UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — Penn State graphic design students who were finishing their third year in the program last spring said they felt disappointed, cheated even, when their internships were canceled due to the pandemic. After all, they had been looking forward since they were freshmen to the internship experience that graphic design students are required to take during the summer before their fourth year for the bachelor of design degree.
Each fall since they arrived in Happy Valley, the students watched the internship show that the fourth-year students would put together based on their experiences the previous summer, working as interns with some of the biggest names in entertainment, fashion and hospitality in cities like Los Angeles, New York and Chicago. They watched, wide-eyed, at the cutting-edge designs, websites, social media campaigns and motion graphics that the upperclassmen worked on for some of the most recognizable brands in the world, and they were finally to have their own shot at that big-time design experience, in the summer of 2020.
“Our graphic design students are required to do an internship every summer between their third and fourth years, GD 495. During this time, students traditionally travel to a number of cities to work with companies, studios and design firms as interns,” said Taylor Shipton, assistant teaching professor of graphic design. “We always see students thriving as a result of these opportunities and they often lead to collaboration — whether it be full-time positions, internships or studio projects here — with us down the line.”
Then, last March, COVID-19 hit and hit hard. The pandemic stopped everyone in their tracks, and it was clear early on that the summer internship the then-juniors were looking forward to for the past three years just could not happen.
“I was a bit devastated when I found out I wouldn’t be having the internship I had planned for,” said graphic design student Ron Feinberg. “I had an internship lined up on the West Coast in Burbank [California] and I could almost taste being there.
“I can’t say I didn’t expect it [to be canceled] when the first few internships got canceled early on but when I did get word that mine was off, too, it was upsetting,” he continued. “It was like this big life step that I was about to take was closed off indefinitely.”
The overall feeling of disappointment, however, quickly turned into action as faculty within the Department of Graphic Design set out to find an opportunity these students could count toward their internship requirement, one they could use to boost their portfolios and get excited about in the face of a crippling global pandemic.
That’s when the power of the Penn State graphic design network showed its strength.
Ryan Russell, associate professor in the department, recalled that John L. Mondock, director of purchasing, housing and food service at Penn State, had reached out to the College of Arts and Architecture during the winter of 2019 to inquire about a student art competition. As a result, Russell and Phil Choo, department head of graphic design, met with Tom Osborn, senior marketing manager at PepsiCo, in April 2020 and developed an internship project in response to the COVID-19 pandemic.
“It was important for us to establish a mutually beneficial relationship and construct a project that would enhance the student experience for those involved,” explained Russell. “After a few meetings with various members of the PepsiCo team, we were able to create some strict functional parameters to work within and this project was officially launched in fall 2020.”
PepsiCo partnered with faculty and the now-fourth-year students on a semester-long design project for one of their most popular beverages on the Penn State campus — LIFEWTR. PepsiCo calls the campaign “Let Creativity Flow at Penn State.”
“PepsiCo has been involved with Penn State since 1992 and it’s one of our prestige partners so we were excited and honored to do a project with the design students and faculty,” said Umi Patel, chief marketing officer with PepsiCo Beverages North America (PBNA) North Division. “We were told that LIFEWTR is considered one of our ‘cool brands’ on campus and so we collaborated with the [graphic] design faculty so students had the opportunity to create graphics that emulate that brand.”