Justin Roth Archives - EMU News /now/news/tag/justin-roth/ News from the ݮ community. Tue, 08 Jul 2014 16:45:43 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9 EMU grads help market James Madison University /now/news/2014/emu-grads-help-market-james-madison-university/ Sat, 08 Mar 2014 17:37:49 +0000 http://emu.edu/now/news/?p=20830 From brochures to advertisements, from emails to exhibit displays, and mobile apps to video tours, five EMU alumni help promote the James Madison University brand through graphic design, photography, videography, and web design. Four of them – Katie Landis ’12, Justin Roth ’12, Lorinda “Rinn” Siegrist ’89 and Frank Ameka ’07 – came to their various positions with degrees in and internships in EMU’s small, but multi-faceted marketing department. The fifth alumnus is something of an anomaly: Web developer Jamie Johnson was already a minted Duke who had earned his bachelor’s in computer information systems before completing an MA in counseling in 1999 at EMU. We’ll save his unusual story for last.

Katie Landis, an assistant photographer in the marketing department, started her position at JMU the day after graduation. She shoots, edits, archives and delivers photos for the alumni magazine, orientation guides, the Madison Family Handbook, and other projects. Landis also manages four student photographers, emphasizing the “art of visual storytelling” that she learned from her EMU professors.

Since February 2013, Justin Roth has worked at JMU as an assistant video producer. One of his first tasks was to produce video of newly appointed President Jonathan Alger during his get-acquainted tour of alumni around the country.

Rinn Siegrist, who holds a master’s from Syracuse, is the marketing design manager in JMU’s Office of University Communications and Marketing. Siegrist first gained experience as a student graphic designer in the EMU athletics department, and then worked full-time for seven years in the marketing department, designing EMU’s first website and a wide variety of marketing materials.

Since 1996, Siegrist has spent all but three years at JMU, “in various roles over the years, but they all amount to graphic design work,” she says. She currently designs and oversees graphic design and visual brands, including those relating to the JMU alumni magazine, the Forbes Performing Arts Center, and College of Visual and Performing Arts, development and student recruitment.

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At JMU, Frank Ameka ’07 runs an in-house marketing agency staffed by students. (Photo by Evan White/JMU)

Across campus in the depths of Warren Hall, Frank Ameka runs what amounts to a small, but very busy marketing agency. Ameka is assistant director of technology and design, and his job is to oversee what he jokingly calls his self-created “behemoth.” Hired the year he graduated, Ameka consolidated client services into a student-staffed and team-oriented marketing agency specializing in integrated graphic design, web development, video, writing, and photography. His staff has exploded from four to 27 employees serving six major clients at the university, including Madison Union, the Office of Student Activities and Involvement, the Festival Conference Center, Fraternity and Sorority Life, Kijiji Leadership, and the University Program Board. At any given time, his student-employees could be developing digital signs and web promotions, filming a leadership video, designing a webpage, or working on advertisements for upcoming Madison Union gallery showings.

“At EMU, I took advantage of every opportunity to practice my craft,” he said, whether single-handedly creating the yearbook, photographing campus events, or filming the Mennonite Youth Conference. “We offer that same opportunity here.”

Web developer Jamie Johnson graduated from JMU with a degree in computer information systems and worked in informational technology for WLR Foods from 1995 to 1999 before attending EMU and then pursuing a career in behavioral health counseling. After five years, he returned to the IT field.

Now his digital “artistry” is behind the campus directory, the mobile apps website, and the IT portal that the university community uses to access electronic accounts, among other projects. Johnson has also contributed to webpages promoting the Marching Royal Dukes, the Forbes Center, the Furious Flower Poetry Center, and the department of art, design and art history.

“Counseling skills play a role here in being able to support and encourage,” he says. “The skills I learned at EMU also assist in learning to speak the customer’s language to help them understand the technical aspects of something I have developed, maintain or support.”

— Lauren Jefferson

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‘Weaving Life’ Documentary Wins Award /now/news/2012/weaving-life-documentary-wins-award/ Tue, 11 Dec 2012 21:05:32 +0000 http://emu.edu/now/news/?p=15236 Weaving Life, a documentary on the life and death of peacemaker Dan Terry in Afghanistan, has received a gold “Pixie” award for innovation in the use of motion graphics, effects and animation.

The 4th Annual , sponsored by the (encompassing those who work with “moving pixels”), was founded by David E. Carter, originator of the well-known Telly Awards for film/video work.

Weaving Life was produced by last spring, in cooperation with . The documentary began airing on ABC-TV affiliates on Oct. 21, with the last airing on Dec. 16.

Weaving Life tells how Terry wove relationships, joy, partnership and understanding into his lifelong work in Afghanistan. Terry, a 64-year-old United Methodist, was among 10 humanitarian aid workers assassinated in Afghanistan in August 2010. was among the slain workers.

