A compassionate speaker committed to engaging college students in safe, fun and interactive ways.
If you’ve been looking for a truly different and effective way to get your students engaged in the topic of diversity, Brian C. Johnson is one of your best choices!
Brian has the ability to “morph,” adapting his conversations from faculty-level to student-level with ease, while simultaneously engaging all participants. No matter what we threw at him, Brian handled it with skill, and he was able to successfully modify his keynotes to meet our needs.
Jennifer de Coste, Clarkson University
I do believe Brian instilled key concepts and motivated students to think from a different perspective and appreciate difference. This will hopefully plant seeds as we continue to contribute to their diversity education and prepare them for society after graduation...Even when talking about serious issues, Brian had a nice balance between humor and communicating life lessons.
Joy Hoffman, Whittier College
He definitely left a lasting impression on our new members, and we hope that they will follow his words, and try to defeat stereotypes. It was super effective, how he called out specific organization, in his films and his speech, but in a way that will help them realign with their values.
Chloe Beighley, Grand Valley State University
The "Reel Diversity" presentation really made a positive impact on how we wish students to engage and view diversity on campus. I think the most effective was the fact that for students who identify as white...this may have been the first time they were encouraged/included in an explicit way into diversity conversations.
Paula Lima Jones, Dickinson College
Keynotes
- Reel Diversity
- Reel Big Bullies
- Reel Greek: Where Hollywood Boulevard Meets Greek Row
- Reel Diversity: Move Over Chuck & Larry
- We’ve Scene It All Before: College Life in the Movies
- LEAD: Leadership Excellence Acknowledges Diversimilarity
Reel Diversity
Understanding diversity, multiculturalism and social justice is a hallmark of the current higher education experience. Engaging students about diversity is a moral, educational and strategic mandate for colleges and universities who desire to produce global citizens in an interconnected world. “Diversity” is also one of the most challenging subjects for many students to grasp. Exploring the “difference that difference makes” can be difficult because there are so many perspectives and opinions about how it can be presented.
Most campuses see diversity from a deficits base (a problem to be solved) rather than as an opportunity. Many campuses are about counting the pepper in the salt, instead of harnessing the power of creative communities. We shine a spotlight on those who are different, who then resent being used as tokens. We neglect to critically examine the campus climate and dig deep to understand what it’s like to live, work and study there. Non-minority students withdraw from the conversation about diversity because there is no personal benefit, and conflicts, tensions and communication barriers grow. We struggle to find a way to frame the conversation about tough issues without dissolving into personal attacks.
Brian’s creative keynote, Reel Diversity, frames the diversity conversation through modern film. By sharing clips of well-known films and discussing the messages they consciously or unconsciously give, Brian allows every student to see himself or herself as diverse. Students laugh and remember some of their favorite movies, and from there, an interactive keynote about multiculturalism can begin.
Students learn about the concept of “diversity”—its associated values, expressions of identity, similarity, and the devaluation of “different.” They are asked to consider the concept of “culture”—its symbols, language, norms and values in American society. The audience is challenged to care about “social justice”—power, oppression, ethnocentrism, stereotyping, prejudice and discrimination. Students are asked to make personal judgments about these issues and recognize that the opportunity for change exists within each of us.
In addition to race, the keynote addresses these issues with regard to sexual orientation, socio-economics, religion and disability.
If you have been looking for a truly different and effective way to get your students engaged on these topics, Brian is a wonderful choice. His keynote is enjoyable, interactive, thought-provoking and based in the common experience of popular media. Reel Diversity is a wonderful choice for any campus convocation or educational observance, but is especially popular for new student orientation, MLK celebrations, Black History Month and other community appreciation events. Be sure to book early for popular times.
Reel Big Bullies
Bullying was once considered a normal, inevitable part of growing up. Boys hitting each other on the playground were shrugged off with the thought that “boys will be boys.” Girls excluding one another were considered to be engaging in a rite of passage to womanhood. National incidents like school shootings at Columbine High or at Virginia Tech and the rash suicides of gay teens and college students have cast new light on the age-old problem of bullying. The perpetrators were themselves victims of bullying or had felt the stinging effects of social isolation and discrimination.
Bullying at school means that learning occurs in a culture of fear and intimidation. Defining bullying is a first step towards understanding it. These attacks can include taunting, teasing, hitting, threatening or indirect bullying through purposeful exclusion caused by gossip and rumors.
Using clips from Hollywood blockbusters like Knocked Up, The Emperor’s New Groove, Benchwarmers and others, Reel Big Bullies is designed to help students, administrators, teachers and counselors create a safer school environment for all students. It is also intended to help all students understand the terrible toll bulling can take on its victims, and to encourage students to stand up for their classmates who are being harassed.
Perfect for college campuses or high school assemblies, Reel Big Bullies is designed to strengthen communities, foster mutual respect and build truly inclusive environments where all can thrive!
