Savannah Smithson Savannah Smithson

Capturing the Final Four

Since 2015, the first time Rob Sandoval captured sports through creative video, he knew this is what he wanted to do. Rob has grown….

Since 2015, the first time Rob Sandoval captured sports through creative video, he knew this is what he wanted to do. Rob has grown tremendously as a creative videographer, from his early days as a student intern at Texas A&M’s 12th Man Productions, to capturing moments like the Final Four for the University of Houston Men’s basketball team as the Director of Creative Video for Houston Athletics.

For the past four seasons, Rob has gotten to work with UH Men’s Basketball as a team creative taking emotional videos and dynamic photos of practices, games, and March Madness. As a Houston native, taking the job at UH was not a hard push because he “always wanted to come back and work in the city. I didn’t get to experience it as an adult because I went to A&M.”

Rob taking photos during game warm-ups for the UH Men's Basketball team /Image provided by Rob Sandoval

The position was exactly what he was looking for as he stepped away from Texas A&M, making a mark of his own in his career. With family close by and a new ability to explore the city he grew up in a different way, Rob excitedly stepped into his new role.

At first, there was a bit of hesitancy in his new position, not knowing fully what he was getting into. The initial months he went “from a school that had so many resources and so many opportunities” to a school where he did not have the same equipment and less staff was a big change. He started in 2020, joining UH athletics in the middle of the basketball season. He was able to fill the role as the creative for basketball but did not get a chance to get to know anyone. Fast forward to the next season, the NCAA allowing for a March Madness through a copy of the NBA bubble, there was nothing but time to get to know the team.

While the bubble was a new way to host the NCAA tournament, certainly nothing anyone had seen before, it offered its challenges as well as benefits. Without having to travel each week the team advanced in March Madness, they were able to spend a lot of time together. Rob used his time editing the footage he got from that day’s events, able to ‘lock-in’ on his work and push himself creatively. At mealtimes, Rob took the time to sit with the players and staff to get to know them better. Ever since, his favorite part of working with the UH basketball team is the family aspect. Something Head Coach Kelvin Sampson prides himself on; that and the overall culture of the team. “When you are in it, everyone is more comfortable and they will show you who they really are and share emotions, and they are comfortable with you showing that off,” Rob explains about how the family aspect of the team and his videos are his favorite.

Rob with the Midwest division trophy after UH beat Oregon State to advance to the Final Four in 2021. /Image provided by Rob Sandoval

In the 2021 season, UH Men’s Hoops, as their twitter denotes, battled their way to the Final Four, with Rob there to capture every moment. “A moment I would never have thought I would get to experience. Getting to live that moment was really cool. And you don’t realize it happened until everything settles and the confetti stops,” Rob said of his experience.

Since then, the Coog’s Basketball has advanced to the Elite Eight in 2022 and Sweet Sixteen in 2023. For Rob, “to be able to experience those things and be along for the ride has been so much fun. I will never take that for granted and I will always be thankful to the team for allowing me to go with them.”

Through this last season, the AP poll had the Coogs ranked Number 1 in the country for almost half the season, challenging Rob to be a better creative. “Everyday is a growing process. From where I started to where I am now, I am a better storyteller, I can make things flow better, I am a better shooter. I would say being with the team has elevated my storytelling because of how good they are. I wouldn’t want to give a subpar product to a team that is really good.” Taking a look at the UH Cougars Mens Basketball Instagram page, you can tell just that. Over the past three seasons of videos, there is growth in the post-game highlights, end of season look backs, and especially the senior send off videos. Rob has been able to push himself each day to be better in every aspect.

Before coming to UH, Rob did not have much experience shooting basketball. A majority of his time as a college student and his two years working for 12th man post-graduation was spent shooting football. Many people know the significance of Texas A&M football, and as Rob is “a college football guy through and through,” and easily fell in love with the content he was able to create. “Getting to show big time basketball is fun, but man when you have 100,000 plus people in a stadium and they have been tailgating, you’re capturing that, capturing the emotions of the play, the cheerleaders, the overall fan atmosphere of a college football game is second to none. Especially in the south it is so different because people live and die by Saturdays in the fall.”

