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Emerging from the pandemic. virtual assistants help professionals to succeed. They take over many critical tasks that are associated with scaling a business. As millions of business founders and entrepreneurs settle into remote work, many of them turn to virtual assistants for help. As principal of VirtualKGB.com, Kate Gable Bright delivers the capabilities of big marketing services companies. Often times, Kate launches marketing campaigns, increases sales, and builds formidable social media presences for her clients' brands. Kate’s background is impressive. For years, she led a successful experiential marketing agency. Then, during the pandemic, Kate decided the time was right for her to apply her considerable talents via a virtual assistance company, providing project management expertise to a wide range of clients. In this episode, Kate: Introduces VirtualKGB.com and the unique value it provides entrepreneurs, CEOs, and company founders. Starts at 2:18 Describes some of the stressors that keep her clients up at night. Starts at 3:58 Explains how she overcomes the "do it all" mentality. Starts at 8:28 Illustrates the positive experiences of clients who launch side-hustles like online businesses. Starts at 11:28 Offers what she likes about being an entrepreneur. Starts at 17:03 Clearly, virtual assistants will help professionals to succeed and inform many best practices in the future of work. About our guest: Kate Gable Bright earned a Bachelor of Science degree from the Roy H. Park School of Communications at Ithaca College. Prior to launching VirtualKGB.com, she ran a successful experiential marketing agency. Kate lives and works in Southern California. EPISODE DATE: March 19, 2021 Social media: - LinkedIn - Website Please Subscribe to The Dan Smolen Podcast on: – Apple Podcast – Android – Google Podcasts – Pandora – Spotify – Stitcher – TuneIn …or wherever you get your podcasts. You may also click HERE to receive our podcast episodes by email. Image credits: Virtual assistant at keyboard, Pheelings Media for iStock Photo; Kate Gable Bright portrait, Monika O'Deegan; Podcast button, J. Brandt Studio for The Dan Smolen Experience.
***Trigger Warning***In this episode, we share detailed accounts of bingeing, restricting, body dysmorphia, and harmful beauty ideals. If you are suffering or recovering from an eating disorder, body dysmorphia, and/or mental disorder, please listen with caution or skip this episode entirely. The last thing I would want is for hearing these things to set you back in your healing journey or to trigger negative thoughts or emotions.//Amari Pollard is 1/4 of the So-Called Oreos podcast, a podcast where four friends discuss topics on being labeled "too Black" or "too white" in society and how that impacts their everyday lives. In addition to being a podcaster, Amari is also a writer and audience development strategist currently studying strategic communication as a Roy H. Park Fellow at the UNC Hussman School of Journalism and Media. In this episode, Amari shares personal stories from childhood, her high school and college days as an athlete, and present day in the pandemic dealing with body dysmorphia and disordered eating. We discuss the harmful beauty trends and societal messaging around bodies that can have negative impacts on one's own body image or relationship with food. Amari stated, "My personal issues with food originally stemmed from being over sexualized as a child. At the age of 10, my classmates had started a rumor that I was pregnant, and so I thought that in order for people to stop discussing my body, I had to physically take up less space. For the last 15 years I've struggled to maintain a positive relationship with my body and food, and I've even noticed old, bad habits return during the pandemic."We dive deeper into the following:The moments as a child that made her aware of her bodyViewing her body through men's appreciationWhat body dysmorphia means / looks likeBingeing and restricting habitsDisordered eating and body image as an athlete in high school vs. collegeTriggers in relationships around your bodyHarmful beauty trends and societal messaging around bodiesWhy representation of all types of bodies mattersHow social media affects your body imageTune in to hear the rest of Amari's story and insights!! //Connect with Amari:Instagram: @amaridawn@socalledoreosTwitter: @amaripollard@socalledoreosWebsite: amaridawn.comsocalledoreos.comPodcast: So Called Oreos//Song:Video by India Arie//Follow along with the rest of my journey. Instagram: @whytli@inthewakewithwhytliFacebook: Whytli RogersTwitter: @whytliTikTok: @whytliPinterest: WhytliLinkedIn: Whytli RogersWebsite: whytli.comContact me here.Support the show (https://paypal.me/whytli?locale.x=en_US)
Join Denese & Ann discuss reopening of school after the effects of COVID and the racial tension during the pandemics. With all the developments that have transpired, what will the rest of the year in education resemble? The Podcypher panel includes: Amari Pollard is one-fourth of the So-Called Oreos Podcast, a show where four friends discuss topics on being labeled "too Black" or "too white" in society and how this impacts their everyday life. In addition to being a podcaster, Amari is a writer and audience development strategist currently studying strategic communication as a Roy H. Park Fellow at the UNC Hussman School of Journalism and Media. Social Media Handles Personal Twitter: @AmariPollard Personal Instagram: @AmariDawn So-Called Oreos Twitter: @SoCalledOreos So-Called Oreos Instagram: @socalledoreos Andrew Santiago is an audio engineer, artist, administrator, and alumni of both I.A.R. And Berkeley. After graduating with a better understanding of audio and production, he began running his recording sessions and collaborating with other artists. Applying to his passion, a tenured ten-year experience of building client relations and revenue as a successful store manager. He looks forward to partnering with Marvin Perdomo in growing the success of both Bravery Studios and its podcasters. Bravery Studios: Facebook:BraveryStudiosNJ Instagram:BraveryStudiosNJ Twitter: @BraveryNJ Andrew Santiago Personal: Instagram:silkcitypro Twitter:silkcitypro --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/podcypher/support
Jeremy Menard '12 is the Television and Radio Operations Manager for the Roy H. Park School of Communications at Ithaca College.
