top of page
Video Production, editing
and Motion Graphic Design

I enjoy making creative ideas come alive with visual storytelling. While conducting and filming interviews are my primary strengths, I frequently direct, produce, and edit creative projects through storyboarding to the end result.

 

I shoot with Sony and Canon DSLRs and edit with Adobe Premiere Pro and After Effects, along with utilizing stabilizers and lavalier/boom mics for interviews or run-and-gun set ups. The following is a mix of my favorite freelance, passion, and work projects. In all of the projects below, I was the primary director, shooter, editor, so I am well equipped to produce in stand-alone settings, as well as working with a creative team.

I currently work remotely as a Multimedia Manager for Semester at Sea, helping drive global brand awareness through managing our visual storytelling and marketing strategies. I'm continuing to build my freelance network and accept new projects on an availability basis. If you would like to connect over a project, visit my contact me page

to set up a Discovery call. 

60 Years of Semester at Sea
07:56
COVID Conspiracy Theories - Dominik Stecula, Department of Political Science
03:18

COVID Conspiracy Theories - Dominik Stecula, Department of Political Science

Assistant Professor of Political Science Dominik Stecula’s research interest has always been centered around how the media shapes what people believe. In 2020, the global pandemic provided a rare opportunity to study an international emergence of misinformation, conspiracy theories, and the role media plays in shaping people’s political and personal beliefs. From March of 2020 to April of 2021, Stecula and partners Mark Pickup (Simon Fraser University) and Clifton van der Linden (McMaster University) conducted research on COVID-19 conspiracy theory beliefs and media influences in the United States, Canada, United Kingdom, Australia, and New Zealand. Throughout the year, Stecula and his partners identified numerous findings about people’s beliefs and the roles media play, including that Americans are three times more likely than these other countries to share COVID-19 conspiracy theories and misinformation with their social networks. “It’s important to understand the basics of Political Science because it's important to understand what’s going on around you...Some of the things I focus on on the media and political communication side are skills that I think make people better citizens and make people more aware of how the information-ecosystem in America works,” he says. Stecula teaches POLS 307 Media and Politics and will be offering a capstone course on misinformation this fall that will explore in depth how people interact with misinformation online (POLS 492-004 Information Disorder? American Politics and the Changing Media Landscape).
Big Green Year In Review, 2023
01:10
Fenway Clayworks, May 2024
00:15
Hey Little Girl, 2023
02:25
I think I like this little life...
00:29
Fenway Clayworks, May 2024
00:21
Jordan, 2024
00:20
ULAX Denver Video Reel
00:24
bottom of page