Lesson series
MAKE A COMMERCIAL
Learn how a commercial is shot and how to win over a target audience within 15, 30, 60 or 90 seconds maximum.
Write your awesome label here.
Learn How To Make Videos To Convert?
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Create visual impact
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Connect with your target audience through storytelling techniques that convey your message
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Direct scenes for maximum storytelling and audience engagement
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Create a professional collaborative production workflow
Learn What's Important
Step behind the lens and into the world of storytelling with *Make a Commercial*! In this hands-on course, you'll master the art of crafting captivating camera shots, nailing cinematic composition, and writing copy that converts. Bring your vision to life as you learn to design storyboards, direct impactful production, and polish your work in post-production. From concept to final cut, this is where creators become visionaries. Are you ready to bring your ideas to the screen?
Learn by Example
Creating a commercial course emphasizes the importance of crafting compelling content to effectively engage and educate participants. By developing well-structured, visually appealing, and relevant materials, this course captures the attention and delivers value to participants. Enroll today!
Meet the instructor
Tamisha Thomas
Tamisha Thomas is a graduate of the the University of Alabama of Birmingham. While in college Tamisha Thomas learned the art of television by working for Comcast and Time Warner Cable Systems. Upon graduation Ms. Thomas worked for V103; a CBS Radio Station in Atlanta, Georgia. However it was her move to a black owned radio station; WEUP in Huntsville, Alabama the transformed the way Tamisha viewed the power of media in the black community.
While working for WEUP Radio as the Marketing Director, she found that the station’s founder, Leroy Garrett, helped to change Federal Communication Com- mission regulations preventing black owned radio stations from broadcasting after sunset. Changing this federal regulation was important to Mr. Garrett because radio stations could help report on lynches that occurred after the sun went down.
While working for WEUP Radio as the Marketing Director, she found that the station’s founder, Leroy Garrett, helped to change Federal Communication Com- mission regulations preventing black owned radio stations from broadcasting after sunset. Changing this federal regulation was important to Mr. Garrett because radio stations could help report on lynches that occurred after the sun went down.
Ms. Thomas relocated to Raleigh, North Carolina and began teaching school as a Math teacher at Jordan High School in Durham, N.C. As a classroom teacher, Tamisha Thomas came face-to- face with biases that help shape the home/school/prison cycle. Inspired by the actions of WEUP’s founder, Tamisha Thomas, began writing a plan to educate and employ youth.
Tamisha Thomas is the founder of the TMT Youth Community Foundation a non-profit organiza- tion that trains youth and exposes them to a science, technology, engineering, arts, and math cur- riculum.
Patrick Jones - Course author