The future of work doing meaningful work includes pursuing truly epic experiences. About this episode: Pew Research finds that the American Dream many in the workforce experienced as upward mobility is long gone; it was replaced by a soberer pursuit of economic stability. As a result, we now fill our homes and storage bins with less stuff. More of us, and especially Millennials, instead pursue less stuff and more profound meaning and experience. There are few industries where that shift to experience is more evident than in the travel and hospitality space. Eva Grodberg is a lifelong lover of international travel and an entrepreneur who delivers epic vacation travel and leisure experiences to her discriminating clients who are pursuing truly epic experiences. In these key interview segments, Eva: Relates how we may make the most of a life with less stuff and more experience. Starts at 6:30 Describes how the dynamic aspect of the pursuit of experience gets factored in to the work that she does. Starts at 16:53 Speaks to how “adrenaline junkies” escape the rush of work when on vacation. Starts at 18:31 Dreams of an epic experience she would like to have. Starts at 19:55 In the news: Fifty-five percent of people on the job don't use all of their earned vacation time. And the reason may be FOMO, or, a fear of missing out. We discover how skipping vacation time can prove harmful to health and work performance. About our guest: Eva Grodberg is the Founder and President of Epic Experiences, LLC. She is a graduate of the Roy H. Park School of Communications at Ithaca College in Ithaca, New York, and, lives and works in New York City. EPISODE DATE: February 14, 2020 Social media: Facebook Epic Experience Website - Newsletter Image credits: Woman kayaking in Norway, iStock Photo; Portrait of Eva Grodberg, Karl Grobl.
Gregory Wool, Cornell Johnson MBA '21, scored below average on the quantitative section of the GMAT. How did he overcome this score to not only get into Cornell Johnson, but win a prestigious tuition free scholarship? Gregory also shares his experience surviving a packed first semester, leading the student consulting club, and recruiting into strategy consulting. Questions Gregory's application and GMAT journey (4:40) What Gregory did to overcome his low quant score (8:50) Gregory's experience with Cornell's L.E.A.D. admissions event (12:45) Gregory's career goals and how they affected his MBA search (18:50) Winning a Roy H. Park Leadership Fellowship (22:40) The importance of speaking to current students (24:30) Surviving first semester FOMO and coursework (26:50) Becoming an officer at Johnson Consulting club (32:12) Recruiting into consulting: clubs, case competitions, career working groups, and live consulting projects (36:15) Social life at Cornell Johnson (48:00) Being an older MBA candidate (54:00) Cornell's Present Value Podcast (58:16) About Gregory Gregory Wool worked as a Director of Operations at two boutique resorts before attending the Cornell Johnson MBA, where he is a first year MBA candidate and Roy H. Park Leadership Fellow. Gregory is also President of the Johnson Consulting Club, and Producer of the Present Value Podcast. Gregory got a Bachelors in Fine Arts in Dramatic Performance from the University of Cincinnati College - Conservatory of Music. Episode summary, show notes and more at: http://touchmba.com/quantless-in-cornell-gregory-wool
When Nikole Hannah-Jones ’03 (MA) was in high school, she became obsessed with one year: 1619 — the year African slaves were first transported to an English-speaking colony in the Americas. As the 400th anniversary of that voyage was approaching, Hannah-Jones found herself at the New York Times Magazine, where she works as an investigative reporter. She pitched a project to re-examine the legacy of slavery in this country tied to that event. “I feel like my whole career and, in some ways, my whole life was geared toward this moment,” said Hannah-Jones, who received her graduate degree from the UNC Hussman School of Journalism and Media. Her 1619 Project debuted in August with essays, poems, short fiction, a photo essay and an audio series, and they all work together to build a case that slavery is one of the foundational elements of the country’s development. “We can’t understand why things are like they are in the country until we grapple with the fact that slavery is at our foundations,” she said. Significant amounts of research, investigation and fact-checking went into this project, and Hannah-Jones learned those skills at Carolina. “I think you see what I learned here in my work every day,” said Hannah-Jones, who was a Roy H. Park Fellow at the journalism school. And she’ll be returning to Carolina on Nov. 16 to officially kick off a collaborative relationship between Carolina and the Ida B. Wells Society for Investigative Reporting, a national organization she co-founded to train investigative journalists of color. On this week’s episode, Hannah-Jones will explain how Carolina helped prepare her for that pivotal moment to lead the 1619 Project and why she’s returning to Carolina to train more journalists.