Rob shooting video during a Texas A&M game as part of 12th Man Productions. /Image provided by Rob Sandoval

A pivotal, and certainly memorable moment in Rob’s career was the Texas A&M vs LSU football game in 2018 that went into seven overtimes. That game tied the NCAA record for most overtimes in one game, something surely never to happen again due to overtime rule changes. It was also a long day when you consider the kickoff time of 6:30 pm and lasted until 11:32 pm, and the day starting with the early tailgaters. “That was a long day, long game, lots of emotions…Getting to experience that, then when we won, that was second to none. [The fans] rushed the field, it was crazy. I have experienced a lot of highs but that was probably the top.”

Now that the 2022-2023 basketball season has wrapped up, Rob is looking forward to next season as the Coogs take on the Big 12 Conference. He is also trying to pay it back to his experience in college by having student interns on his team as well. In the past four years, the team has grown from two interns to six, a major win for his team. Rob explains now that there are more interns, “we can rely on students to do some of the things [staff] can’t always reach, we can put them in places to be successful, we can have them be second shooters and set up interviews [to further their growth] and make them a good all-around creative.” The best advice he can give to his interns and any other creatives is to “do everything and anything. Put yourself in as many uncomfortable situations as you can because the more uncomfortable you are, the better you are better for it and it will become an ally. Being everywhere and anywhere, asking questions all the time will go so much farther than you think it will.”

Click the image to go to the UH Men's Basketball Twitter page where Rob's videos, like this one, for the team are shared. /Image of @UHCougarMBK twitter of one of Rob’s videos

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Savannah Smithson Savannah Smithson

Making an iMPACT in Argentina

One of Halliburton's employee resource groups makes a difference through donations

One of Halliburton's employee resource groups makes a difference through donations

An article I wrote during my internship for Halliburton's Energy Pulse blog about the iMPACT employee resource group making a difference in Argentina through donations. To read the full story, click here.

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Savannah Smithson Savannah Smithson

Rock On! Geologists Volunteering in the UK

Halliburton geologists spend their free time educating and mentoring future geologists.

Halliburton geologists spend their free time educating and mentoring future geologists.

An article I wrote during my internship for the Halliburton Energy Pulse Blog. To read the full story click here.

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Savannah Smithson Savannah Smithson

Catch Up With Our Summer Interns for National Intern Day

Halliburton celebrates National Intern Day with a look back at what our Summer 2022 interns accomplished in the field, the lab, and the office.

Halliburton celebrates National Intern Day with a look back at what our Summer 2022 interns accomplished in the field, the lab, and the office.

An article I wrote for Halliburton's Energy Pulse Blog. To read the full story click here.

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Savannah Smithson Savannah Smithson

Job Insecurity for Arts Majors

At the University of Houston, many students have a difficult time finding jobs and internships relevant to their major during their undergraduate career.

At the University of Houston, many students have a difficult time finding jobs and internships relevant to their major during their undergraduate career. Most students who have trouble come from unconventional majors such as journalism, anthropology, arts, theater and dance. With little to no guidance from their university, students are left with the burden of finding jobs in a competitive, saturated and sparse job field. 

To get a better understanding of the issues at UH, I spoke to Nadine Nassar, a student at the Catherine McGovern School of Arts, whose path led her to pursue a Bachelor of Fine Arts.

“I started in political science, then women’s studies and then I decided I wanted to do art because nothing was satisfying,” she said. After taking a sculpture class, she found her calling and decided to make the final switch to a Bachelor of Fine Arts in Sculpture.

Nadine’s experience of jumping from one major to the other illuminates how once she made her undergraduate major switch, her job search difficulty multiplied. She noted that there was little guidance from the university when it came to career services.

