Last year’s crop of Super Bowl ads were a direct response to the divisive American politics prevalent under Donald Trump’s presidency. This year’s ads focused more generally on social issues and and good old-fashioned entertainment, said two Emerson Marketing Communication faculty members.
After graduating with degrees in Journalism and Global & Postcolonial Studies, Margaux Maxwell ’18 took her passion for international human rights to Bogota, Colombia, where she is working as a freelance journalist.
…there was this crowd from 1910. We don’t know why these people converged on Emerson’s block of Boylston Street, but it must have been a big deal because Emerson archivist … Continue Reading #ThrowbackTuesday: 100 Years Before the Patriots Drew Crowds
Dear Emerson Community, The New England Patriots Super Bowl Victory Rolling Rally has passed through our campus area as of 12:45 p.m. The pedestrian traffic on our sidewalks has also … Continue Reading Super Bowl Parade Traffic Back to Normal on Campus
Dear Students and Faculty, I am writing to urge you to nominate faculty for our three teaching awards that celebrate dedication, creativity, innovation, and inclusive excellence in the classroom. Please click … Continue Reading Call for Teaching Award Nominations
Dear Emerson community, On Tuesday, February 5, there will be a parade in Boston for Super Bowl champions, the New England Patriots. The parade/rolling rally of about 25 Duck Boats … Continue Reading Super Bowl Parade and the Emerson Campus
Writing, Literature and Publishing Professor Emerita Charlotte Lindgren got a hug last night from one of her former students: Emmy Award-winning actor and children’s book author Henry Winkler ’67.
Dear Emerson Community, The College has been in conversations with the City of Boston and other local officials to make plans for a parade/rolling rally should the Patriots be victorious … Continue Reading Super Bowl Preparations
This Sunday evening, the New England Patriots will challenge the Los Angeles Rams in Super Bowl LIII in Atlanta! Whether you tune in to cheer for a team, watch the commercials, or see the halftime show, we encourage you to be thoughtful about your activities and actions both during and after the game.
Visual and Media Arts Professor Kathryn Ramey’s current production, El Signo Vacio (The Empty Sign), a cinematic ethnography interrogating the U.S. occupation of Puerto Rico, was one of just 50 projects selected out of roughly 5,000 for funding and professional support through a Creative Capital grant.