BOSTON, UNTOLD
Every city has its official story — the landmarks, the history books, the names on the plaques. But the real story of a city lives in the people who show up every day to keep it running, to protect it, to make it better, and to serve the people inside it.
Entertainment
✳︎
Awareness
✳︎
Connection
✳︎
Entertainment ✳︎ Awareness ✳︎ Connection ✳︎
2026
Boston
The Atlast Project →
Boston, Untold is an interview series that goes behind the scenes of the city's most essential and overlooked institutions — the transit workers and urban planners, the museum conservators and park rangers, the librarians, the civil engineers, the community organizers. The people whose work shapes daily life in Boston, but who rarely get to speak for themselves in public.
Each episode is a short, intimate conversation. Not a lecture. Not a press release. A real exchange about the work, the calling, the small moments and the hard ones. What drew someone to this profession. What they wish more people understood. What they see when they look at this city that most of us walk past without noticing.
The goal is simple but important: connection. Between neighbors who have never met. Between residents and the institutions that serve them. Between the city Boston is and the city it's working to become.
We believe that when people understand how something works — a subway line, a wetland restoration project, a rare book archive — they feel more ownership over it. And when people feel ownership, they show up. They vote, they volunteer, they ask better questions, they use the resources available to them. Civic engagement doesn't start with a policy brief. It starts with a story.
Boston, Untold is also a resource guide in disguise. Each episode naturally surfaces programs, services, institutions, and opportunities that many residents don't know exist — from free museum memberships to public planning meetings to conservation careers. Entertainment is the entry point. Awareness is the outcome.
This series is for the lifelong Bostonian who has walked past the same building and never wondered what happens inside. It's for the newcomer trying to find their footing in a complicated, layered city. It's for the kid who doesn't know that the job they want actually exists and that someone in their city is doing it right now.
Boston is full of extraordinary people doing quiet, essential work. They have stories worth telling. This is where we tell them.
Stay Connected
ENTERTAINMENT
Monet is a lifelong educator with a passion for creating accessible, engaging learning experiences. Known for a calm, encouraging teaching style, Monet believes that growth happens when learners feel both challenged and supported.
AWARENESS
Emmett is a detail-oriented instructor who’s spent the past decade helping people develop new tools, habits, and mindsets. Their approach is clear, practical, and always infused with curiosity and care.
CONNECTION
Eleanor's background spans education, coaching, and creative development. With a strong focus on process and progress, Eleanor helps learners move from where they are to where they want to be—one step at a time.
Real Work,
Real Impact.
Learn more about each role:
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PERFECT FOR
Film, media arts, or photography students looking for real location shooting experience on a documentary project. You should have handled a camera before — doesn't have to be professional gear.
WHAT YOU'LL DO
Operate the camera during interviews (composition, focus, exposure)
Collaborate with the director on shot choices and visual approach
Shoot b-roll at the location before or after the interview
Help review footage and flag the best shots after the shoot
WHAT YOU'LL GAIN
Full cinematographer / camera operator credit on a published episode
Location shooting in extraordinary places — tunnels, conservation labs, community centers, and more
A strong documentary-style piece for your portfolio
Experience matching a visual style across multiple episodes
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PERFECT FOR
Film, media, or communications students comfortable in an editing suite and interested in the specific challenge of shaping a documentary interview into a compelling story. Fully remote and schedule-flexible.
WHAT YOU'LL DO
Receive raw footage and selects from the director
Assemble the rough cut from interview audio, building the narrative spine first
Cut the full-length episode (8–15 min) and one or two short-form clips (60–90 sec)
Add lower thirds, title card, and end card from provided templates
Incorporate music, color corrections, and motion graphics
Export final versions optimized for YouTube and social platforms
WHAT YOU'LL GAIN
Full editor credit on a published, distributed episode
Experience editing documentary interview footage — a distinct skill from narrative editing
Published work on YouTube and social media with real viewership
Remote, flexible work that fits around your class schedule
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PERFECT FOR
Design, motion graphics, or visual communications students comfortable in After Effects, Premiere, DaVinci Resolve, or Canva. Strong visual sensibility and attention to typography is key.