The main career service UH offers is the Cougar Pathway, a job search engine to connect students to known job opportunities. Most of the featured job listings are for UH on-campus student jobs, which are relevant to students ready to start their careers. Searching for jobs can be tricky if you do not know the keywords of each position, and to find internships, you must find the hidden drop-down menu.

Nassar was unable to find any job listings related to fine arts, leading her to ask her professors for help. Networking has been a clear path for Nassar to find a job, as professors in the School of Art have been connecting her to relevant job openings and contacts.

“I am looking for internships for next semester. I was looking (for a) list (of jobs) that UH might have (in Cougar Pathway). I did search internships at UH and I found (them) for common schools but did not find anything for the art school,” Nadine said. It is just the lack of the same resources that are offered (that make it hard to find jobs).”

Ninety percent of STEM graduates can get a job related to their degree. But only 48% of liberal arts majors and 10% of creative arts majors can do the same. Overall, students with unconventional majors at UH have a hard time knowing where to get started in their search, unless their professor is willing to help.

Nadine continues to look for an internship or job opportunity that will help her start her career. The Cougar Pathway can be hard to navigate and does not always have a variety of listings. Students must rely on the connections they make, professors who are willing to help, and the limited opportunities of career fairs held on campus to find job opportunities.

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Savannah Smithson Savannah Smithson

Who is the Chancellor of The University of Houston?

Sitting in the president’s office, looking out onto a campus covered in scarlet red and albino white, dreaming of new ways to grow one…

Sitting in the president’s office, looking out onto a campus covered in scarlet red and albino white, dreaming of new ways to grow one of the top research institutions is not where Chancellor Renu Khator saw her career going.

Expanding the opportunities in and around the University of Houston as the first woman chancellor, and the first Indian immigrant to lead a Tier one research institution.

Through the last 12-years of her tenure, Chancellor Khator has been able to accomplish, refine, and start new dreams for the university system.

Renu’s dreams for higher education started when she was a teenager living in her native India, wanting to go to college for a bachelor’s degree in political science.

She stated, “My obsession, my passion… was to get the highest degree possible,” and that is what she did.

After being married to her husband, Suresh Khator, Renu moved to the United States and continued to pursue her passion for higher education.

Suresh was studying at Perdue University, and was able to help Renu, a non-English speaker, enroll in the university so she could accomplish her goal.

She earned her Ph. D. in Political Science and Public Administration after years of hard work; which helped her grow in the University of South Florida system.

There, she worked for 22-years climbing through administrative positions until she reached the office of provost; then she was offered an interview to become the chancellor of the University of Houston.

Once Renu decided to take the interview, she looked into UH and everything it had to offer at the time.

“The reason I came here was because I knew what was possible for the university,” she said.

From there, she would begin to compile her list of dreams for the university, including Tier-one status in her first few years.

Tier one distinction came within three-years, an impressive feat that would prove to help expand her idea of what is possible.

Khator understood that all of the dreams she had for the university would require a significant amount of funding.

That need lead to the “Here, We Go” fundraising campaign that reached its goal of $1 billion, 18 months ahead of schedule.

The $1 Billion will fund scholarships, improvements and new projects to increase the overall standing and impact the university has to offer.

“Just all around from sciences, arts athletics,” Renu said. “I believe in comprehensive, overall even excellence.”

Projects being funded by the billion started immediately, including the construction of the Fertitta center -a multipurpose arena- and improvements all over campus.

The latest dream to be realized is the medical school, set to open its doors in the fall of 2020.

Renu wanted to create the medical school after realizing there are many ways to help improve the quality of the community surrounding the UH campus.

“There is a health disparity, there are people [around us] who do not have access to health care,” she stated.

The goal for the medical school is to train students to fill the need for local doctors and health care officials.

Through her career at the University of Houston, Khator has done her best to have all of her dreams for the university to come true and to believe in the future possibilities.

“I feel if you do put your heart and soul in something, you have passion for something. Doors and windows will open. But just have the courage at that time to walk through that door or to peak out that open window.”

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