Features

  • Nic Tamayo with a buffalo statue and the Flatirons in the background.
    Saying yes to opportunities served Nic well as a student鈥攁nd will help him in a competitive Fulbright program in France.
  • Keely at KING5
    When an award-winning producer decided to move on from Denver, the one thing she wouldn鈥檛 negotiate on was a view of the mountains.
  • Coach Prime
    NIL has changed the relationship between athletes and the media. As it happens, one NFL athlete was 30 years ahead of the curve.
  • A group of CMCI students shoots video and photos amid a group of players on the sidelines of the stadium during a football game.
    Students in CMCI鈥檚 sports media minor regularly have opportunities to network and get hands-on experience while completing the program.
  • Nandi and camera
    A PhD student and documentary filmmaker is trying to understand how leaving the country influences how Black American men form their identities.
  • Film camera showing a scene from Bridgerton
    Alumna Sara Fischer decided Shondaland鈥檚 sets needed to better reflect the worlds she was helping create on series like Bridgerton.
  • Student takes a selfie
    CMCI in D.C. is helping students discover new passions and grow鈥攑ersonally and professionally鈥攁s they prepare for careers in media.
  • Information Science Associate Professors Casey Fiesler and Steven Voida
    Living with Type 1 diabetes is demanding鈥攑atients must stay on top of their diet and exercise, even if they鈥檙e living with technology like insulin pumps or continuous glucose monitors. But information science faculty Casey Fiesler and Steven Voida are optimistic that with the help of holistic technology, this will change. They鈥檝e received a grant from the National Institutes of Health, and, along with other university colleagues, hope to develop a 鈥減erson-centered artificial pancreas.鈥
  • Dawn Doty instructs students
    Teaching Associate Professor Dawn Doty received the lifetime achievement award from the Colorado chapter of the Public Relations Society of America. She sat down with CMCI to share anecdotes, tips and keys to working in public relations.
  • Leysia works with students
    Leysia Palen was awarded CU鈥檚 highest honor for faculty鈥攖he title of distinguished professor. She offers a deeper look into her groundbreaking research career, her mentorship methods and her goals for the future.
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