Misplaced Pages

Madison Media Institute

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.

Madison Media Institute (MMI) was a private for-profit media arts college in Madison, Wisconsin . Until 2017, it ran a branch location in Edina, Minnesota . The school offered associate and baccalaureate degree programs in video, music production, game design, media technology, graphic design, and web and entertainment business.

#242757

6-573: MMI closed in 2018. Madison Media Institute was established in 1969 by Ray Szmanda (more well-known regionally as "The Menards Guy" for his longtime ads for that chain) as Trans-American School of Broadcasting , with programs that prepared graduates for jobs in radio broadcasting. Over the years the college added a broader range of programs to reflect the changes in the media field, such as video & motion graphics, electronic & A/V systems, graphic and web design, entertainment & media business, and independent digital film. In 1986 Szmanda sold

12-538: A Business in Media Bachelor of Science Degree program. Minneapolis Media Institute closed in 2017. 43°03′32.4″N 89°17′38.9″W  /  43.059000°N 89.294139°W  / 43.059000; -89.294139 Ray Szmanda Raymond Jack "Ray" Szmanda, Sr. (June 22, 1926 – May 6, 2018) was an American radio and television announcer known throughout the Midwestern United States as

18-751: The Trans-American School of Broadcasting in his hometown of Wausau, Wisconsin . His career with Menards began in 1976, where he was a fixture of the ads until his retirement in 1998. He did, however, make occasional ads with the company starting in 1999, such as Embers America . Szmanda also appeared in the 1970s science fiction movie The Alpha Incident and hosted the Wausau version of High Quiz Bowl. He also served as co-anchor at KDFW-TV in Dallas, Texas from 1975 to 1978. Szmanda died on May 6, 2018, at age 91, of pneumonia, heart problems and complications from

24-1090: The business of entertainment, music, video, film, and media. Tuition ranged from $ 32,000 to $ 46,000 for a two-year degree, depending on the program and the campus. In 2009 the Media College added a branch campus in Edina, Minnesota in the Flyte Tyme recording studios previously owned by Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis . Starting as a music production school, Minneapolis Media Institute later offered programs in animation, graphic design, mobile app development, and business. The Minneapolis campus offered four Associate Degree programs: Audio & Recording Arts, Animation & Game Design, Graphic & Web Design, and User Interface/User Experience (UI/UX). It also offered an online degree program, Digital Marketing & Media, where students learned online marketing initiatives and campaign management. Minneapolis Media Institute also offered an online Mobile Application Development Certification program and

30-814: The college to Ed Hutchings, a career broadcaster who owned the school from 1986 to 2007. In August 2007 the Hutchings family sold the college to American Higher Education Development Corporation , a New York company. In August 2018, Madison Media Institute announced that it would close. MMI president and academic dean Mike Bailey cited "business reasons" for the decision. The school specialized in programs in audio production, music production, sound for video, sound for games, sound for films, graphic arts, web design, animation, game design, video production, camera techniques, photography, AV systems design and installation, visual fx, music production software, music business and media business skills. In addition, students can specialize in

36-723: The spokesperson for Menards . Szmanda was born in Milwaukee , Wisconsin and served in the United States Navy during World War II . Szmanda trained at the American Institute of the Air and took writing courses from the University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee and University of Wisconsin–Madison . He worked for radio and television stations as a staff announcer from 1951 to 1958, when he began to freelance . From 1959 to 1978, he operated

#242757