
Dress Up for St. Jude, an evening featuring new and gently-used high-end fashion timed right before the fall fashion awards season, recently raised thousands of dollars for St. Jude’s music therapy program.
Dress Up for St. Jude, an evening featuring new and gently-used high-end fashion timed right before the fall fashion awards season, recently raised thousands of dollars for St. Jude’s music therapy program.
When music business alumna Leslie Mosier graduated from Belmont in May 2014, she accepted her dream job at a local record label and artist management company. Happily employed, Mosier’s personal Instagram began garnering major attention when she posted pictures and videos of her dog, Doug. Noticing the trend, Mosier’s passion for this side project could not be ignored. Now, Doug the Pug’s social media accounts have gone viral, and Mosier has left her *once* dream job to pursue a new one: Doug’s full-time “momager.”
Mosier has talked about her journey in many national articles including Huffington Post, and Doug has made appearances on late night shows, concerts and “Good Morning America.” In fact, for many Doug the Pug has become a household name, with more than 2.3 million likes on Facebook.
“When I began Doug the Pug’s social media accounts, I was consistently testing the waters and figuring out what exactly it was that set Doug apart from the thousands of other Instagram dogs. I tried collaborating, experimenting with different photo and caption techniques and partnering with dog-related brands. Once his following started growing and I began introducing funny videos to his account, one of them went viral with more than 30 million views. Millions of people were now looking at Doug the Pug for the first time,” said Mosier. “Since I had already been so consistent and placed such a high standard on the content I put out, many of those viewers became intrigued enough to ‘follow’ him, and they are now dedicated, product-buying fans. Consistency and staying true to his ‘voice’ is the most important part… people feel like they know him.”
Now a celebrity of sorts, Doug’s a fad-dieter as he follows a strict, all-raw regimen. Mosier laughed, saying, “He lost three pounds and is proud of it! Doug gets a ton of exercise during all of his crazy adventures. But, I actually don’t take Doug to the groomer – he gets an old fashioned bath in our home!”
“Momager” Mosier said her first job, as well as her classes at Belmont, taught her a lot about about public relations, marketing and artist relations. Taking full advantage of her internships, Mosier said it’s very important to make a strong first impression. She began interning her junior year and treated it as a job, rather than a temporary internship, ultimately leading to a full-time position.
Mosier also took Belmont’s Marketing in the Music Business class, where students create marketing plans and present them to record label heads. As the project’s group leader, Mosier was able to take the reigns, giving her the experience she needed to be prepared for the industry. She attributes her success with Doug to lessons learned while working and being a student.
Mosier also has a big passion for graphic design. “I do a lot of design for bands such as Mat Kearney and PVRIS, and have designed a lot of the Doug merchandise as well. No matter how busy the Doug stuff gets, I want to continue my design work. I firmly believe that I can never be too busy to help out the artists that I’ve worked with for years,” she said.
Mosier’s words of advice to others who would like to develop a brand is to “Be consistent and work as hard as you possibly can. It took several months of posting Doug photos every day for people to finally notice him, and even still I’m working around the clock to differentiate him from the rest of the internet,” she said. “I don’t see ‘Doug the Pug’ as being a fad. I want him to continue to surprise people each and every year.”
Stay up to date with Doug and ‘momager’ Leslie’s adventures on Doug the Pug’s Facebook and Instagram accounts.
Aquinas College’s Center for Faith & Culture hosted the “Tolkien and Lewis Celebration,” an all-day event on the 20th century’s greatest Christian literary figures, J.R.R. Tolkien and C.S. Lewis, on Saturday, September 19.
Director of the Center for Faith and Culture Joseph Pearce invited noted speakers and scholars who talked about their research on the 20th century’s most influential Christian writers, J. R. R. Tolkien and C. S. Lewis. Speakers included Dale Ahlquist, creator and host of EWTN’s Apostle of Common Sense; Kevin O’Brien, founder of Theater of the Word Incorporated; and Devin Brown, professor at Asbury University and author of nine books on Lewis and Tolkien. Belmont Honors Program Director Jonathan Thorndike and three of his students presented on “Tolkien and Peter Jackson: Creative Legacy or Hollywood Disgrace?” Pictured (l-r) are junior music business major Caleb Theriot, senior chemistry major Daniel Beagan, Thorndike and sophomore music business major McKenna Risch. The students discussed their research and divergent views of The Lord of the Rings and Hobbit movies made based on the books by J. R. R. Tolkien.
