This video package was shot at Isom's Orchard in Athen's, AL. It was shot for a class project. All video, script and editing was done by me.
Mary Rickabaugh online portfolio
Thursday, May 5, 2011
Tough Mudder
This video was shot in Georgia during the Tough Mudder competition. The video centered mainly around my brother Patrick Rickabaugh and his wife Anna provided some of the intro photos. All other footage and photos were shot by me and the final product was edited by me.
Wednesday, March 16, 2011
'Dungeons and Dragons' players unite on campus to play
Dungeons and Dragons is a game often associated with the worst types of nerdy. It is seen as nerdy, weird and played only by the biggest of losers.
"[People that play] are geeks that will live in their mother's basement until they are 30 and sit behind books playing whatever card game is popular at the time with kids three times younger than them," said John Philips, UNA student.
This seems to be the general consensus among non-players. However, what stereotypes and public opinion fail to mention is that Dungeons and Dragons has remained a part of pop culture and society for over 30 years and continues to hold a dedicated fan base.
Dungeons and Dragons was created in the '70s before the video games of today existed. It can be played board-game style or role played. Each player creates his or her own character, documenting everything on paper. A "dungeon master" creates the quests and basis of each game. Actions depend on the situation of the story and can be infinite. Each player has special powers and abilities defined by the Dungeons and Dragons rule book. Basic rules can also be found online.
The rules may sound familiar, the pretty much are the basis of most role playing games today, like World of Warcraft. However, Dungeons and Dragons has one of the worst reputations of any game out there. One huge stereotype is that the only people that play it are old, but Leo Taylor is out to prove that false and is even working on getting a group together on campus.
"I have always liked different hobbies and I just kind of looked into the game. I had always heard bad things about it, that it was kind of nerdy, but I've always been a sucker for really complicated games, especially board games. I was kind of curious about it so I guess I just started," said Taylor.
The game has a wide fan base that posts regularly on the official website. The website includes everything the budding "noob" would need for getting started, including game synopsis, character explanations and interactive forums from other veteran players.
Getting involved in a game like Dungeons and Dragons is easier said than done.
"There's a group that actually meets on campus every Tuesday and Thursday but they've been doing it so long that it would be really hard for a new player to get involved just because of how advanced they are in their game," said Taylor.
The game is very group-oriented and is best played when all the characters start together. This is why Taylor is trying to get a new group together on campus.
"I wanted to play with a group that was more laid back so I put fliers around campus. I've already had people texting me like ‘Hey, when can we play?'" said Taylor.
While one of the stigmas of the game is that no one under 30 plays it, but Taylor claims he has never played with anyone over 30. His groups usually consist of fellow students and friends. While older people play the game as well, the Dungeons and Dragons community is incredibly diverse.
The game is even updated on a regular basis in order to maintain a younger audience.
"It's not a game that can be played by like pre-teen kids just because there are some harder mechanics. Video games are fun but you can get together and socialize and play together [with Dungeons and Dragons]," said Taylor.
For more information on joining Taylor's group, call 797-7935 or contact him on Facebook.
"[People that play] are geeks that will live in their mother's basement until they are 30 and sit behind books playing whatever card game is popular at the time with kids three times younger than them," said John Philips, UNA student.
This seems to be the general consensus among non-players. However, what stereotypes and public opinion fail to mention is that Dungeons and Dragons has remained a part of pop culture and society for over 30 years and continues to hold a dedicated fan base.
Dungeons and Dragons was created in the '70s before the video games of today existed. It can be played board-game style or role played. Each player creates his or her own character, documenting everything on paper. A "dungeon master" creates the quests and basis of each game. Actions depend on the situation of the story and can be infinite. Each player has special powers and abilities defined by the Dungeons and Dragons rule book. Basic rules can also be found online.
The rules may sound familiar, the pretty much are the basis of most role playing games today, like World of Warcraft. However, Dungeons and Dragons has one of the worst reputations of any game out there. One huge stereotype is that the only people that play it are old, but Leo Taylor is out to prove that false and is even working on getting a group together on campus.