The documentary shows the way Terry set out to build bridges where “everyone else was blowing them up,” says production consultant and storyteller Jonathan Larson. “He spans the chasms of suspicion, religious hatred and outright warfare, with patient bonds of trust and openness.”

, media arts and peacebuilding professor at EMU, oversaw the 16 students who produced the documentary, with help from classmates in a motion graphics course taught by , PhD, professor of visual and communication arts. Unable to go to Afghanistan to get new video footage for the documentary, the students relied on photos, numerous motion graphics and effects, and videotaped interviews to illustrate the story.

The highest Pixie award is a platinum award for entries scoring 9 or higher on a 10 point scale; those scoring 7 to 8.9 points qualify for a gold award. More information is available at

Terry’s story is also the focus of a book, . The book is available for $15.99 (25 percent off for group study) and the documentary is available for $14.99 from . More information on the program and book is also available at

MennoMedia, which produces documentaries through participation in the , worked with EMU intern Justin Roth to complete the documentary to meet ABC-TV specifications for airing this fall.

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A Humanitarian’s Story /now/news/2012/a-humanitarian%e2%80%99s-story/ Wed, 02 May 2012 14:07:54 +0000 http://emu.edu/now/news/?p=12638 Courtesy Daily News Record, May 1, 2012

Dan Terry devoted his life to helping Afghan people.

For nearly four decades, the humanitarian aid worker coordinated small-scale community development projects throughout the struggling country until his murder in 2010.

“I never know how to describe what my dad did. Every time I called him, he was doing something different,” said his daughter, Anneli Terry-Nelson, 30. “He was a networker. He knew someone who could do something someone needed to be done and could link them up over a cup of tea.”

The 64-year-old was among 10 humanitarian aid workers murdered on Aug. 5, 2010, as they were returning to Kabul from a medical relief trip in the northern part of Afghanistan.

ݮ alum Glen Lapp and Harrisonburg resident Brian Carderelli also were killed in the ambush.

On Friday night at the MainStage Theater in University Commons, 16 EMU students from the university’s visual and communication arts department unveiled a 57-minute documentary, “Weaving Life,” which portrayed Terry’s life.

Paulette Moore, a media arts and peace building professor, thought of the idea for the documentary after one of Terry’s friends, Jonathan Larson, spoke during a university chapel service.

“Those killings affected our community, the Mennonite community, greatly,” Moore said. “We were part of that story.”

Kelby Miller, a 22-year-old senior from Sarasota, Fla., served as the senior producer for the project.

The film depicts Terry’s unique approach to humanitarianism.

“I hope the documentary shows people Dan’s different ways of doing things,” Miller said. “He wasn’t just worried about giving them things but [also] making relationships.”

Justin Roth, a 21-year-old senior from Bettsville, Ohio, served as the project’s editor. Roth said he learned a great deal about Terry’s life during the semester-long project.

“We learned a whole lot about Dan through the stories of other people,” he said.

MennoMedia, which produces documentaries through the National Programming Committee of the National Council of Churches, plans to prepare the film for airing on ABC television stations this fall.

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Senior Shows Open with Dynamic Multimedia Exhibit /now/news/2012/senior-shows-open-with-dynamic-multimedia-exhibit/ Fri, 16 Mar 2012 15:29:40 +0000 http://emu.edu/now/news/?p=11680 A dynamic multimedia exhibition combining digital media, stained glass and a collage of digital photography will open the 2012 senior art show season on Saturday, March 17, at 4 p.m.

Conrad Yutzy and Justin Roth, students in the Visual and Communication Arts (VaCA) students at ݮ, will open the shows in the Margaret Martin Gehman Art Gallery in University Commons.

Yutzy combines interviews with digital media and stained glass sculpture to provide powerful insight into the nexus of spirituality and sexuality.

Roth’s digital photography and collage on matte paper explores how action impacts identity. “My work visually represents the idea of how our actions form who we are,” says Roth. “Our actions define us, our hands are the tools that create action.”

Admission to the gallery is free.

Full schedule of exhibits

March 17:

Conrad Yutzy,”The Other Side”: Mixed-media installations

Justin Roth, “Formed”: Digitally-collaged portraits

 

March 24:

Katie Weaver:  Photos under the macro lens

Laney Garcia:  Underwater photography

 

March 31:

Katie Landis, cinemagraphs

Kayci Detweiler, collaged illustrations

 

April 14:

Travis Duerksen: Digital media

Chris Stauffer: “Selah”: A digital animation

Corey Martin: Cinemagraphs

Chelsea Kight, Installation with paintings (in the Hartzler Library Gallery)

 

April 21:

Kelby Miller: The Consu(M3)d Project – photography and digital media

Erica Lehman: The Consu(M3)d Project – paintings

Susan Alexander: The Consu(M3)d Project – animation

In addition, there will be a group installation drawing.

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