NBC News—Catalin Grigoras, director of the National Center for Media Forensics at the University of Colorado Denver provides expert analysis of the audio evidence from the shooting at former president Trump's rally
CU Denver News—Lucky for us, CU Denver’s campus is surrounded by the Mile High City’s vibrant music and entertainment scene. But that’s not all: Our very own Lynx—students, alums, and faculty—are often on the stage, in the crowd, and behind the scenes working on lights, sound, and production.
CNN—Audio analysis by Catalin Grigoras and Cole Whitecotton of the National Center for Media Forensics at the University of Colorado Denver helps law enforcement investigate ballistic evidence from the deadly shooting at a Trump rally.
In addition to helping digital-designers-in-training get some resume-worthy experience, the class is also intended to benefit nonprofit organizations in the Denver community. The 2024 cohort assisted six Denver nonprofits by solving one or many design problems for them.
Over the year, the club interacted with screenwriters, producers, directors, costume designers, and actors currently working in Hollywood. They also produced three original films and screened dozens of films in CU Denver's community theater.
(Westword) As a recording arts student at CU Denver, Keegan De La Torre oversees every aspect of his music and is making an impact in the Denver music scene.
(Neighborhood Gazette) Jess Ellis is an artist and an alum of CU Denver’s College of Arts & Media. Ellis currently has a collection of art on display at RitualCravt in Denver. Ellis creates miniature, fantasy landscapes housed under glass, using found objects and natural materials like mosses, crystals, bones and bugs. “I want my work to inspire people to appreciate nature in all of its forms and not take it for granted,” Ellis said.
Traveling to Ireland with Artnauts, CU Denver visual arts professors Melissa Furness and Rian Kerrane are exhibiting in two location and creating site-specific installations on their journey.
The significance of an opportunity to curate an exhibition while an undergraduate student is not lost on Josephine Clark and Adira Castillo, who are students in the College of Arts & Media.
(Denverite) An explosion of bright yellow, cherry pink and lime green paper flowers help frame a painting of Arlette Lucero’s loved ones, from her late husband Stevon Lucero to beloved tattoo artist Alicia Cardenas.