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Faculty filmmakers win Oscar-qualifying festival for short film featured at Cleveland International Film Festival

School of Media and Journalism professors Dana White and Christopher Knoblock are giving ºÚÁÏÉç students hands-on experience on productions that are earning national recognition

A short film co-directed by two ºÚÁÏÉç faculty members is eligible to submit to the Academy after winning Best Live Action Short Film at the Oscar Qualifying St. Louis Film Festival- and is now being featured at the Cleveland International Film Festival.

Dana White, associate professor in the School of Media and Journalism, and Christopher Knoblock, associate lecturer in the school, co-directed Magan's Fare, a film that follows a rideshare driver confronted with a moral dilemma after being left responsible for a vulnerable passenger with nowhere to go. The story draws on a real and troubling practice known as patient dumping — the discharge of individuals from care facilities without a safe destination.

For White and Knoblock, who are married and have built their filmmaking careers around difficult questions of human experience, that kind of real-world resonance is exactly what drives their work.

"I tend to write into what terrifies me because I don't understand it," White said in an interview with WKYC.  "And if I don't understand it, I have to make something about it."

That philosophy shapes not only their films, but also how they approach their craft. The couple, who previously lived and worked on the East and West coasts, now call Northeast Ohio home and have embraced the region as both a filming location and a creative community. Multiple projects have been shot across the area, with local support playing a significant role in making their productions possible.

 

Including students

Including Students in the Process

They've also made it a priority to bring ºÚÁÏÉç students into that process — offering hands-on experience working alongside seasoned professionals on productions with real festival traction.

"We get a chance to take this and bring it to young people and really be able to give back to the community," White said.

White and Knoblock are no strangers to recognition. Their feature film In the Orchard won Best Feature Film at the 2018 Sonoma International Film Festival and the 2018 Culver City Film Festival, and earned four awards — including Best Director, Best Actress and Best Actor — at the 2019 Beaufort International Film Festival. Their film Turning Blue, which chronicles the final hours of a dying woman, was supported by ºÚÁÏÉç's Research and Creative Activity Fund (RACAF) grant.

Magan's Fare continues that tradition of using film to sit with hard questions rather than answer them.

"We never want to preach to people," White said. "We want to present a situation that allows people to let it stay with them and lets them ruminate."

White holds an MFA in Screenwriting and Writing for the Performing Arts from the University of California Riverside and a BFA from The Boston Conservatory. Knoblock brings more than 30 years of experience in theater, film and television as a director, director of photography and actor, with network credits spanning NBC, CBS, National Geographic, Discovery Channel and others.

View the full interview segment on

POSTED: Wednesday, April 8, 2026 09:58 AM
Updated: Wednesday, April 8, 2026 02:42 PM