UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — At the start of each school year, students in the Stuckeman School of Architecture and Landscape Architecture have to learn how to use the large-scale printers and plotters needed for their studio projects. Usually, these tutorials require an AAIT staff member to attend each introductory studio course to give a 15-minute introduction to the equipment. This year, Scott Lindsay, director of AAIT, and Nicole Cingolani, AAIT consultant, decided that creating a video tutorial with instructions for setting up a print account and printing would be a better and more efficient use of everyone’s time. However, in the College of Arts and Architecture, producing a tutorial video provided an opportunity for collaboration, humor and paying homage to the HBO series "Game of Thrones."
“I was dreading being on camera and making boring videos that no one would want to watch, and I mentioned this to my colleague, Stephanie Swindle Thomas. We decided that it didn’t have to be boring and that people might watch it if we did something different,” explained Cingolani.
She and Thomas, public relations specialist for the College of Arts and Architecture and producer for the project, decided to make it a "Game of Thrones"-themed tutorial after Thomas mentioned the successful Delta Airlines safety video campaign that used humorous video clips paired with informative narration.The pair spent time writing a script based on what Cingolani would typically say during her in-person tutorials and revised it with lines about the print charges being deducted from their student accounts at the "iron bank" of the Bursar’s Office and naming the printers after dragons from the famous show.
Kyle Clark, AAIT helpdesk staff, advised on language and imagery. Communications student and Arts and Architecture intern, Amanda Strassler, served as videographer and member of the student focus group on the video. In a collaborative effort, Thomas built a throne out of recycled computer foam and boxes; Cingolani borrowed costumes from the School of Theatre’s Theatre and Production Studios with the assistance of Diane Toyos, costume shop supervisor, and Amanda Ferg, draper; and the pair cast AAIT and Stuckeman staff members in the video.
“I’m ready for my close-up,” laughed Kyle Clark with colleague Sean Cain, as in-costume they prepared for their roles introducing the printers in the video.