A single multimedia story or essay created by one student, which uses more than one form of reporting (still image, video, audio). Each entry should have a short run time (flexible up to about 8 minutes). The work should be non-fiction, relying on visual evidence to report real situations or events involving real subjects. All multimedia entries should adhere to strict journalistic ethics.
When the most powerful Atlantic hurricane since Katrina struck Western North Carolina in September 2024, Daniel Wright had two minutes to evacuate his home of twenty years. Hours later, a river of mud consumed everything his family had built. Fighting public amnesia became the community’s most difficult task as national attention continued to fade.
"What The Mud Took" chronicles the aftermath of Hurricane Helene through the lens of Daniel Wright. His home now stands stripped to its wooden skeleton, with bare studs exposed after dozens of volunteers helped remove flooded drywall and insulation. He had to throw nearly everything he owned away into a growing pile of debris at the curb in front of his property. Wright's personal journey of loss and resilience raises the topic of how communities survive after media attention fades.
As months pass, the people of Western North Carolina face unique challenges in their recovery. Unlike coastal hurricanes, Helene devastated a mountain region where harsh winters and rugged terrain complicate rebuilding efforts, thus capturing a critical moment in the rebuilding process. This isn't just a story of destruction – it's about what remains when the waters recede, and why we must remember.










