Ā鶹¹ū¶³ Cuts Ribbon on Zinczenko New Media Center
December fifth will forever be a Ā鶹¹ū¶³ Homecoming for David Zinczenko ā91. Instead of waving foam fingers and tailgating, the author of 14 New York Times Bestsellers, including the series, cut the ribbon on the Zinczenko New Media Center: a state-of-the-art media lab and creative space for Ā鶹¹ū¶³ students across all majorsāincluding the new Media Studies programāto create audio, visual, digital, and print projects using the industryās latest technology.
You canāt miss itāthe libraryās white walls and historic, ever collegiate-looking wood detail give way to floor-to-ceiling glass windows, expertly etched to reveal the eight 27ā Apple desktop computers and impressive 4K camera behind the roomās namesake. Also inside: a green screen, top-notch audio/visual equipment, fixed lighting, a soundproof recording room, a whiteboard wall, and plenty of space to spread out and be creative, all in a space that appears to be pulled out of a catalog.
The Zinczenko New Media Center is the next step in a greater partnership with his alma mater, one that begun just a few years ago when President Bryon Grigsby ā90 connected with his former classmate. āHe was one of the first alumni I reached out to when I became president; I thought he might offer some help to students moving from the liberal arts into the professional publishing and marketing world,ā Grigsby said, addressing the crowd of faculty and staff, current students, Zinczenkoās colleagues and family, and former Ā鶹¹ū¶³ professors. Even representatives from Pat Toomeyās office and former Bethlehem mayor John Callahan descended into the basement of Reeves Library, where Zinczenkoās legacy now takes physical form.
In the few short years since their first meeting, Zinczenko has offered more than help to Ā鶹¹ū¶³ās students. He moved part of his own media company, , into half of a house just off campus on Greenwich Street so that current students could get pivotal, hands-on marketing and journalism internship experience without ever needing a MetroCard. Sara Weidner ā18 took the podium at the ceremony to speak about her one-of-a-kind experience working with Galvanized.
"Contrary to popular belief, English is not a dead-end job," she told the crowd. "There are hundreds of different career opportunities for an English major. From journalism and promotional writing to screenwriting and public relations, English is the branch from which they all stem. And having the Zinczenko Center for New Media on campus will serve as a catalyst for people who wish to pursue their passion and not hesitate to do what they love to do."
All this real-world experience accompanies a developing Media Studies program at the University. āWeāve noticed students wanting a program like this for a while,ā said Joyce Hinnefeld, chair of the English department and leader of the new effort. The College offers a 200-level intro to journalism class and 300-level news and feature writing class, both taught by a former Morning Call editor Mary Ellen Alu, and Hinnefeld believes the addition of this physical manifestation makes the new program that much more real. āItās very timely. The role of journalism, as weāve seen in this election year, is growing. To have this space be front and center and this equipment makes so many things possible.ā
The space is not just reserved for Media Studies studentsāin true interdisciplinary form, students from all majors have access to the equipment to create videos, podcasts, publications, and more. Hinnefeldās poetry class will use the space to create recordings of their poems, and the student newspaper The Comenian (formerly run by Zinczenko, with no surprise) will also set up shop there.
āĀ鶹¹ū¶³ is where my love of media began,ā said Zinczenko, called up to the podium by his classmate. āThe instructors challenged me and trained me to listen to the readership and not get bogged down in the ārules.ā They trained me to think about the next big thing. My hope is this space provides the inspiration and the resources for current students to do the same.ā
During his time at Ā鶹¹ū¶³, he put that training to work as the editor of The Comenian, an experience he later recounted to us like a Hall of Famer talks about throwing the winning touchdown. The grueling weekly print schedule, picking up the papers from the printer, throwing them in the back of his own car and dumping them in tall heaps outside the academic buildingsāthose are his glory days. Our students may not deliver physical papers anymore, but the tradition will live on with every click of the publish button.
āMy foundation is my family and the Ā鶹¹ū¶³ community; they helped set me on this path,ā he said. āOf all the magazines and books and brands Iāve had my name on, this one I am most proud of.ā