Reel Greek: Where Hollywood Boulevard Meets Greek Row
Most fraternities and sororities were founded upon the exemplary principles of scholarship and achievement, service, philanthropy and leadership; yet today, the popular perception of Greeks is anything but! As more and more first generation students go to college, fraternity and sorority members must come face-to-face with the Hollywood mirror where beer guzzling, lewd behavior, hazing, cheating and destruction are the order of the day for fraternities, and sororities are little more than havens of bitchiness and exclusivity (not to mention being pictured as the willing servants and concubines of frat boys!).
Brian’s keynote Reel Greek: Where Hollywood Boulevard Meets Greek Row uses film clips from popular films like Old School, Animal House, Stomp the Yard and College (and many others) to explore the influence of Hollywood on how we view ourselves as members of the Greek community as well as the impact these images have on how/who we recruit, the traditions and rituals we uphold, how we act in public and private, our town/gown relationships and how we interact on with others on campus.
By examining these images, audiences (Greek and non-Greek) will be challenged to question what it really means to live in community with others, and to think critically about counteracting the negative public perceptions and promoting the true ideals of these organizations.
Reel Diversity: Move Over Chuck & Larry
How many viewers of movies find themselves questioning heterosexual identity and behavior on screen? Not many, because it’s usually perceived as the norm; their reactions change, though—mostly in a negative way—when homosexual identity and behavior is portrayed on film. This also creates a psychological impact on LGBTQ viewers, who must cope with this negative reaction, overt or not, from the majority audience.
Homophobia is, unfortunately, coded into the fabric of our society and one of the most common places is in mainstream Hollywood film. In fact, as detailed in the documentary This Film Is Not Yet Rated, films that include homosexual acts of sex will more likely receive the dreaded NC-17 rating, whereas similar acts by heterosexuals will receive more favorable ratings (R or PG). This is one clear example of how our film-going society favors heterosexuality as normal and homo/trans/bisexuality as not.
Brian explores the societal issues of sexual orientation in his new keynote Reel Diversity: Move Over Chuck & Larry, using this particular movie as one example of how film can reinforce ideas of heterosexism and homophobia, and magnify the stereotypes and prejudices of each. By viewing and discussing films, such as The Birdcage, Brokeback Mountain and The Talented Mr. Ripley, students will examine concepts of “hetero-normativity” and its influence upon popular movies, and how young people may readily accept these images as truth. They will leave this keynote with the challenge to define their own sexual orientation in terms that are non-sexual, and a better understanding of how people’s ways of lives deserve acknowledgement and respect.
We’ve Scene It All Before: College Life in the Movies
This fun and interactive keynote opens the door for first year students to discuss their pre-college conditioning and temper these images with real campus life.
Using clips from popular films set on college campuses, Brian will deconstruct the Hollywood myth machine and empower students to make positive choices regarding the challenges they will face on a daily basis.
This keynote will get students laughing as they remember their favorite scenes and are challenged to be critical thinkers about how to make positive, informed decisions about success in college as well as how to be a productive citizen within the campus community.
LEAD: Leadership Excellence Acknowledges Diversimilarity
One of our most compelling challenges is the encouragement of student leadership, on- and off-campus. This type of leadership entails building relationships and communication with people who have divergent beliefs and values. Campus conversations about diversity are often messy, sensitive and, for many, down right scary. How can we build effective personal relationships across (and in spite of) differences when people are afraid and unable to talk to each other?
Brian will help students expand their relationship—building skills by becoming more culturally self-aware, finding common ground and harnessing the benefits of living and learning in community with others.
In this keynote—perfect for new student orientation and leadership development—Brian frames diversity as a leadership issue, making it an appropriate discussion for students of different backgrounds. Brian directs students toward a journey of cultural competence—helping them acquire a factual knowledge base about different cultures, and giving them the confidence and comfort to generate communication between cultures.
Brian C.'s Bio
Brian C. Johnson honors the struggles and accomplishments of the ordinary citizens who launched the Civil Rights Movement by committing himself personally and professionally to the advancement of multicultural and inclusive education.
He serves as a faculty member in the department of developmental instruction at Bloomsburg University and is the director of the Frederick Douglas Institute for Academic Excellence.
Brian earned both bachelor’s and master’s degrees in English from California University of Pennsylvania, and is currently a doctoral student in Communications Media and Instructional Technology at Indiana University of Pennsylvania. His research interests focus on the cultural impacts of the film industry and how film entertains, educates and indoctrinates. Brian’s goal is to help students develop the critical thinking and writing skills needed to understand the impact Hollywood has on our expectations about college life and to deconstruct films’ mixed messages.
Brian is the co-author of Reel Diversity: A Teacher’s Sourcebook (2008), winner of the 2009 Phillip Chinn Book Award by the National Association for Multicultural Education, and We’ve Scene It All Before: Using Film Clips in Diversity Awareness Training (2009).
Brian serves on the ministry team at Revival Tabernacle in Watsontown, PA where he is the youth pastor. He is a gifted teacher and enjoys sharing hope and joy with those to whom he ministers.
Brian is a film reviewer for Christian Spotlight on Entertainment. In August 2009, his book Sintimacy: The Christian’s Love Affair with Secret Sin was published by Revival Nation Publishing .
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