The September Transition
Meet the Class of 2026 麻豆果冻传媒 Fellows!
Today, we welcome 10 Class of 2026 麻豆果冻传媒 Fellows to 麻豆果冻传媒. This class of Fellows includes writers and filmmakers dedicated to enhancing conversations around the most pressing issues of our time.
This month serves as both an inflection and reflection point as we look forward to supporting the professional journey of this new cohort while also pausing to reflect on the impact made by last year鈥檚 class.
Since last September, the Class of 2025 has had a remarkable year. They published and produced work that will shape our understanding of a range of issues, including politics, migration, prison reform, and more.
We have compiled a list of highlights from their fellowship year. We hope you enjoy catching up on the work from the Class of 2025!
Highlights from the Class of 2025:
- Paige Bethmann鈥檚 鈥嬧Fellows project, the film , premiered at SXSW in March, where it won the and the . The film follows Ku Stevens, a 17-year-old Native American runner who takes inspiration from his ancestors.
- Keri Blakinger for the Houston Chronicle about the state鈥檚 new shift away from intense isolation in solitary confinement. She also a short documentary about a and his quest for forgiveness in the final days before his execution. The film was a 2025 Oscar nominee.
- Cecilia 叠补濒濒铆 worked on her book, Mariachi Dreams, about life and culture on the Texas border among the nation鈥檚 top three-ranked high school mariachi bands.
- Sam Butin worked on a video game, Normandie: A Documentary Video Game, which follows his ancestor鈥檚 immigration story as Jewish refugees aboard the final voyage of the SS Normandie in 1939. Butin also aboard the Marius (a French cargo ship) with Villa Albertine, during which to the same ports as the SS Normandie. There will be an exhibition at the Musee du Marine in Paris in 2026 showcasing the trip and Butin鈥檚 video game.
- Matthew Campbell worked on his book, The Man Who Stole the Gods, which will tell the story of how thousands of priceless artifacts were looted during the Cambodian Civil War and laundered onto the international art market鈥攅nding up, among other places, at New York鈥檚 Metropolitan Museum.
- Aimee Meredith Cox the Society for Cultural Anthropology鈥檚 biennial conference, 鈥淩estorative Relations,鈥 and worked on her book that explores the interlocking societal and cultural forces that contribute to the various degrees of violence that often circumscribe, but do not wholly define, the lives of Black women in the United States.
- Megan Garber worked on her Fellows project, the book , which will be published in 2026. She also for The Atlantic about the intersection of pop culture and politics.
- Seth Harp鈥檚 Fellows project, the book The Fort Bragg Cartel, about a string of unsolved murders at America鈥檚 premier special operations base in August.
- Will Hunt鈥檚 book, Bones, a narrative nonfiction for Random House, will explore the power of the ancestral dead鈥攖heir bodies, bones, and burial grounds鈥攖o shape contemporary culture and politics.
- Jason Fitzroy Jeffers worked on his first feature-length documentary, The First Plantation, about the intensifying fight for reparations in Barbados, once home to the world鈥檚 first slavery-based economy, and the impact of this little-known history on the wider Americas.
- Sheelah Kolhatkar worked on her book about how activist investing is reshaping American politics and the economy. She a 2025 Andrew Carnegie Fellow.
- Molly O鈥橳oole worked on her Fellows project, a book on unprecedented migration from around the world to the United States, which she has continued at the Kluge Center at the Library of Congress. In fall 2025, O鈥橳oole will also teach a course on covering immigration at Georgetown.
- Alex W. Palmer worked on his book about the history of American intelligence in China.
- Nadim Roberts worked on his book, The Highway, which explores the legacy of colonialism and residential schooling in the Canadian Arctic. He a 2024 Whiting Creative Nonfiction grant.
- Mayukh Sen on PBS NewsHour and about his book Love, Queenie: Merle Oberon, Hollywood鈥檚 First South Asian Star, which was released earlier this year. He also worked on his Fellows project, a book on the broader history of South Asian actors in Hollywood.