Canton Video Production Educator- Emeritus. Digital Storyteller - Seeks to help folks make videos worth watching. Opinions are my own.

Joined July 2013
6,563 Photos and videos
"Subject Matter" provides funds/resources to doc films highlighting urgent social issues. They awarded $30,000 grant to Freedom Reads & will add $100 to each donation made during the @Tribeca Film Festival. subjectmatter.org/march-fort… @subjectmatter.org @thecinematic @dwaynebetts
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I asked @dwaynebetts how to motivate students who are "prisoners of their own minds." He had sage advice. Carve time out of the curriculum to have conversations. Educators need to hold a mirror up to reveal kids personal strengths. Add fuel to the fire igniting their passion.
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As seen in NYC.
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Ed McDonough retweeted
Absolutely love this. A US police officer does keepie-uppie and is cheered on by the Tartan Army in Boston. 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿♥️🇺🇸

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Via The Boston Globe Gene Shalit, film critic bristling with hair and puns, 100 edition.pagesuite.com/popove…
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After 40 years of teaching I'm finally launching ed_mcdonough on insta to help brand my second a t as a filmmaker and Digucator. Consider following me on my journey . @CantonCommunity @CantonAthletics @CantonMAHS @Canton_Super #SecondAct
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Thanks Dennis , making wonderful contacts while in NYC.
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Scotsman Craig Ferguson arrives in Boston to a hero’s welcome after walking across the U.S. to attend the World Cup.
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At his graduation, this son walked onstage carrying a full gas cylinder to honor his father’s 26 years of hard work delivering gas and sacrifices that funded his entire education

