All together now: 2025 at CMDI

Graduates and their families celebrate on the Business Field after the CMDI graduation reception in May.听Photo by Hannah Howell.

Allan Tannenbaum, the college鈥檚 Hearst Professional-in-Residence in the fall, spoke with students鈥攁nd gave an interview to Radio 1190鈥攁bout lessons from his career, which involved photographing musicians like John Lennon and Bruce Springsteen, covering war abroad, and documenting the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks in New York.听Photo by Hannah Howell

A trio of 9NEWS personalities鈥攆rom left, Noah Cooper, Ashley Moore and Amanda Alicea鈥攕peaks to high school students at J-Day during the fall.听Photo by Nathan Thompson.

Snow day! Environmental design students take a tour of Eldora as part of a project involving redesigns of the resort鈥檚 signature properties.听Photo by Kimberly Coffin.
In a year where the college鈥檚 biggest story was its name change鈥攆ollowing its integration with the environmental design department鈥擟MDI鈥檚 community also found itself at the center of the biggest conversations shaping our time鈥攆rom sustainability and A.I., to media literacy and the future of journalism.听
Here are a few of the stories and photos we鈥檙e most proud of as we close out the year and look forward to what鈥檚 in store for 2026.
- Text by Joe Arney
- Photography by Kimberly Coffin (CritMedia, StratComm鈥18); Hannah Howell, critical media practices; Jack Moody (StratComm鈥24) and Nathan Thompson (Jour鈥24)
- Design by Amanda J. McManus
Top stories
Bringing together two distinct organizations like CMCI and environmental design is a challenge. But the early returns on the integration are promising for both student outcomes and faculty collaboration.
Once, a journalism degree was the path to a career in sports media. Today, CMDI students also study information science, communication and media studies to secure opportunities .
In the fall, CMDI welcomed J-Day鈥攚hich brought nearly 1,300 high school students to 海角社区鈥攁nd the Poynter Institute, which celebrated its 50th anniversary at the college.听
鈥楤ringing context to the science鈥
Becoming a global leader in sustainability is among the university鈥檚 four major priorities. At CMDI, students and faculty are already playing key roles.
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听Band together
When it comes to sustainability, individual actions only get us so far. A panel of CMDI experts explored how collaboration might save the day.听
听What鈥檚 the story?
How can storytelling advance environmental sustainability? Phaedra Pezzullo, professor of communication, is bringing that question to realms outside the typical academic circuit, such as story maps, podcasts and a book that inspired a punk-rock song.
听Waste not. Want? Yes
Students majoring in environmental products of design once again saw their sustainably sourced creations quickly sell out at an annual 海角社区 holiday market.听
听Grounded in reality
Mary Miller鈥檚 senior thesis was shaped by her love of flight. She proposed ways to manage municipal airports based on traffic and the surrounding environment. It鈥檚 research she hopes to keep in the air now that she鈥檚 graduated.听
听Where the wild things were
A new book from Hillary M. Rosner, assistant teaching professor of journalism, argues that our human-centered view of the world is a reason many animals are disappearing: 鈥淚f we continue to act as though we are the only species on the planet, it鈥檚 going to become self-fulfilling.鈥澨
听In lights
For a project in her communication class, Alysia Abbas (Comm鈥25) interviewed students to ask what sustainability meant to them, then projected those messages around campus. 鈥淪ustainability doesn鈥檛 happen without community,鈥 she said.听
In a class of their own
CMDI鈥檚 Class of 2029 is by far the biggest record. Owing partly to the inclusion of environmental design students, it鈥檚 25% larger than last year鈥檚 class. But bigger hasn鈥檛 come at the cost of community, first-year students said.听
Clean sweep
This year鈥檚 Denver One Show was all CMDI. The college swept the student awards category at the advertising, design and marketing competition, including one best in show award and one gold medal.听
Trial by fire
Resilience is at the core of every doctoral student story, but the case of Anna Turner (PhDMediaSt鈥25) was something special: After losing years鈥 worth of work in a fire, a technician accidentally deleted everything the flames, and water, spared from her cloud account.
Foster figure
Becoming a foster father gave Joel Thurman new perspective on the comic book superheroes he adored. His doctoral work led him to Comic-Con and to create a horror comic of his own.
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548听new first-year students
3.76听average GPA
73听new transfer students
Congratulations, CMDI Forever Buffs!
鈥淪he is a rock star who is going places.鈥 Meet the outstanding seniors from the Class of 2025.