Living a Life of Less Stuff And More Epic Experience According Pew Research's groundbreaking January 2017 report, the American Dream that we all knew as Upward Mobility is long gone; it was replaced by a soberer pursuit of economic stability. As a result, we now fill our homes and storage bins with less stuff. Instead, more of us, and especially Millennials, pursue profound meaning and experience. There are few industries where that shift to experience is more evident than in the travel and leisure space. In these key interview segments, she: Relates how we may make the most of a life with less stuff and more experience [start point at 3:08] Lays out what it is like being an entrepreneur [start point at 5:19] Describes how the dynamic aspect of the pursuit of experience gets factored in to the work that she does [start point at 12:10] Speaks to how “adrenaline junkies” escape the rush of work when on vacation [start point at 14:10] Dreams of an epic experience she would like to have [start point 15:32] About our podcast guest: Eva Grodberg experienced unrivaled success as a senior sales executive in the advertising industry, but after a sudden downsizing from her company, she reinvented herself doing work that she truly loves: providing epic travel and leisure experiences to discriminating world travelers. Grodberg is the Founder and President of Epic Experiences, LLC. Our conversation covers her amazing journey from successful media sales executive, to corporate escapee, to blissful entrepreneur doing the meaningful work of her dreams that benefits grateful clients. Grodberg is a graduate of the Roy H. Park School of Communications at Ithaca College in Ithaca, New York. She lives and works in New York City. EPISODE DATE: May 11, 2018 Eva Grodberg’s social media: Epic Experiences Website Epic Experiences Twitter Page Photo credits: Dad and child at Sunset, iStock Photo; Eva Grodberg portrait, Karl Grobl.
Meet Eva Grodberg, a corporate escapee turned travel provider of epic experiences. Imagine embarking on an advertising career on famed Madison Avenue, where all the entry level jobs available to recent college grads like you require proficiency in typing. Then imagine getting a lucky break with a pivot to print media sales where you rise to become a top direct response advertising sales mega-producer with a $20.5 million revenue portfolio and a huge expense account. Next, imagine what happens when your great career in print media sales comes to a screeching halt? And finally, imagine reinventing yourself in a dream role providing customized travel and leisure experiences to discriminating clients. All that and more happened to corporate escapee turned “epic” travel pro Eva Grodberg. In these key interview segments, she Describes her lucky post-college-graduation career in advertising sales [start point at 5:31] Relives the “I should have gotten out of it sooner, but I didn’t” end to her advertising career [start point at 12:16] Details becoming an entrepreneur [start point at 14:49] Identifies the skills that got her to providing epic travel experiences [start point at 17:14] About our guest: Eva Grodberg experienced unrivaled success as a senior sales executive in the advertising industry, but after a sudden downsizing from her company, she reinvented herself doing work that she truly loves: providing epic travel and leisure experiences to discriminating world travelers. Grodberg is the Founder and President of Epic Experiences, LLC. Our conversation covers her amazing journey from successful media sales executive, to corporate escapee, to blissful entrepreneur doing the meaningful work of her dreams that benefits grateful clients. Grodberg is a graduate of the Roy H. Park School of Communications at Ithaca College in Ithaca, New York. She lives and works in New York City. EPISODE DATE: May 11, 2018 Eva Grodberg’s social media: Epic Experiences Website Epic Experiences Twitter Page Photo credits: Corporate Escapee, iStock Photo; Eva Grodberg portrait, Karl Grobl.
