John Hopkins University Adds ‘Immersive Storytelling & Emerging Technologies’ to Their Film & Media Master of Arts Program

Announced on the 7th October 2017 at the Immersive Media Conference, John Hopkins University has added ‘ Immersive Storytelling & Emerging Technologies’ (ISET) to its Film & Media Masters Arts Program. The course will be starting in January, so individuals looking to further their knowledge in immersive storytelling or potentially find a way to fund their project should be excited. VRFocus spoke to Gabo Arora, a filmmaker most well known for his virtual reality (VR) documentary Clouds over Sidra about ISET, a course he designed and is leading. 

ISET is a two year Masters program consisting of 10 courses that will focus on cutting-edge technology focusing on VR, augmented reality (AR) and artificial intelligence (A.I.). John Hopkin’s Film & Media of Arts program is ranked among the most diverse in America’s graduate programs across race, gender and ethnicity with nearly 70% women and 80% people of colour. Tuition is a third of what similar programs cost at institutions like New York University and University of Southern California, making it more accessible to students who might not otherwise have access to the expensive tolls necessary to explore uncharted technological territories. One of the aims of the new offering is to use the power of immersive technology for urban renewal in Baltimore as well as students working together with the John Hopkins School of Medicine and Lieber Institute for Brain development to utilize VR as a tool to treat and diagnose schizophrenia and autism. Gabo explains that the Film & Media Masters Arts Program is only two years old and unlike most traditional film courses isn’t stuck in its ways, but is open to experimentation and new opportunities.

“I began my journey in virtual reality filmmaking at the United Nations, with the goal of using this new and rich storytelling medium to create empathy for some of the world’s most pressing challenges. VR and AR can tell and teach with a depth that is unattainable in most other creative media,” said Arora. “The concentration, when combined with Johns Hopkins’ strong academic programs, will drive social impact across disciplines ranging from medicine to law and international relations.”

The Immersive Media Conference showcased a demo of Freedom Fighter, a social justice experience that uses AR to connect users with the past of Baltimore and Baltimore civil rights leader Lillie May Carrroll Jackson. This project is a perfect example of what ISET hopes students will create when on the course. The course therefore is very practical, and depending on the number of people who sign up there should be around 15-20 students per course. Gabo hopes that by the time the students finish ISET, more jobs in the fields of VR, AR and A.I. will be available for them to immediately take.

Applications are open till the end of the year and can be found here. To find out more about what Gabo hopes to do in the course, and how he intends to teach watch the video below.

‘Freedom Fighter’ AR App Will Connect Baltimore With its Past and Civil Rights Leader Dr. Lillie May Carrol Jackson

Filmmaker Taura Musgrove saw The Last Goodbye , a virtual reality (VR) documentary led by Gabo Arora by Lightshed. The documentary followed Pinchas Gutter, a Holocaust survivor and takes the user to the Majdanek concentration camp in Poland. With the help of room-scale VR, the experience takes the viewer on a tour of the camp and Pincha’s experience as a child there. The compassion and empathy felt by viewers is what Musgrove wanted to tap into when she created her augmented reality (AR) experience. Gabo Arora tells VRFocus about how with his guidance Musgrove and John Hopkins University were able to create an app that could bring the new youths in touch with their historical past in Baltimore.

Freedom Fighter is an AR app built with Apple’s ARkit that uses geofencing to bring users face-to-face with a volumetric AR model of American Civil Rights leader Dr. Lillie May Carroll Jackson. The app works only with geofencing, meaning that users can only access the content in the exact physical space where the content is made to be displayed. A little like Pokemon Go, you have to physically walk to a location to get access to certain items. Musgrove hopes that Freedom Fighter will not only connect Baltimorians with the history of their city, street corners and significant historical figures but also also show them where certain events took place with geofencing.

So if you were to download the app on an iPhone, you would physically have to walk to certain street corners in Baltimore and take out your iphone. All these locations you have to walk to, are of historical significance in the history of Baltimore and have been affected by the riots in 2015 or are in urban decay. You would hold up your phone for example and see the old National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) appear as well as an AR model of Dr. Jackson. She would then proceed to tell you about herself, the history of this corner and its significance.

Dr. Lillie May Carroll Jackson is a herald of American Civil Rights. As head of the Baltimore chapter of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) for thirty-five years, she pioneered the organization of ordinary citizens, black and white, to protest lynching, educational segregation, and police brutality. Arora, the executive producer of Freedom Fighter explains that Baltimore suffered riots in 2015, the origin of the Black Lives Matter movement and a hotbed of activism and solutions for racial and social justice. The younger generation however seem to have forgotten Baltimore’s civil rights activists and the importance of certain locations in the history of America.

The app has not been released yet, but when it is, it will be completely free to download. making it accessible to let viewers experience firsthand Dr. Jackson’s leadership, vision and strategy for activism. Arora talks about potentially bringing this into history classes in Baltimore as well as helping sustain black businesses in the community by collecting points through the app. To find out more watch the video below.