"I have always liked different hobbies and I just kind of looked into the game. I had always heard bad things about it, that it was kind of nerdy, but I've always been a sucker for really complicated games, especially board games. I was kind of curious about it so I guess I just started," said Taylor.
The game has a wide fan base that posts regularly on the official website. The website includes everything the budding "noob" would need for getting started, including game synopsis, character explanations and interactive forums from other veteran players.
Getting involved in a game like Dungeons and Dragons is easier said than done.
"There's a group that actually meets on campus every Tuesday and Thursday but they've been doing it so long that it would be really hard for a new player to get involved just because of how advanced they are in their game," said Taylor.
The game is very group-oriented and is best played when all the characters start together. This is why Taylor is trying to get a new group together on campus.
"I wanted to play with a group that was more laid back so I put fliers around campus. I've already had people texting me like ‘Hey, when can we play?'" said Taylor.
While one of the stigmas of the game is that no one under 30 plays it, but Taylor claims he has never played with anyone over 30. His groups usually consist of fellow students and friends. While older people play the game as well, the Dungeons and Dragons community is incredibly diverse.
The game is even updated on a regular basis in order to maintain a younger audience.
"It's not a game that can be played by like pre-teen kids just because there are some harder mechanics. Video games are fun but you can get together and socialize and play together [with Dungeons and Dragons]," said Taylor.
For more information on joining Taylor's group, call 797-7935 or contact him on Facebook.
Florence Animal SHelter photoslide
The following is a photoslide done for my Media Convergence class. The topic was the Florence Animal Shelter.
Cheating and technology can go hand in hand
Cheating has always been the unspoken elephant in schools. Teachers don’t want to experience it, and students don’t want to get caught doing it.
Just like schools have evolved over the years, so has cheating. What started as writing answers on your hand changed to taping a sheet on the inside of your shirt. Now, some students are using technology to get ahead on tests.
“I’ve heard of students in the first row texting the answers to the students in the back row, but I can’t see how that would work,” said UNA professor Dr. Jim Martin.
Many teachers are taking action on cheating from the very start by banning cell phones and Internet surfing in class altogether.
An article from takepart.com stated that cheating is at an all-time high with even the teachers getting involved by giving out answers prior to the test or even changing wrong ones while grading. However, with more effort to elude detection comes even more effort to detect it. Caveon is a company dedicated to detecting cheaters and educating teachers on how to catch them in class.
Even with more preventative actions taking place in schools across the nation, cheaters still get through.
“In my advanced reporting class, I had one student whose beat was fraternities and sororities,” Martin said. “He wrote an acceptable article with two different sources about the activity. However, for whatever reason, The Flor-Ala did not publish it. Two years later, unbeknownst to me, one of the young ladies in the class turned in a fraternity-sorority story. I didn’t recognize it and The Flor-Ala ran the story. They assumed that since The Flor-Ala didn’t run it once they wouldn’t run it again.”
Instances like this are not completely uncommon at UNA, but Martin believes that just as easy as it is to cheat with technology, it is even easier to detect it.
“If I suspect a phrase or quote of being suspicious, I’ll usually google it,” he said.
While the university is tight-lipped on previous plagiarism cases that have gone to trial, their policies are more than clear. In fact, all professors are required to include the university’s plagiarism policies on the syllabus at the start of the year.
While cheating cases are not nonexistent at UNA, Martin feels they are significantly less common than at other universities.
“I honestly believe that most students [at UNA] are honest and hardworking. Other universities may have more of a problem [with cheating],” said Martin.
While cheating will never really be eliminated from educational settings, it is clear that teachers and faculty will not sit back and let it happen. Steps will continually be made to further educate on how to prevent cheating.
UNA student wins competitive global scholarship
While most people spend their summers taking extra hours or catching up on sleep, UNA junior Allison Ray spends her summers thousands of miles from home studying Arabic in a foreign country.
Ray has received the Critical Language Scholarship for the second consecutive year. The scholarship is designed to fully immerse the student in a desired culture. Nearly 500 students are chosen from around the country.