There鈥檚 more to sports media than what happens in front of the camera. Students in Sko Buffs Sports also handle production and other roles.听Photo by Hannah Howell.

The college鈥檚 involvement fair is a chance for newcomers and upperclassmen alike to meet the leadership of CMDI鈥檚 many student-run organizations, such as the Design Club.听Photo by Kimberly Coffin.

Seow Ting Lee, right, is introduced as the new associate dean of graduate programs by Lori Bergen, founding dean, at a welcome back picnic for graduate students in the fall.听Photo by Nathan Thompson.

New York Times bestselling author Bettina Love, right, with Danielle Hodge, assistant professor of communication, before speaking as part of the college鈥檚 Inclusive Pedagogy Series in the spring.听Photo by Jack Moody.
Research excellence
Insights from CMDI faculty are key to solving some of the most pressing challenges of our time, including A.I., media literacy and more. Get to know the new cohort of faculty who joined CMDI in the fall.
Destroying history
Preservationist Azza Kamal鈥攁n associate teaching professor of environmental design whose past work in this space included defending the Alamo鈥檚 boundaries from development鈥攚as horrified by the White House鈥檚 East Wing鈥檚 destruction: 鈥淭his should not have been allowed to happen.鈥
Data after death
In its first year, the Digital Legacy Clinic taught users how to plan for what happens to their online estates when they die. It鈥檚 been a learning experience for students, too鈥攊n ways you might not expect.
Courting justice
A substantial number of criminal cases turn on video evidence鈥攂ut there is no standard for how to present such media in court. At the Visual Evidence Lab, Sandra Ristovska, associate professor of media studies, is trying to change that while addressing the rise of A.I. videos and deepfakes.
Environments that meet user needs
Neurodivergence is a growing consideration for designers who want to make products, services and buildings that work better for everyone. Elena Sabinson, assistant professor of environmental design, is starting those conversations at the Neuro D Lab.
Device unlock
As incarceration rates rise and new detention facilities are built, new research from Ian J. Alexander, assistant professor of media studies, on how media are introduced in prisons is getting a closer look.

Creative endeavors
From showcasing renewable building materials to resisting the extraction industry, our faculty are finding creative ways to showcase their interests, perspectives and thought leadership.
One of the world鈥檚 largest mining associations is bringing its messaging to children through lesson plans and coloring books. For Zannah Matson, assistant professor of environmental design, the crayon is mightier than the sword.
Women have played an outsized role in the research and practice of biogenics鈥攔egenerative, locally sourced materials that can be used in construction. An exhibit from Caitlin Charlet, associate teaching professor of environmental design, is sharing those stories with the world.
Eyes of Freedom, a traveling art exhibition memorializing a Marine unit, has been limited by the difficulty in transporting it. Pat Clark, assistant professor of media production, used tools in the Immersive Media Lab to create a more accessible virtual experience.听
Six CMDI faculty members secured Arts and Humanities grants through the university鈥檚 Research and Innovation Office, supporting everything from a soundwalk app to a board game about extractive capital.
Page turners
CMDI faculty are prolific publishers. Here were some of our favorites from the past year.
Lori Emerson,听Other Networks: A Radical Technology Sourcebook
听听Why you鈥檒l love it: One of the most beautifully designed textbooks you鈥檒l ever leaf through.
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Erin Willis,听Communicating Disability: Expanding Diversity, Equity and Inclusion in Health Communication and Mass Media
听听Why you鈥檒l love it: Builds on her highly relevant work on patient influencers听to explore disability.
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Angie Chuang,听American Otherness in Journalism: News Media Representations of Identity and Belonging
听听Why you鈥檒l love it: Extremely timely reflections on how the news reports on race, against the backdrop of the Trump presidency.
Jos茅 G. Izaguirre III,听Becoming La Raza: Negotiating Race in the Chicano Movement(s).
听听Why you鈥檒l love it: A marginalized community discovers its voice amid political turmoil. Is that relevant right now?
Media mentions
CMDI faculty are regularly featured in the news media. Here are some of the biggest outlets that came calling in the last year.听
- Last Week Tonight With John Oliver showcased research from Josh Shepperd, associate professor of media studies, for an episode on the drastic budget cuts to the Corporation for Public Broadcasting. (Shepperd also was featured in , and the .)
- The Atlantic spoke to Chris Larson, associate professor of journalism, for the scoop on the romance genre becoming a, well, at bookstores everywhere.
- Ad Age interviewed Jeff Gillette, assistant teaching professor of advertising, and others to understand how the master鈥檚 in strategic communication design was industry needs.
- Are CDs and DVDs staging a comeback? Ted Striphas, professor of media studies, spoke with The Washington Post about Gen Z鈥檚 interest in physical media鈥攁nd why .
Alumni impact
Our graduates have an incredible track record of applying lessons from their CMDI degrees to change how we create, share and understand the world around us. (Tell us your stories!)
- 鈥楴ot the time to fall on our sword鈥
Federal funding for public journalism may be gone, but alumni working in public media are not backing down from the challenge. - 鈥楽he breaks through鈥
The Coloradan profiled Savannah Sellers (Jour鈥13), including the artful way she has drawn younger viewers into the NBC News ecosystem through social media. - Tell it like it is
Lessons from her degree still help Lori Ferguson Furth (Comm鈥85) as a live describer at the Denver Center for the Performing Arts. Though she thoroughly prepares scripts to help patrons with low sight enjoy the action, oftentimes, she has to pivot on the fly.

