TDOT Announces Memphis Project Orange Video Contest Winner is from Halls High School

Monday, March 16, 2009 | 02:57am
Five Regional Winners Will Go On to Compete for Statewide Prize
 
NASHVILLE – A group of teenagers from Halls High School will compete for the top prize in the Tennessee Department of Transportation's Between the Barrels Project Orange Video Contest.   After tallying the online votes and judges scores, TDOT announced today that Tori Pease and 17 of her classmates are Memphis’s Regional winners of the Project Orange Video Contest.
 
The group’s 25 second winning video entitled “Halls High Safety Video: Between the Barrels Video Contest” was chosen from among 7 video entries by students across the Memphis region. The video shows the tragedy that can unfold when a group of teenagers makes a bad decision while traveling through a work zone.  To view the video on YouTube, go to: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ystrFDo1xuQ
 
“My friends and I had a great time making this video and we are all so excited that it will be shown on TV,” said Pease. “Hopefully, it will make other teenagers stop and think the next time they drive through a construction zone.” Pease entered the contest along with other students in Stephen Korpi's class at Halls High School. Mr. Korpi utilized the TDOT contest as a teaching tool for students interested in video production by incorporating the contest into a class project. 
 
The students from Hall High are among five regional winners selected from competitions in the Tri-Cities, Knoxville, Chattanooga, Nashville and Memphis who will go on to compete for the statewide prize. The statewide winning video will be aired by TV stations across Tennessee beginning April 6 and the winning team will receive up to five $500 gift certificates to Best Buy from the Tennessee Road Builders Association, up to five sets of Bridgestone tires and a spot in the 2009 Driver’s Edge Teen Safe Driving Program (www.driversedge.com).
 
The Between the Barrels Project Orange Video Contest was launched in early January, allowing high school students across the state who wrote, filmed and edited a 25 second public service announcement on teen safe driving in work zones to submit their videos. Students then helped determine the winning videos by participating in online voting, which counts as 20% of the overall score.
 
“This has been a great opportunity for Tennessee high school students to not only showcase their talent and creativity, but also to possibly prevent future vehicle crashes in work zones,” said Christin Hayes, Between the Barrels Statewide Coordinator. “TDOT is extremely proud of the five regional winners, as well as all students across the state who submitted videos and have shown their support for the Between the Barrels program.” 
 
The mission of the “Between the Barrels” program is to increase teen-age awareness of the importance of safety on the roadways, particularly in work zones. Since it was first launched in 2006, the “Between the Barrels” Program has been presented to more than 50,000 students in nearly 200 schools across the state. TDOT and THP volunteer instructors travel to high schools and present the program at no cost to schools, during one class period, in an assembly-type setting. The presentations include a power point, participation prizes, interactive activities including a remote-control work zone simulation, and two very powerful work zone safety videos producedspecific to Tennessee.

The Between the Barrels Project Orange Video Contest is sponsored by TDOT, Bridgestone Americas, The Tennessee Road Builders Association, and WCYB, WBIR, WTVC, WTVF and WREG television stations.

To view the winning videos go to www.betweenthebarrels.com and click on “Watch and Vote” at the top of the page. Teens may also visit the Between the Barrels Project Orange Facebook and MySpace pages and become a fan or add us as a friend (Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/home.php#/pages/Nashville-TN/Between-the-Barrels/111080125513?ref=mf; MySpace: http://www.myspace.com/betweenthebarrels). 
 
 
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For more information contact:
Julie Oaks
TDOT Public Information Officer
615-741-9930
Julie.A.Oaks@tn.gov

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