"The scholarship process was definitely harder the second time around," said Ray. "Of the 30 people that were in my group last year, half of them reapplied and only three were chosen again."
The scholarship process is intensified for intermediate-level applicants. Two years of study in the desired language is required. Students must complete four essays, which each have a word limit, get several personal references and complete an Arabic evaluation.
Once Ray was notified of her acceptance, she had to immediately begin written and oral assessments to decide her placement. Ray will not find out her placement until nearly April, but she has requested to be placed in Tunisia again to improve not just her knowledge of the language but her dialect as well.
The trip is anything from a vacation, though. Students are required to spend about five hours a day in class, another five hours studying and working on homework, as well as embarking on a chosen cultural activity. Ray chose to study belly dancing while she was in Tunisia, and even had to perform on stage at the end of the year.
Along with her studies, all the students went on cultural excursions. Ray went on three different trips, one of which was the Kush desert.
"A lot of Star Wars was filmed in Tunisia, and I didn't know that," she said. "It was really bizarre because you'd be walking through the desert and suddenly you'd see this big set from Star Wars."
While the trip greatly improved her Arabic, Ray also made some lifelong acquaintances while she was there.
"There was this café I would go to every day, and in time the owner and I became friends," said Ray. "He considered me like his daughter. On the last day, he opened up the café for breakfast for me and had gone out and bought me breakfast and had this huge basket of beautiful gifts for me."
Along with friends, Ray keeps in touch with her teachers, tutors, host family and other students from the trip. She even stayed with one of her speaking partners on a trip to New York recently.
While she would be happy with any of the country options, Ray and those deciding where she will stay are keeping their ears and eyes on the escalating conflict in the Middle East.
"Egypt is still on the table as an option but that may change by April," Ray said. "The area in Tunisia I stayed is in the suburbs is right outside the city where most of the conflict is happening. While I would be OK being in an area like that, I would never place myself in a dangerous situation. I would never do anything to jeopardize my scholarship."
Because the scholarship is through Washington D.C., restrictions are made upon illegal activity.
"My parents don't want me to be in danger, but I was surprised at how supportive they've been," Ray said.
Ray won't be leaving for her trip until the summer, but there is one thing she missed on her stay that she intends to stock up on.
"All I wanted the whole time I was there was coffee," said Ray. "I kept telling everyone all I wanted was a big coffee. So I'll definitely be bringing a coffee pot and lots of coffee."
http://www.florala.net/news/article_98194668-4474-11e0-8e1a-00127992bc8b.html
Ray has received the Critical Language Scholarship for the second consecutive year. The scholarship is designed to fully immerse the student in a desired culture. Nearly 500 students are chosen from around the country.
"The scholarship process was definitely harder the second time around," said Ray. "Of the 30 people that were in my group last year, half of them reapplied and only three were chosen again."
The scholarship process is intensified for intermediate-level applicants. Two years of study in the desired language is required. Students must complete four essays, which each have a word limit, get several personal references and complete an Arabic evaluation.
Once Ray was notified of her acceptance, she had to immediately begin written and oral assessments to decide her placement. Ray will not find out her placement until nearly April, but she has requested to be placed in Tunisia again to improve not just her knowledge of the language but her dialect as well.
The trip is anything from a vacation, though. Students are required to spend about five hours a day in class, another five hours studying and working on homework, as well as embarking on a chosen cultural activity. Ray chose to study belly dancing while she was in Tunisia, and even had to perform on stage at the end of the year.
Along with her studies, all the students went on cultural excursions. Ray went on three different trips, one of which was the Kush desert.
"A lot of Star Wars was filmed in Tunisia, and I didn't know that," she said. "It was really bizarre because you'd be walking through the desert and suddenly you'd see this big set from Star Wars."
While the trip greatly improved her Arabic, Ray also made some lifelong acquaintances while she was there.
"There was this café I would go to every day, and in time the owner and I became friends," said Ray. "He considered me like his daughter. On the last day, he opened up the café for breakfast for me and had gone out and bought me breakfast and had this huge basket of beautiful gifts for me."
