

This five-minute proof-of-concept documentary asks: How did the United States become a nation built around cars?Through archival footage and contemporary voices, the film traces the rise of highways and car culture, examining how these systems reshaped cities and communities and how people today are rethinking the future of transportation.

Mighty Mussels follows National Park Service staff and Anacostia Watershed Society scientists working to revive freshwater mussels in the Anacostia River, revealing how these small creatures could help restore the health of Washington’s urban waterway.

When I first moved to Washington, D.C., I began working at Colorlab, where I gained hands-on experience in how a lab operates and collaborates with archives. In my first month, I completed one of my first films, diving into a space that was completely new to me.

My first film I ever created has a special place in my heart. Completing my undergrad almost entirely during covid, my friends and I went full force into creating something together to learn the production skills we’d missed out on and produce a script I was proud of.
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Cam and Theo is a feminist counter-narrative inspired by Kerouac's On the Road. This is a featurette about a girl and a guy who are friends... just friends?

"The conversation about Black resistance has to do with Black opportunity and Black resilience. They're interconnected." - Clyde Wilson Pickett, Vice Chancellor for Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion.
Pitt community members share their reflections on the power and meaning of Black spaces here at the University, including the ways in which the institution has reckoned with its shortcomings—and the work we have left to do to ensure students thrive. • What Black Resistance Means at Pitt