American Indian college students cry out into the wild, their message reverberating loud and clear that an education empowers not only them but their entire community.
Each student in this :60 proclaims that education is the key to uplifting thousands in their tribe. Other elements of this campaign out of Wieden+Kennedy, Portland, Ore., reveal specifics such as through the eyes of native environmental science major Aissa, a student at Northwest Indian College, Washington. She is learning through an environmental science study program how to preserve water in the desert. The Colorado River provides her tribe, the Navajo, with energy, with income and with life. If it becomes polluted or if it were to dry up, the tribe’s culture too would shrivel.
You can help a student help a tribe by logging onto tribalcollege.org.
The two TV spots, a :60 and a :30, were directed by Joe Pytka of PYTKA.
Utah Leaders and Locals Rally To Keep Sundance Film Festival In The State
With the 2025 Sundance Film Festival underway, Utah leaders, locals and longtime attendees are making a final push โ one that could include paying millions of dollars โ to keep the world-renowned film festival as its directors consider uprooting.
Thousands of festivalgoers affixed bright yellow stickers to their winter coats that read "Keep Sundance in Utah" in a last-ditch effort to convince festival leadership and state officials to keep it in Park City, its home of 41 years.
Gov. Spencer Cox said previously that Utah would not throw as much money at the festival as other states hoping to lure it away. Now his office is urging the Legislature to carve out $3 million for Sundance in the state budget, weeks before the independent film festival is expected to pick a home for the next decade.
It could retain a small presence in picturesque Park City and center itself in nearby Salt Lake City, or move to another finalist โ Cincinnati, Ohio, or Boulder, Colorado โ beginning in 2027.
"Sundance is Utah, and Utah is Sundance. You can't really separate those two," Cox said. "This is your home, and we desperately hope it will be your home forever."
Last year's festival generated about $132 million for the state of Utah, according to Sundance's 2024 economic impact report.
Festival Director Eugene Hernandez told reporters last week that they had not made a final decision. An announcement is expected this year by early spring.
Colorado is trying to further sweeten its offer. The state is considering legislation giving up to $34 million in tax incentives to film festivals like Sundance through 2036 โ on top of the $1.5 million in funds already approved to lure the Utah festival to its neighboring... Read More