Along with friends, Ray keeps in touch with her teachers, tutors, host family and other students from the trip. She even stayed with one of her speaking partners on a trip to New York recently.
While she would be happy with any of the country options, Ray and those deciding where she will stay are keeping their ears and eyes on the escalating conflict in the Middle East.
"Egypt is still on the table as an option but that may change by April," Ray said. "The area in Tunisia I stayed is in the suburbs is right outside the city where most of the conflict is happening. While I would be OK being in an area like that, I would never place myself in a dangerous situation. I would never do anything to jeopardize my scholarship."
Because the scholarship is through Washington D.C., restrictions are made upon illegal activity.
"My parents don't want me to be in danger, but I was surprised at how supportive they've been," Ray said.
Ray won't be leaving for her trip until the summer, but there is one thing she missed on her stay that she intends to stock up on.
"All I wanted the whole time I was there was coffee," said Ray. "I kept telling everyone all I wanted was a big coffee. So I'll definitely be bringing a coffee pot and lots of coffee."
http://www.florala.net/news/article_98194668-4474-11e0-8e1a-00127992bc8b.html
'Soda Pot' could be medical marijauna
"Canna Cola or "soda pot" as its better known is the newest creation out of California that combines soda and THC, the chemical found in marijuana.
The soda was created in order to give glaucoma patients an alternative way to take their medication.
"A lot of people simply don't want to smoke," said co-brand developer Clay Butler in an interview with ABC news. "It's very easy to take your medication in the form of a cookie, soda or brownie, and you can do that without drawing attention to yourself."
The drink is being featured in a 12-ounce can and will be available in five flavors. It will cost between $10 and $12.
The drink is first being introduced in Colorado before it will expand to the California market and beyond. However, some students doubt the likelihood of it making it to Alabama.
"That kind of thing would never pass state by state. It would have to pass at the federal level," said Flor-Ala political columnist Evan King.
Surprisingly, this is not the first marijuana soda in creation, but Butler believes his unique bottle designs and marketing will set the drink apart from the other "mom-and-pop, hippie-dippy and rinky-dink" drinks.
On the heels of the release of this drink is a law making its way to senate entitled the "Brownie Law" which will increase punishment for those that combine the drug THC with candy-like products such as brownies and soda.
The law is intended to reduce the chance of selling to minors.
Butler firmly believes, though, that "adults have an inalienable right to think, eat, smoke, drink, ingest, decorate, dress any way they choose."
The drink, only available to glaucoma patients with a prescription, will be introduced in February. If it reaches past California, it will only be sold in 15 states, as these are the only states with medical marijuana legalized.
http://www.florala.net/life/article_c4136510-2f2e-11e0-b39f-00127992bc8b.html
The soda was created in order to give glaucoma patients an alternative way to take their medication.
"A lot of people simply don't want to smoke," said co-brand developer Clay Butler in an interview with ABC news. "It's very easy to take your medication in the form of a cookie, soda or brownie, and you can do that without drawing attention to yourself."
The drink is being featured in a 12-ounce can and will be available in five flavors. It will cost between $10 and $12.
The drink is first being introduced in Colorado before it will expand to the California market and beyond. However, some students doubt the likelihood of it making it to Alabama.
"That kind of thing would never pass state by state. It would have to pass at the federal level," said Flor-Ala political columnist Evan King.
Surprisingly, this is not the first marijuana soda in creation, but Butler believes his unique bottle designs and marketing will set the drink apart from the other "mom-and-pop, hippie-dippy and rinky-dink" drinks.
On the heels of the release of this drink is a law making its way to senate entitled the "Brownie Law" which will increase punishment for those that combine the drug THC with candy-like products such as brownies and soda.
The law is intended to reduce the chance of selling to minors.
Butler firmly believes, though, that "adults have an inalienable right to think, eat, smoke, drink, ingest, decorate, dress any way they choose."
The drink, only available to glaucoma patients with a prescription, will be introduced in February. If it reaches past California, it will only be sold in 15 states, as these are the only states with medical marijuana legalized.
http://www.florala.net/life/article_c4136510-2f2e-11e0-b39f-00127992bc8b.html
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