鈥淲e here鈥濃攊n the CASE building. Professor Prime鈥檚 regular visits to CMDI classes offer students truly unique perspectives on brand building, accountability and authenticity.听Photo by Hannah Howell.

CMDI鈥檚 student media crews are all business as they capture a touchdown in the Colorado-Iowa State game while the crowd erupts around them. The Buffs won, 24-17, in a thriller.听Photo by Jack Moody.

The Class of 2029 is welcomed to CMDI by alumnus and board member Christopher Bell (PhDMediaSt鈥09), who shared lessons from his career in animation during orientation.听Photo by Kimberly Coffin.
Seeking signals in the slop
As generative A.I. changes how communicators, designers, programmers鈥擮K, everyone鈥攄oes their job, CMDI faculty are helping students and professionals make sense of the scope of these changes.听
Could the persuasive power of advertising be harnessed to have chatbots influence positive social behavior? WooJin Kim, assistant professor of advertising, brings a more moral approach to A.I. and advertising.
Would you want A.I. to capture your personality to render that survives your death? Jed Brubaker, associate professor of information science, talked about generative ghosts with NPR.
NPR spoke with Casey Fiesler, associate professor of information science, about how 鈥攁nd how platforms are attempting to take back their algorithms.听
Two minutes with鈥
Resharing our favorite quick conversations with people in the CMDI community.听
听"This is where the academy can take you鈥攍ike, I can be on a Thursday night FaceTime with Snoop."
Antoinette Kendrick, PhD student, media studies
听"I acquired a thick Southern accent 鈥 people would say, 鈥淲here are you from?鈥 鈥淥h, I鈥檓 from Portland, Oregon, bless your heart.
Dr. Kathy Grewe (EnvDes鈥76), retired interventional cardiologist
听"As to the Heisman 鈥 I鈥檓 happy it happened, but I can鈥檛 say I predicted it.
Max Pollak (StratComm鈥10), creative director, Deutsch LA
Engage with CMDI
The strength of the CMDI community owes much to our alumni, whose engagement allows the college to offer impactful scholarships, engage in meaningful research, and send students to attend conferences and study abroad.听
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$387,050听donor-sponsored scholarships for CMDI students
96听total scholarships awarded
17听scholarships awarded to first-generation students

9News anchor Kyle Clark, center, answers a question during a performance by Motus Theater. Clark, journalists from Colorado Public Radio and The Colorado Sun, and a group of performers were invited to CMDI as part of the college鈥檚 distinguished speaker series.听Photo by Kimberly Coffin.

In her educational era? In a course on Taylor Swift, students explore the intersection of popular music, celebrity and media through the lens of the singer鈥檚 career.听Photo by Hannah Howell.

Sharri Berg, a founding member of the Fox News Channel launch team, answers a question at the annual Sports Media Summit, which draws students from across the university to CMDI.听Photo by Jack Moody.