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On this day in 1944, Lieutenant John F. Kennedy was awarded the Navy and Marine Corps Medal for heroism. After his PT-109 was rammed and sunk by a Japanese destroyer in the Pacific, JFK swam for hours towing an injured crewman with a life jacket strap in his teeth. He led the survivors to safety on a remote island, then repeatedly swam into dangerous waters to signal for rescue. His courage saved his men and embodied the unbreakable spirit of American service.
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Ten year old Ryan Neighbors uses a wheelchair because of spina bifida, a condition that left her paralyzed from the waist down. When her fourth grade class planned a field trip, Ryan feared she would miss out because the terrain was not wheelchair accessible. In previous years, she often had to take alternative educational trips instead of joining her classmates. Then teacher Jim Freeman stepped in. Although he was not even Ryan's teacher, Freeman volunteered to carry her on his back so she could experience the trip with her friends. Ryan was thrilled. Freeman recalled that as soon as she was secured in the carrier, she said, "This is the part I've been waiting for." She later shared that she felt "blessed and special" to explore alongside her classmates rather than being separated from them. Sometimes, the smallest acts of kindness can make the biggest difference ❤️
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I'm in NYC & thrilled to see Canton Alum Jon Cortizo. He's a Director of Photography in the Disney ecosystem. Works on an array of programs including Nightline. As he set up for an interview today he offered Canton students advice about always being prepared. @CantonCommunity
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Meet our 2027 Captains! Dean Madden, Will Young and Tommy Rose.
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JR Rappaport is a Los Angeles-based filmmaker. His advice @Tribeca for pitching is to avoid reading from notes... make eye contact. Start small making the central charter known and build a pyramid. #ElevatorPitch
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Felicity Wren is VP of Development at the International Screenwriters' Assoc. & Creative Screenwriter Productions. @Tibeca her advice when on a zoom pitch, is elevate your energy. Lean forward to break through the screen. Better to mess up than read notes. Be human! @Felicity555
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Yesterday at the Tribeca Film Festival I attended "Pitch : Winning the Room". A interactive workshop where one got to learn how to effectively share and sharpen a short elevator pitch. @Tribeca
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Yet another example of the Next Great Generation: "Courage without hesitation, action without certainty, sacrifice without expectation of reward."
It was April 30, 2019. The kind of ordinary Tuesday that nobody remembers — until they do. Inside a classroom at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte, students were finishing end-of-semester presentations. Laptops were open. Notes were scattered across desks. It felt like any other day at the end of a semester. Then everything changed. A gunman entered the room and opened fire. In an instant, normal life gave way to panic. Students rushed for exits, ducked behind desks, and searched desperately for safety. Most people ran from the danger. Riley Howell ran toward it. At 21 years old, the ROTC cadet had no weapon, no protective gear, and no time to think through a plan. He saw what was happening and reacted. He charged the shooter. The tackle was sudden, direct, and decisive. Howell threw himself into the struggle, forcing the gunman off balance and disrupting the attack at its most critical moment. He was shot multiple times. But the shooting stopped. Later, investigators confirmed what many already suspected. The gunman himself admitted that Howell's actions ended the attack. Police also discovered multiple loaded magazines that had never been used. The attack could have lasted much longer. It didn't. Because Riley Howell acted. The tragedy still claimed lives. Fellow student Ellis Reed Parlier was also killed, and several others were wounded. Families were forever changed by what happened that day. But amid the grief, one fact remained impossible to ignore. Riley Howell's decision saved lives. The story quickly spread beyond the university. People across the country saw in him something rare — courage without hesitation, action without certainty, sacrifice without expectation of reward. He was buried with full military honors. He also became the first civilian ever to receive the Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police Department's Medal of Valor. Yet his legacy was never about medals. He wasn't on a battlefield. He wasn't wearing a uniform in combat. He was a student sitting in a classroom. And when others needed time, Riley Howell gave them his. There is no formula for that kind of courage. There is only character. And on an ordinary Tuesday, Riley Howell showed the world exactly what that looks like.
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Ed McDonough retweeted
Four flights. 715 hours in space. Two trips to the Moon — and never once a footstep on its surface. Jim Lovell was one of the most experienced astronauts of his generation. He orbited the Moon aboard Apollo 8 in 1968, helping deliver a Christmas Eve broadcast that reached millions around the world. Later, as commander of Apollo 13, he led his crew through one of the most dangerous crises in spaceflight history and brought them safely home. He passed away on August 7, 2025, at the age of 97. Lovell never lived to see Artemis II launch. He wasn't there for the countdown, the liftoff, or the mission that would carry astronauts farther from Earth than any humans had traveled before. But before his death, he left behind something special. Months earlier, Lovell recorded a message for the Artemis II crew — Reid Wiseman, Victor Glover, Christina Koch, and Jeremy Hansen. NASA kept the recording private until the right moment. That moment came on April 6, 2026. As the crew floated aboard Orion on Flight Day 6, just hours before setting a new distance record from Earth, a familiar voice filled the spacecraft. "Hello, Artemis II. This is Apollo astronaut Jim Lovell. Welcome to my old neighborhood." He spoke about Apollo 8, about seeing Earth rise above the lunar horizon, and about the wonder of looking back at a small, fragile planet from deep space. He told the crew he was proud to pass the torch and reminded them to enjoy the view. Then came his final words. "Good luck and Godspeed from all of us here on the good Earth." For a moment, the crew sat quietly. One astronaut finally broke the silence. "What an awesome message from Jim Lovell." Soon after, they pulled out a silk Apollo 8 mission patch that had traveled from Earth with them — a piece of Lovell's own mission history, sent by his son before launch. Later that day, Artemis II surpassed Lovell's distance record. The man who set it had already congratulated them. He just wasn't there to watch. Some records are broken. Some legacies keep traveling long after their owners are gone.
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A 12-year-old just saved two lives. On March 30, Macy Johnson stepped off her school bus in Richmond Hill, Georgia, and saw the garage of her family's home engulfed in flames. Her two older brothers were inside, completely unaware. Her 14-year-old had come home sick and was asleep in the bedroom directly above the burning garage. Her oldest brother was in the shower, getting ready for work. Macy had just stepped off the school bus and did not hesitate. No adults. No waiting. She ran inside, opened the front door, and screamed to alert her brothers. After getting out, one brother even went back inside to rescue the family's dog. All three children and the family's dog escaped the blaze unharmed. The Johnson family of six had only moved into the house a few months before the fire broke out. They lost roughly 75 to 80% of everything they owned. The home was left severely damaged and unsafe to live in, and the family is now receiving assistance from the American Red Cross. "She's an incredible girl and I'm very proud of her," said her mother, Lisa Johnson. A 12-year-old girl. A burning house. Two brothers who had no idea. And a split-second decision that saved everyone. Share this if Macy deserves to be recognized.
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🚨WOW: Firefighter Alan Kent helped deliver baby Chloe Huddle in Colorado Springs in 2004. 22 years later, the retired firefighter traveled nearly 800 miles to attend her college graduation. Chloe graduated from Grand Canyon University (GCU) with a degree in educational studies. Kent has stayed connected with the Huddle family over the years, and when he received the invitation, he made the trip to celebrate this special milestone.
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