Living a Life of Less Stuff And More Epic Experience According Pew Research's groundbreaking January 2017 report, the American Dream that we all knew as Upward Mobility is long gone; it was replaced by a soberer pursuit of economic stability. As a result, we now fill our homes and storage bins with less stuff. Instead, more of us, and especially Millennials, pursue profound meaning and experience. There are few industries where that shift to experience is more evident than in the travel and leisure space. In these key interview segments, she: Relates how we may make the most of a life with less stuff and more experience [start point at 3:08] Lays out what it is like being an entrepreneur [start point at 5:19] Describes how the dynamic aspect of the pursuit of experience gets factored in to the work that she does [start point at 12:10] Speaks to how “adrenaline junkies” escape the rush of work when on vacation [start point at 14:10] Dreams of an epic experience she would like to have [start point 15:32] About our podcast guest: Eva Grodberg experienced unrivaled success as a senior sales executive in the advertising industry, but after a sudden downsizing from her company, she reinvented herself doing work that she truly loves: providing epic travel and leisure experiences to discriminating world travelers. Grodberg is the Founder and President of Epic Experiences, LLC. Our conversation covers her amazing journey from successful media sales executive, to corporate escapee, to blissful entrepreneur doing the meaningful work of her dreams that benefits grateful clients. Grodberg is a graduate of the Roy H. Park School of Communications at Ithaca College in Ithaca, New York. She lives and works in New York City. EPISODE DATE: May 11, 2018 Eva Grodberg's social media: Epic Experiences Website Epic Experiences Twitter Page Photo credits: Dad and child at Sunset, iStock Photo; Eva Grodberg portrait, Karl Grobl.
Meet Eva Grodberg, a corporate escapee turned travel provider of epic experiences. Imagine embarking on an advertising career on famed Madison Avenue, where all the entry level jobs available to recent college grads like you require proficiency in typing. Then imagine getting a lucky break with a pivot to print media sales where you rise to become a top direct response advertising sales mega-producer with a $20.5 million revenue portfolio and a huge expense account. Next, imagine what happens when your great career in print media sales comes to a screeching halt? And finally, imagine reinventing yourself in a dream role providing customized travel and leisure experiences to discriminating clients. All that and more happened to corporate escapee turned “epic” travel pro Eva Grodberg. In these key interview segments, she Describes her lucky post-college-graduation career in advertising sales [start point at 5:31] Relives the “I should have gotten out of it sooner, but I didn't” end to her advertising career [start point at 12:16] Details becoming an entrepreneur [start point at 14:49] Identifies the skills that got her to providing epic travel experiences [start point at 17:14] About our guest: Eva Grodberg experienced unrivaled success as a senior sales executive in the advertising industry, but after a sudden downsizing from her company, she reinvented herself doing work that she truly loves: providing epic travel and leisure experiences to discriminating world travelers. Grodberg is the Founder and President of Epic Experiences, LLC. Our conversation covers her amazing journey from successful media sales executive, to corporate escapee, to blissful entrepreneur doing the meaningful work of her dreams that benefits grateful clients. Grodberg is a graduate of the Roy H. Park School of Communications at Ithaca College in Ithaca, New York. She lives and works in New York City. EPISODE DATE: May 11, 2018 Eva Grodberg's social media: Epic Experiences Website Epic Experiences Twitter Page Photo credits: Corporate Escapee, iStock Photo; Eva Grodberg portrait, Karl Grobl.
