williams ’28 and Evan Cooper ’28 attended the Associated Collegiate Press’ 2026 National College Media Conference in San Francisco.

Elon News Network earned 11 awards during the National College Media Conference hosted by the Associated Collegiate Press in San Francisco, March 5-7.

The awards contest included hundreds of entries from college media outlets from across the country. Below is a list of the Elon winners.

  • Finalist – Online Pacemaker | Staff |
  • 2nd Place – Best of Show Broadcast | “ENN Tonight” |
  • 2nd Place – Best of Show Newspaper | The Pendulum |
  • 4th Place – Best of Show Digital Newsletter | Elon News Network Weekly Newsletter |
  • 6th Place – Best of Show Website |
  • 6th Place – Best of Show News Story | Lilly Molina and Charlotte Pfabe |
  • 10th Place – Best of Show Sports Story | Benjamin Berfield |
  • 8th Place – Best of Show Feature Story | Charlotte Pfabe |
  • 6th Place – Best of Show Newspaper Design | Sarah T. Moore |
  • 7th Place – Best of Show Broadcast News Story | Anjolina Fantaroni | “
  • 10th Place – Best of Show Broadcast Sports Story | Monika Jurevicius | “

Elon students attending the National College Media Convention conference included Evan Cooper ’28, Trista Panagakos ’28, Megan Walsh ’28 and Nolan Williams ’28. They were accompanied by Kelly Furnas, senior lecturer in journalism and ENN adviser.

ENN is a student-run news organization covering 51±ŹÁÏÍű and the broader Alamance County community. It includes The Pendulum newspaper, “ENN Tonight” broadcast, elonnewsnetwork.com website, as well as social media accounts, podcasts and newsletters. regardless of their experience level, major or year in school.

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