Announcing the Record’s 2025 Fellows!

The Peoples’ Media Record is thrilled to introduce the group of wonderful individuals we selected for this year’s Preserving and Archiving Community Media Fellowship.

From April to December, the Preserving and Archiving Community Media fellows will embark on a journey to enhance their archiving and preservation skills and develop comprehensive plans for the long-term care of their local neighborhood, community, and movement histories while building community power.

The Preserving and Archiving Community Media Fellowship is generously funded by the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation.

Congratulations to our selected fellows! Your commitment to uplifting community histories and memory work in our city and beyond is truly inspiring.


Preserving and Archiving Community Media Fellows

Alyssa Bigbee (she/her)
Black Rebel Nomads & Rebel Arts

Alyssa Bigbee is a multidisciplinary performer and creator who integrates multimedia, anthropology, dance, and circus arts into her innovative performances. She is dedicated to artistic growth and community engagement, seeking collaborative opportunities with other artists. Her work challenges perceptions and creates immersive experiences. 

Alyssa is committed to documenting the contributions of Black Philly artists and international collaborations, aiming to establish a historical archive. Currently, she has a collection of digital prints, videos, scrapbooks, and artifacts from various collaborations, including coverage of events like Black Circus Week. Her goal is to create a database that emphasizes the significance of community among Philly artists and the power of cultural exchange.


Arielle Julia Brown (she/her)
Black Spatial Relics

Arielle Julia Brown is an artist, curator, and creative wayfinder who directs and supports cultural spaces as sites for radical imagination, vision building, and social transformation in her communities. Arielle’s practices traverse cultural strategy, research, evaluation, performance curation, dramaturgy, facilitation, and performance-making. Working most frequently in performance, philanthropic, memory work, and cultural organizing spaces, Arielle’s offerings help create the conditions for the truthtelling necessary for the building of the Beloved Community. Arielle is the founder and director of Black Spatial Relics and a convener and presenter of Black Radical performances. 

Reviewing and engaging the last eight years of supported performances, convenings, and programs of Black Spatial Relics, Arielle will sit with digitally kept materials to begin the process of crafting an accessible archive of these works. Featuring the works from some our the  24 artists in residence, 26 micrograntees, and numerous presented artists, this process of archiving will bring forward and make more accessible a body of Black radical performance works that remain potent and essential in these times.


Brujo de la Mancha (all pronouns welcome)
Ollin Yolliztli Calmecac

Brujo de la Mancha is a multidisciplinary artist focused on showcasing indigenous art and artists. Growing up in Mexico City, he was influenced by the cultural legacies of the Mayan, Olmec, and Aztec civilizations. His Tlaxcalan grandmother, who spoke Nahuatl, Tojolabal, and Spanish, played a key role in his development. In 2003, he co-founded the non-profit Ollin Yoliztli Calmecac, an Aztec dance troupe aimed at promoting Mexicayotl culture. He has received various grants, including one from The Institute for Cultural Partnership to learn Tlapizcalli clay flute-making, and another for traditional Aztec dance apprenticeship. In 2021, he earned the Creative Entrepreneur Accelerator Grant and has received two grants for his documentaries highlighting the impact of COVID-19 on Mexicans in South Philly and the history of Aztec dance in Philadelphia. 

He currently possesses 8mm and MiniDV tapes, flyers, news articles, and other digital materials, with hopeful plans to create a website archive of Aztec dance history in Philadelphia.


John Morrison (he/him)

John Morrison is a DJ, radio host, and music journalist from Philadelphia. For the past 25 years, he has worked as a writer covering Philadelphia’s music scene. His work has appeared in The New York Times,  NPR Music, Spin Magazine, Red Bull Music Academy, Bandcamp Daily, and more.  An in-demand on-air personality, Morrison regularly appears on NPR’s All Songs Considered and The World Cafe as well as NPR’s Tiny Desk Top Shelf series. Morrison is also the author of Boyz II Men: 40th Anniversary Celebration, a comprehensive book on Philly R&B legends, Boyz II Men.

Their interview archive is a large repository of recorded conversations with some of the leading lights of Philadelphia hip-hop culture and beyond. This archive includes select interviews from his personal archives, and his hope is to preserve them for prosperity and future access for journalists, scholars, and academics.


Tomarra Sankara-Kilombo (she/her)
Black Soul Vintage

Tomarra Sankara-Kilombo is an archivist, collector, and collage artist. Through her curatorial practice and business, “Black Soul,”  she engages her art in dialogue with archival materials, ephemera, and historical artifacts related to African-descendant culture. Sankara-Kilombo’s work serves as a conduit through which she navigates the conception of black futures rooted in the enduring legacy of her ancestors.

Her collection includes books, magazines, pamphlets, and other media such as movie posters, VHS, cassettes, and vinyl records chronicling Black/African-descendent life and culture with emphasis on protest culture in the 1960s and 70s. Through this fellowship, Tomarra hopes to specifically engage her collection of Black Magazines, thinking of creative ways to digitize the media as well as utilizing materials as resources for art making. Her community-centered event will involve creating and facilitating a collage workshop.


Anula Shetty (she/her)
Termite TV Collective

Anula Shetty is an award-winning filmmaker and new media artist, recognized for her work as a Leeway Foundation Media Artist and Activist Fellow. She has held residencies with SEPTA transit and participated in initiatives like Public Works and Mural Arts. Anula is a Pew Fellowship recipient and holds an MFA in Film & Media Arts from Temple University. She serves on the Alliance for Media Arts and Culture board and is involved with A-Doc, Brown Girls Doc Mafia, and the Bitchitra Collective, and she co-directs Termite TV.

Her collection features migration and immigration stories filmed with the Termite TV Collective over the past 20 years, focusing on Asian American and Latinx communities in Philadelphia. Given the rising dehumanization of immigrant communities, she aims to create a living immigrant archive to preserve these vital histories. Anula is particularly interested in using VR, AR, and 3D modeling to envision future spaces for cultural preservation.


Kristal Sotomayor (they/she)
New Hope Celebrates (NHC)

Kristal Sotomayor is an award-winning director, producer, journalist, and curator based in Philadelphia and Pittsburgh. Recognized as one of the “10 Latinx Filmmakers You Should Know About” by HipLatina, they are a 2023 DOC NYC Documentary New Leader Honoree and a Rockwood Documentary Leadership Fellow. Their short documentary “Expanding Sanctuary” won the Philadelphia Filmmaker Award at the 2024 BlackStar Film Festival, while their experimental documentary “Don’t Cry For Me All You Drag Queens” has screened internationally. Currently, they are in post-production on their debut narrative short film “Las Cosas Que Brillan,” which follows a Trans Latina mermaid. Kristal is developing several projects through Sotomayor Productions.


Preserving and Archiving Community Media Coordinator

Rasheed Z. Ajamu (all pronouns)

Rasheed is a Black queer journalist who also serves as editor and reporter for Germantown Info Hub. As a reporter, they focus on issues shaping place-making and neighborhood life in Germantown. As the PACME fellowship coordinator, they are responsible for shaping the fellowship into the most engaging and supportive experience it can be. We are truly delighted to be working and growing alongside them in this work.

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