Sex educator & pleasure industry wonder woman, Anne Hodder, shares stories of her sex journalism days including the ongoing Village Voice, coast to coast, “girl-fight” she helped craft under the pseudonym Barbie Davenport. We discuss the importance of sex ed in rehab facilities and the myth of ‘sex addiction.’ Anne teaches us about breathwork & how science and the spiritual can come together to help us ‘own our shit’ in sex, relationships & all areas of life. Ken & Sunny get warm & fuzzy feedback from a fan. Guest Bio Anne Hodder, ACS, is a multi-certified sex educator endorsed by San Francisco Sex Information and the American College of Sexologists International. A cum laude graduate of the Roy H. Park School of Communications at Ithaca College, Anne’s journalism and sociology background led her to work as a journalist focusing on sexuality and the adult industry before being professionally trained in accurate and inclusive sex education. Anne received her first certification and endorsement by the renowned San Francisco Sex Information program and continued her training via the American College of Sexologists International and Planned Parenthood Los Angeles’s School Based Sex Education Program, where she honed a special skill for working with adolescents. She boasts a unique understanding of age-appropriate education, high school sex ed, critical thinking, and trauma sensitivity and, most recently, Anne has brought her teaching style into the addiction treatment and mental health communities. Anne provides accurate and accessible sexual health information and healthy relationship tools with a special focus on inclusivity, shame reduction, and effective communication skills and, with a friendly and non-judgmental approach, Anne helps clients of all kinds heal, grow and be their most authentic selves. Episode 26 Topics Delta & theta brain frequencies, compulsive sexual behavior disorder, advice for the self employed, Barbie Davenport, the business side of sex toys, sex ed in rehab facilities, classic girl fights, Harvey Weinstein, DSM 5, Own Your Shit Workshops. AV Flox, alternative medicine in the US military, Backpage, your rights in a relationship. rolling your third eye, all the reasons Nathaniel is amazing, the sweet spot between science and woo-woo, sobriety & sexual identity, adult industry PR, not my circus not my monkeys, LA Weekly firings, Sex & Love Addicts Anonymous/SLAW, The Village Voice, fuck you pay me, coke nails, east coast vs west coast, breathwork, how to get your brain to STFU Episode 26 Links Anne Hodder’s Website: http://annehodder.com/ Anne Hodder Twitter: https://twitter.com/theannehodder Anne Hodder Instagram: https://instagram.com/theannehodder Hodder Media: http://www.hoddermedia.com/ Own Your Shit Workshops https://ownyoursht.splashthat.com/ Breathwork for Recovery free Tuesday night class in LA http://breathworkforrecovery.com Nathaniel V. Dust http://nathanielvdust.com/ Episode 26 Sponsor, Affiliate & Giveaway Info Crave Vesper 24k Gold Vibrating Necklace Giveaway at sunnymegatron.com: Provided by Castle Megastore. Entrants must be over 18, US resident, no purchase necessary. Visit the giveaway page for details and to enter: http://sunnymegatron.com/vesper/ Giveaway entry ends 1/31/2017 20% off your order at http://castlemegastore.com when you use code SUNNY at checkout (limited restrictions apply) 20% off at Lelo.com with code SUNNY Get a 30 day free trial of Audible + a free audiobook download (The Butterfly Effect Podcast by Jon Ronson is a MUST LISTEN!): http://www.audibletrial.com/aspodcast
Eddie Asbie from Cornell University's Johnson School of Management discusses what makes the Cornell MBA unique, the school's admissions process and career opportunities for Cornell MBAs. Program Highlights (7:14) | Admissions (29:50) | Scholarships (52:07) | Careers (58:38) Cornell MBA Highlights (last updated Dec 2017) 1-Year Cornell Tech MBA (New York City), May intake, ~50 students/year 1-Year MBA (Ithaca, New York), May intake, ~75 students/year 2-Year MBA (Ithaca, New York), September intake, ~275 students/year Typical 2-Year Class: 5 years work exp / 35% international / 700 GMAT Offers 7 immersions in corporate finance, investment research and asset management, strategic marketing, strategic operations, digital technology, sustainable global enterprise, and investment banking Placement for 2-Year, Class of 2016: 94% w/job offers w/in 3 months, $121,000 USD avg starting salary, $31,000 USD avg signing bonus Top Destinations for 2-Year, Class of 2016: 53% NorthEast US / 18% West US / 8% Midwest US / 5% Southwest US / 4% Asia Top Functions for 2-Year, Class of 2016: 33% Finance / 29% Consulting / 22% Management / 11% Marketing ROI: one-third of class win merit-based scholarships, up to 25 students/year can win Roy H. Park 2-Year Full Tuition Fellowship Ranked #16 by US News and World Report in 2018 About Our Guest Eddie Asbie is the Associate Director of Admissions and Financial Aid, Cornell University, Johnson Graduate School of Management. Eddie has worked over 5 years for the Cornell MBA and specializes in helping military, underrepresented and dual degree program candidates. Previously Eddie served as an Admissions Advisor for University at Buffalo. Episode summary, show notes and more at: http://touchmba.com/cornell-johnson-mba-admissions-interview Episode Sponsor The IESE MBA in Barcelona is consistently ranked Top 15 worldwide by the Financial Times. Do you want to challenge yourself and take your career to the next level? IESE's full time MBA program will transform your capacity to think strategically, explore new perspectives and be a leader in today's global world. The IESE MBA: Give us 19 months and we give you a lifetime of impact. Get informal feedback on your profile at mba.iese.edu or visit us on campus at our Open Days.