WHAT YOU'LL DO
Design and animate lower thirds (name and title cards) for each guest
Produce episode title cards and end cards consistent with the series visual identity
Create thumbnails for YouTube and short-form clips
Maintain visual consistency of templates across the season
Optionally: contribute to series-wide graphic assets (social headers, press kit, flyers)
WHAT YOU'LL GAIN
On-screen design credit on every published episode you work on
Experience building a consistent visual identity for a real media series
Published work visible to the series' full audience
Strong broadcast-style portfolio pieces
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PERFECT FOR
Film production, communications, or project management students who are organized, people-oriented, and energized by making things happen. This is a logistics and relationship role as much as a creative one.
WHAT YOU'LL DO
Coordinate scheduling between the host, crew, and interview guest
Manage location logistics: permits, access, timing, and backup planning
Prepare and collect signed release forms for every shoot
Maintain the production calendar and shared task tracker
Communicate with guests before and after shoots
Support the director on shoot day with whatever is needed
WHAT YOU'LL GAIN
Production coordinator or associate producer credit on published episodes
Real experience managing a production from scheduling through wrap
Skills in stakeholder communication, logistics, and project management that transfer to any industry
Hands-on experience with the full lifecycle of a documentary episode
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PERFECT FOR
Journalism, communications, history, urban studies, or public policy students with strong research and writing instincts. Ideal for someone who wants to shape the editorial direction of the series without being on set.
WHAT YOU'LL DO
Research each upcoming guest: their institution, their role, recent news, and relevant context
Identify the most interesting and overlooked angles to pursue in each interview
Prepare a briefing document for the host ahead of each shoot
Draft 8–12 potential interview questions per guest
Identify the civic resource angle for each episode — the specific program or service to highlight
Help develop the guest pipeline: researching institutions and identifying specific individuals to reach out to
WHAT YOU'LL GAIN
Story development credit on published episodes
Experience in documentary research and editorial development
Real journalism-adjacent skills: finding people, understanding institutions, building story angles
Fully remote, schedule-flexible work
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PERFECT FOR
Journalism, English, communications, or public policy students who love writing and want their work to live somewhere permanent. You will watch each finished episode and transform it into a written piece — part feature article, part civic guide, part archive entry.
WHAT YOU'LL DO
Watch or review each finished episode and write a companion article (600–1,000 words) covering: who the guest is, what they do, what was most surprising or compelling, and what civic resources viewers should know about
Work with the host to surface anything important the video did not fully capture
Write and assemble each episode's newsletter: short intro, article excerpt, episode link, civic resource spotlight, and one key quote
Maintain a consistent voice and style across all written content — you are building the written identity of the series
Write short archive summaries for each episode entry on the website
Optionally: write social captions for each episode's clip posts across platforms
WHAT YOU'LL GAIN
Published byline on a real series with a real audience — your name on articles that live permanently on the site
Writing portfolio pieces that blend journalism, civic writing, and feature storytelling
Newsletter editing and production experience — a genuinely in-demand professional skill
Experience writing across formats: longform article, newsletter, archive summary, and social copy
Fully remote, schedule-flexible work
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PERFECT FOR
Marketing, communications, or media studies students interested in content strategy, audience building, and social platform dynamics. You should have a genuine feel for what performs and why — not vanity metrics, but real engagement and growth.
WHAT YOU'LL DO
Manage the publishing schedule across YouTube, Instagram, TikTok, and Facebook
Write platform-specific captions and copy for each post
Coordinate with the editor to receive short-form clips on schedule
Post consistently and monitor early engagement
Respond to comments and DMs in the series voice
Track what performs best and share insights with the team
Optionally: pitch content ideas for between-episode posts
WHAT YOU'LL GAIN
Social media management credit for a real, growing series
Multi-platform content strategy experience
Audience analytics experience — real data, real decisions
A fully remote, asynchronous role that fits around any schedule
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PERFECT FOR
Photography or visual arts students who want real set experience and published work. You will photograph in extraordinary locations — transit tunnels, conservation labs, urban parks, food banks, city archives.
WHAT YOU'LL DO
Photograph the shoot location, interview setup, and behind-the-scenes moments
Capture portraits of each interview guest for use on the website and press materials
Deliver edited selects within one week of the shoot
Coordinate with the social media coordinator on image use
WHAT YOU'LL GAIN
Photography credit on a published series
Access to remarkable locations most photographers never enter
Published work on the website, newsletter, and social platforms
A diverse, documentary-style portfolio spanning multiple Boston institutions
JOIN OUR TEAM
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