Teams will have until Sunday afternoon (September 10th) to develop games and a presentation for their game. You and your team will have 48 hours to create a game…sleep is optional and recommended.
Teams will have until Sunday afternoon (September 10th) to develop games and a presentation for their game. You and your team will have 48 hours to create a game…sleep is optional and recommended.
Join the GGDA, Turner’s ELeague and the Technology Association of Georgia for a look at what is next on the horizon for competitive game, esports, and Georgia.
Tytan, I would come to learn, already has an illustrious history as a production company. As I took a seat at the conference table and exchanged handshakes, I couldn’t help but notice the desk to my left covered in Emmy’s and advertising awards.
It’s been 5 years since Clint Eastwood came to Macon to film the movie, “Trouble with the Curve,” and Tuesday, he’ll be back in Central Georgia to film a new movie at Robins Air Force Base.
Learn more about this free monthly collaborative long-term writing, pitching, marketing, and development workshop where they read, write, pitch, workshop, repeat.
Over the years Wallace has created and espoused an array of university events, including SCAD Fashwknd, the Savannah Film Festival, SCAD Define Art, SCAD A TV Fest, SCAD Style and the SCAD Sidewalk Arts Festival.
SoundExchange would distribute royalties for pre-‘72 recordings played by Internet, cable and satellite radio services just as it does for post-‘72 recordings. Currently only sound recordings made after 1972 receive payments from digital radio services under federal law.
Poised to become Netflix’s next hit show, Georgia-filmed “Ozark” tells of a Chicago financial advisor involved with money laundering. After a business deal with a drug cartel goes south, he and his family escape to the Missouri Ozarks so that he can pay back his former boss.
With all the filming, building and educational changes, it’s no wonder that Atlanta is going from “Hotlanta” to “Hollywood of the South” or, as some are calling it, “Y’allywood.”
The president of the board of directors for the festival, Julie Wilkerson, says they chose to finish with that film as a way to transition into Bragg Jam.