Eddie Asbie from Cornell University's Johnson School of Management discusses what makes the Cornell MBA unique, the school's admissions process and career opportunities for Cornell MBAs. Program Highlights (7:14) | Admissions (29:50) | Scholarships (52:07) | Careers (58:38) Cornell MBA Highlights (last updated Dec 2017) 1-Year Cornell Tech MBA (New York City), May intake, ~50 students/year 1-Year MBA (Ithaca, New York), May intake, ~75 students/year 2-Year MBA (Ithaca, New York), September intake, ~275 students/year Typical 2-Year Class: 5 years work exp / 35% international / 700 GMAT Offers 7 immersions in corporate finance, investment research and asset management, strategic marketing, strategic operations, digital technology, sustainable global enterprise, and investment banking Placement for 2-Year, Class of 2016: 94% w/job offers w/in 3 months, $121,000 USD avg starting salary, $31,000 USD avg signing bonus Top Destinations for 2-Year, Class of 2016: 53% NorthEast US / 18% West US / 8% Midwest US / 5% Southwest US / 4% Asia Top Functions for 2-Year, Class of 2016: 33% Finance / 29% Consulting / 22% Management / 11% Marketing ROI: one-third of class win merit-based scholarships, up to 25 students/year can win Roy H. Park 2-Year Full Tuition Fellowship Ranked #16 by US News and World Report in 2018 About Our Guest Eddie Asbie is the Associate Director of Admissions and Financial Aid, Cornell University, Johnson Graduate School of Management. Eddie has worked over 5 years for the Cornell MBA and specializes in helping military, underrepresented and dual degree program candidates. Previously Eddie served as an Admissions Advisor for University at Buffalo. Episode summary, show notes and more at: http://touchmba.com/cornell-johnson-mba-admissions-interview Episode Sponsor The IESE MBA in Barcelona is consistently ranked Top 15 worldwide by the Financial Times. Do you want to challenge yourself and take your career to the next level? IESE’s full time MBA program will transform your capacity to think strategically, explore new perspectives and be a leader in today’s global world. The IESE MBA: Give us 19 months and we give you a lifetime of impact. Get informal feedback on your profile at mba.iese.edu or visit us on campus at our Open Days.
Sophia Nahli Allison is a visual journalist at the community level and a media arts educator. Born in 1987 + a native of South Central Los Angeles, she is passionate about stories that humanize the black and LGBT communities. She believes storytelling is a tool for social change. This spring she will be a video journalist with the New York Times Student Journalism Institute and during the summer will be an intern at The Seattle Times. She recently completed a summer visual journalism internship at the The Tampa Bay Times and has interned at The Chicago Reporter. She participated in the Eddie Adams Workshop XXVIII, the 2014 New York Times Lens Blog Portfolio Review and NABJ's student multimedia projects fellowship. She taught photo and video to youth in Chicago and Los Angeles and is a grateful recipient of the Chicago 3Arts Award for teaching artist. She is currently a Roy H. Park Fellow at The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill pursuing a master's degree in visual communication. Resources: Sophia Nahli Allison Roy DeCarava Download the free Candid Frame app for your favorite smart device. Click here to download for . Click here to download Click here to download for Support the work we do at The Candid Frame with your donations via PayPal. https://www.paypal.com/us/cgi-bin/webscr?cmd=_flow&SESSION=VgliBy3J2e39NoaYEakyINt-17h2AevWulBCcGTirwI6lei5NIMz-60qhE4&dispatch=5885d80a13c0db1f8e263663d3faee8d64ad11bbf4d2a5a1a0d303a50933f9b2