Angela Aguayo
Get to know some of our College of Media faculty. Angela Aguayo is an associate professor of media and cinema studies (MACS) and served as the acting director for the Roger Ebert Center for Film Studies in 2023-24. She is also the director of the Illinois Community Media Project, which uses the production process, the gathering and reporting of information, to address community problems. (Learn more about the Illinois Community Media Project in this “I on the Media” video with Aguayo.)
What are some of the classes you teach?
I teach various classes that have to do with audio-visual culture. Much of my specialization is in documentary. In Gender and Pop Culture, we examine how gender is articulated in movies, TV, music, and more. The class is constantly changing with the currents of what’s happening in the world. In Intro to Documentary, I encourage students to take up skills in interviewing and documentation and look into its history. The class also asks what it means to pick up a camera and engage with the world. A teacher once told me, “When documentaries are done correctly, they change who you are.” I teach New Media and Society, which addresses how new technologies are integrated into our lives—and how those technologies are partial and biased but also have capacities to engage with the world and change things. I also teach a capstone senior portfolio class for media and cinema studies majors. In that class, students look and apply for jobs, think about internships, and develop themselves professionally like finding funding for their work or applying for grad school.
What are your research interests?
I’m forever fascinated with how people use the camera to access the political process, engage with the world, and articulate themselves when they don’t see something articulated in their culture. All of my work and scholarship has been about that process. It’s deeply sociological, in that I’m not preoccupied with the theater screen or traditional understandings of film culture. Rather, I’m interested in everyday people interacting with the screen and the tools of production to create new worlds around them.
What do you enjoy about working with college students?
It’s this beautiful time in human development when young people are becoming unrooted from the things that created them—their families, communities, and homes—and choosing what to bring along and what to add to their lives that will be different from their family legacy. That is an interesting open space for dialogues about the world. I find those discussions with students energizing and keep me thinking freshly. I’ve been teaching for about 25 years, and I see real differences in the generations of students, which is refreshing.
What are some projects you are involved with?
I’m about to start writing a new book: “Collective Matters,” which circles how people pick up the camera and engage the world to address community problems. For example, what does that look like when the only sex education is through film, or schools if they’re lucky? This has resulted in people picking up the camera, recording their lives, and sharing them with others to address absences in resources and information. My book looks at sex education, and how youth media programs have given young people access to their voice, among other topics.
I’m also writing a few grants around AI and representations of mental health in mainstream media. And I’m working with community partners to think through how we can use documentary production to give community members access to technology and authorship, whether that’s veterans finding out how to use their cell phones and record, or houseless people who don’t get access to technology. How do we help them articulate their life on their terms?
What is your favorite part of what you do?
I love that every single day is different. I wake up and think about developing projects with the smartest people I know, working with the brightest students, and thinking about how we can address some of our major problems. I talk about the things that are important to me. I don’t know that many people get to do that. I have a lot of control over what I teach, how I teach it, and what I spend my time with. In a geeky way, I love intellectual puzzles—how to get a grant, make a journal article and publish it, write books, and think about structure. Everything I do is a giant intellectual puzzle.
What are some of your hobbies and interests?
I see an incredible amount of live music. I spent a lot of money on concert tickets last year. I did see Taylor Swift in Los Angeles when they recorded the Eras Tour. And then I paid $20 to see the same concert in the theater. It doesn’t make much sense. I like to see concerts on campus—we just had Ani DiFranco, Emmylou Harris, and Shawn Colvin. There’s something special about enjoying music with people in a room, whether slow, orchestral, or fast, and dancing. I appreciate that process.
I love to cook. I’ll brag about myself. I’m a great sourdough baker—country loaves, sandwich bread, pecan rolls, all kinds of things. Another MACS professor, Anita Chan, helped me learn how to make kombucha. I’m working my way through the different fermented foods. It’s good for your gut.
I love spending time with my family. I spend a lot of time on a sports field every year. My son who is 12 years old is an avid club soccer player, and now basketball. So I spend most of my weekends in small towns, big towns, all across Illinois.
What advice do you have for a student in the College of Media?
University lifestyle is overwhelming. So there’s a lot to get caught up in and explore. Especially in your first couple of years, you must try as many things as possible. In that process, you’ll learn who your people are and what you’re interested in. When you have an idea, you should do what you love often and frequently, especially when it connects with your career choices.
For MACS majors, there’s so much you can do to help prepare for the moment from graduation to your career. Take every opportunity in your classroom to make something you think might showcase your skills. Take the opportunity to push yourself to learn things outside your classroom purview. So learn cameras, technical skills, etc., because you have no idea where you’ll find yourself and what skills will be useful. I did this as a young person and was surprised by what ended up being valuable to me, which were the things I didn’t give too much thought to.
If you orient your studies in an entrepreneurial way, you’ll find yourself at the end of your degree with opportunities, rather than scrambling to figure out what you need to be successful. The classroom stuff is essential and foundational, but not inclusive of everything you should know.
—Interview by Kris Modi, New Voices Intern