Belmont’s College of Law’s Student Bar Association sponsored a team of 17 law students to participate in the 24th annual Hands on Nashville Day on Saturday, September 19. The students volunteered at Madison Middle Prep and completed various projects around the school including painting hallways and classrooms, planting a garden for a life skills class, cleaning the gymnasium and painting a mural.
Belmont University’s College of Pharmacy recently competed in the American College of Clinical Pharmacology’s (ACCP) Clinical Pharmacy Challenge. Pharmacy students Henry Lim(P4), Sarah Ayers(P4) and Anna Whitwell(P3) participated in the team-based event.
Teams of three students compete against other schools and colleges of pharmacy in a quiz bowl format. This year, a total of 108 teams from across the country competed and Belmont’s team made it to the third round of the competition, consisting of the top 32 teams in the country.
Belmont mathematics students saw great success on the passing of their professional actuarial exams this summer. Mallory White, senior mathematics major, passed the Actuarial Exam FM/2 on her first try in June. Elly Fell, junior mathematics major, passed the Actuarial Exam P/1 on her first try in July. Both exams have a pass rate of less than 50 percent. There is a series of nine exams required for full status as an actuary.
Actuaries work in the insurance and financial sectors and specialize in analyzing the financial impact of risk and uncertainty. Belmont University’s Belmont Actuarial Students Society, led by Mathematics Professor Dr. Daniel Biles, is an organization for students interested in pursuing the actuarial sciences.
Assistant Professor of Chemistry Dr. Duane Hatch and Ryan Agh and Ambrose Rice, two Belmont students, did research at the Los Alamos Laboratory this summer. Hatch worked at the lab for more than two and a half years, beginning in May of 2002 as a graduate research assistant while he worked on his Master’s degree from Tennessee Tech University.
An article recently appeared in the Los Alamos National Laboratory Alumni Link Newsletter regarding Hatch and his summer research.
Belmont alumna and soprano Tina Milhorn Stallard received the 2015 Encore Award and presented a recital program on Sept. 17 in McAfee Concert Hall. Stallard graduated from Belmont as a Presser Scholar in 1996, earned the Doctor of Musical Arts degree from the University of Cincinnati College-Conservatory of Music and is an alumnus of the University of Kentucky. Stallard is currently an associate professor of voice at the University of South Carolina, where she teaches applied voice and vocal pedagogy.
Stallard has performed with the Shanghai Philharmonic Orchestra and members of the Beijing National Ballet Orchestra, Zagreb Chamber Orchestra, Plovdiv Philharmonic Orchestra, Cincinnati Chamber Orchestra, Lexington Philharmonic Orchestra, Johnson City Symphony, Louisville Orchestra, South Carolina Philharmonic Orchestra and Bowling Green Western Symphony. In June 2011, she made her Lincoln Center debut as soprano soloist in Timothy Powell’s Incarnation Mysteria.
The Encore Award was created to honor a School of Music alumna or alumnus for achievement in the field of classical music. Previous recipients include Clifton Forbis, Daniel Weeks, Dan and Sherrie Lawhon, Teresa Cheung, Alfredo Colman, Travis Cottrell and Greg Walter.
Biology Professor Dr. Darlene Panvini and senior biology and environmental science major Lindsay Millward spoke at the Tennessee Women in Green (TWIG) meeting on September 11. Their presentation, “Doing Biology: A Philosophy for Mentoring Students,” covered ways in which students are involved in research, professional development and civic engagement.
“We Do Biology” describes the philosophy of the Department of Biology at Belmont. Getting undergraduate science students involved in research, community service and professional organizations includes catching earthworms, cleaning streams and presenting posters at conferences. Panvini and Millward shared examples of how actively mentoring science students prepares them for graduate schools, careers and civic engagement. The talk also described Belmont’s sustainability initiatives.