Chris Kelly, 23, was part of the winning team in the Creative Catapult project
An animated trailer
dreamt up by young creatives
could slingshot them
to a successful career in the
media.
Twenty youngsters from
across Sussex took part in
Creative Catapult, a project set
up last December by Wired
Sussex and creative digital
media agency Kanoti, supported
by the BBC and industry professionals.
A series of workshops gave
them the chance to work on a
"live" brief for the broadcaster
to create a viral animation promoting
two campaigns, Making
the Clothes I Wear, to encourage
ethical fashion, and Bare Facts,
to promote sex education discussion
between parents and their
children.
Those taking part were aged
between 18 and 25 and either
studying, or had graduated
from illustration or animation
courses.
The group was split into
teams and had to find a contemporary
way of encouraging
a hard-to-reach audience to
engage in a difficult subject.
They also gained first-hand
experience of how to successfully
develop and pitch innovative
ideas to clients.
advertisement
No guarantee was given by
the BBC that the work would be
used.
However, the winning team's
pitch was of such high quality it
was commissioned.
The team was made up of
Chris Kelly, 23, who studies
digital media design at City College
Brighton and Hove, Lindsay
Steven, 24, a former multimedia
student at the college, and Kyle
Bean, 22, and Natasha Hodgkins,
22, who are both studying for
a degree in illustration at the
University of Brighton.
The group came up with a
storyboard for a 30-second trailer
for the Bare Facts campaign.
Ben Ledden, of the BBC, said:
"As soon as we saw the storyboards
we could see it working
as a promo. It jumped off the
page. It was a brilliantly simple
concept that delivered a serious
message with a light heart."
The team will now work with
Brighton-based Kanoti to turn
their idea into reality.
Chris said: "You had to have
a lot of confidence in your ideas
to succeed in this project and at
City College our tutors are constantly
encouraging us to raise
our game and try new ways of
approaching things."
Chris and his team's success
was a boost for Micheal O'Connor,
multimedia course leader at
City College. He said: "Chris has
the perfect balance of skills and
attitude you need for a course at
this level. He's very good technically
and really creative.
"I think Chris's success in
this project proves the college
is able to stretch people and
give them confidence to push
themselves out into the industry,
and it also helps gives us a
higher profile when it comes to
attracting the next intake of
students."
John Davison, director of
Kanoti, added: "It's pretty tough
when you first start out, as even
the best portfolio in the world
won't guarantee you success.
"What you need is access to
support and good advice from
people who have been in the
same position and know what
you're going through, which is
what Creative Catapult is all
about."
Phil Jones, director of digital
media support organisation
Wired Sussex, was also delighted
with the inaugural Creative
Catapult and said discussions
were under way to hold further
events.
He said: "Creative Catapult
has shown once again Brighton
really is a hotbed of young
creative talent, particularly
within digital media.
"There's strong graduate
presence provided by the
strength of both universities
and an incredibly diverse and
buoyant industry which help
that talent to grow."
The BBC is keeping the
content of the winning trailer
under wraps until it is unveiled
later this month.
To find out more about
Creative Catapult, register for
the Wired Sussex newsletter at www.wiredsussex.com.
If you liked this article and would like to share it with others on the web who might be searching for good content we've made it easy for you to do it.
At the bottom of all articles, you'll see links to six sites. These sites - commonly called 'social bookmark' or 'social news' sites - have large communities of web users who share and rate interesting, useful and fun things on the web.
Clicking the links will automatically add the address of the story you are reading to one of these sites, letting you share it with others. Each site will ask you to register to share stories. Registration is free and once a member, you can store, recommend and search for stories that interest you.