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FM journalism alum Sydney Sepp’s role with WNBA

Sydney Sepp Journalism alum

Congratulations to journalism alum Sydney Sepp on her new role with the WNBA.

Sepp has joined the league as a social content publisher, leading live game coverage across Meta and YouTube. In the role, she covers games in real time—highlighting major plays, momentum shifts, and defining moments as they unfold.

She credits her Visual Storytelling class with Professor Marcus Harun for helping prepare her for this position.

“Learning from someone actively working at NBC, alongside the journalists he regularly invited into the room, made the experience feel grounded in the real industry from the start,” Sepp said. “That work allowed me to show the WNBA the kind of storytelling I wanted to pursue professionally.”

Harun is a line producer for the award-winning broadcast NBC News Daily and was a practitioner-in-residence professor in the Journalism Program.

Prof. Poyen Wang’s work at MoMA PS1

Poyen MoMA PS1

Night Stroll (video still). 2024–25. HD video with stereo sound, 22 min. Courtesy the artist

Prof. Poyen Wang has been chosen for the MoMA PS1’s Greater New York, their quinquennial focusing on the best of the NYC art scene.

Greater New York 2026, MoMA PS1, opens on April 16 and runs through August 17, 2026.

MoMA PS1’s signature survey of artists living and working in the New York City area returns for its sixth edition this spring, coinciding with MoMA PS1’s 50th anniversary. Spanning two floors of the museum, Greater New York 2026 brings into focus over 50 multidisciplinary artists in the formative years of their careers. This highly anticipated iteration will encompass site-specific commissions, new productions, and performances, alongside important recent works that address today’s most urgent cultural concerns. Organized for the first time by MoMA PS1’s full curatorial team, the exhibition emphasizes the forces that shape daily life in the city today, as well as strategies of resistance and adaptation in the face of increased surveillance, economic precarity, and shifting technologies.  Greater New York 2026 registers an optimism and anxiety generated through artists’ attention to the layered, lived textures of New York City.