Before he graduated in December 2022, digital media production alumnus Sam Teyssier had already racked up some impressive credits: Heād worked on television shows including āAmerican Rustā and āA League of Their Own,ā as well as Sundance Film Festivalās Audience Award winner āCha Cha Real Smooth.ā These experiences ā which he began seeking out in his hometown of Pittsburgh during the summer of 2021 ā have prepared him for post-graduation life.
Teyssier, ā22, first joined sets as an extra so he could make connections for the roles he was trying to get: COVID safety assistant, and eventually, grip ā someone who assists with cameras and lighting.
āI was a COVID safety assistant on the first season of āAmerican Rustā in the summer of last year,ā Teyssier said. āBefore that I was an extra and thatās how I got to know people and that was the whole plan.ā
His job as a COVID safety assistant involved having to make sure everyone on set was following social distancing guidelines, wearing masks and other COVID-19 workplace policies. He said it often made him out to be the ābad guy,ā but gave him experience on sets nonetheless.
āYou have to do it your way so that you have a job once COVID is over,ā he said. āYour bosses donāt really care how the job is completed, they just want (COVID-19) to be over with.ā
That experience prepared him to take on the vital role of grip.
āNothing would really get done without grips, everything is kind of integral on set,ā Teyssier said. āThereās some departments (that) are not as essential but I really think grips are essential, and itās hard too ā the name doesnāt give it justice.ā
Christopher Knoblock, lecturer in the School of Media and Journalism, described Teyssier as a ārelatively quiet student,ā who got moving fast in the digital media production program.
āI would say that he has positioned himself, at his young age, better than most of any of the other students Iāve seen at this university,ā Knoblock said. āIām very impressed with how he has just really gone for it.ā
Other credits on Teyssierās resume include āThe Mayor of Kingstownā and āThe Chair,ā both of which were also filmed in Pittsburgh.
āHe positioned himself so well that when he started working as a grip, after that he began to accrue the hours you need to join a union as a grip,ā Knoblock said. āWhen you join a union, there are so many different departments that you need to specialize in for that union.ā
Teyssier submitted his papers to join the International Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees (I.A.T.S.E) union in October 2022 ā something that would allow him to continue earning additional industry credentials.
While his union papers were being submitted, Teyssier worked on his senior project, which consisted of a three-part narrative podcast series focused around student stories. He said he balanced a lot of his time between classes in Ńż¼§Ö±²„ and working in Pittsburgh, but he maintained his grades and everything worked out.
Teyssier said he felt proud of his work. He created a four-part audio project close to triple of the required length. Although his background is on sets and creating audio, heās considering a career in scriptwriting for video games.
āI really see that as an emerging field,ā he said. āItās already like three times more profitable and I feel like more companies are going to keep investing, so I think thereās going to be a lot more opportunities like this.ā