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Nicola Pine is the Youth Programs Director at SPNN. She has an Associate's degree in video production from Minneapolis Community and Technical College and a BA in Community Based Youth Media from Metropolitan State University. Since 1996 she has been mentoring youth in video production and working to increase access and build visibility of youth media locally and nationally. She is a founding member of the Twin Cities Youth Media Network and is actively involved in the National Youth Media Access Project (a coalition of Access Centers around the country). In her spare time she keeps busy with her super-cute kid and is active in community organizing efforts in the Powderhorn Park neighborhood of Minneapolis. |
| phone: 651.298.8903 |
email: pine@spnn.org |
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Mary Pumphrey, Youth Programs Coordinator works on the Neighborhood Video Project, as well as outreach and distribution for the department. Mary is a recent transplant to Minnesota. Having grown up in Kentucky and attended the University of Virginia (where she studied Political Theory and worked on community-based documentary projects) this is the first time she has lived north of the Mason-Dixon line. She lives in South Minneapolis, where she is often found taking pictures and posting them on flickr. |
| phone: 651.298.8905 |
email: pumphrey@spnn.org |
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Rachel deLange, Youth Media Outreach and Assistant coordinator of Set It Up, has been slowly migrating west from Ontario, Canada where she grew up, to Grand Rapids, Michigan where she recently graduated in Mass Media, and now to Minneapolis, Minnesota, where she commutes from to work at SPNN. She is currently working on a documentary she shot in Thailand and loves to be involved in creative arts. When she’s not involved in media-related activities, she can be found cruising on local bike trails, playing scrabble, or working on her new fashion line. |
| phone: 651.361.8152 |
email: delange@spnn.org |
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Ariel Kitch, Assistant Coordinator of the Neighborhood Video Project, recently made the switch from audio to video. She’s lived in six different states and followed taxi cab drivers, garment factory workers, magic card players and missionaries. Her love for documentary probably began while working at her college station, KWCW, where the largest audience was the Washington State Penitentiary. She studied audio documentary at the Salt Institute in Maine, and since then has incorporated documentary work into all sorts of multimedia: illustration, photography, audio, and now video. |
| phone: 651.361.8147 |
email: kitch@spnn.org |