Jeremy Weiss headed west toward Los Angeles after completing his MFA in Media Arts at Emerson in 2012, focused on pursuing a traditional directing career in scripted TV programming. Seven years later, he’s achieved his first “director” credits, but it isn’t with a scripted program. It’s reality TV.
Recently, we proposed a simple question on Emerson College’s Facebook page: Who is, or was, your favorite professor and why?
The Ivy Film Festival will announce the winners of its five scriptwriting competitions at the conclusion of its weeklong festival April 8-14 at Brown University. And Emerson College is guaranteed at least one win.
Seven Emerson Los Angeles students participated in The Instant Film Festival, an event created by the Motion Picture Television Fund (MPTF), a nonprofit organization that aids people through the financial uncertainties of life in the entertainment industry.
Starting in the fall of 2019, Emerson College is offering a Global BFA in Film Art in partnership with the Paris College of Art. By David Ertischek ’01 Emerson Lions … Continue Reading Here Are The New Undergrad and Graduate Majors Emerson Started Offering in Recent Years
The interdisciplinary research and writing collaboration of Associate Professors Kristin Lieb (Marketing Communications) and Miranda Banks (Visual and Media Arts) published in two parts in Flow Journal, an online television journal, this winter.
Emerson College alums had their hands in Oscar Award nominated movies, including award-winning ‘Spider-Verse’ and ‘Mary Poppins Returns.’
Emerson alum Ross Girard, middle, was surprised by Taylor Swift at his engagement party thanks to his fiancee Alex Goldschmidt. Getting engaged is a momentous occasion. Now how about having … Continue Reading Taylor Swift Surprises, Serenades Emerson Alum at His Engagement Party
One of the Grown-ish’s writers this season was Hailey Chavez ’15, and Visual and Media Arts Associate Professor Miranda Banks (who had Chavez in two classes) consulted on the show, working with the writers to make the characters’ college experience believable to audiences.
Emersonians and the general public got a glimpse of the gritty, ruthless, and tense lives of American and Canadian fishermen feuding over the lobster-rich 277 square miles of sea known as the “Gray Zone,” an area claimed by both the United States and Canada.