Available Now
Language Proficiencies
Similar Members
-
CP
Charles Pinto
Editor in New York, NY -
Nick Toscano
Editor in New York, NY -
Joshua Beaudry
Editor in New York, NY
Loading…
Viacom Spike Gamehead | Nissan GT Academy Teaser
Director & Senior Editor: Russell Costanzo Junior Editor: Luigi Romano Agency: Viacom Velocity Creative Director: Chris Lenz Cross-platform mini-sode that aired on Viacom's family of networks and beyond.
VocDocs: Surveillance Nation
Take a behind-the-scenes look at how our country's most advanced intelligence agencies operate. ----- Behind the scenes of law enforcement, states relies on "fusion centers"-centers where police, FBI agents, jails, and others trade information to better catch criminals. But as fusion centers adopt controversial technology like license plate readers and facial recognition software, how much police intelligence is too much?
Covergirl & CMT | Next Women of Country Case Study
Senior Producer/Writer: Glenn Payne Editor: Luigi Romano Agency: Viacom Velocity A case study created to highlight the success of the partnership between CMT and Covergirl in the 5 episode socially backed digital series entitled "Undercover with Kelsea." The series was created as a behind the scenes presentation of the 10 stop "Next Women of Country Tour."
2016 Video Production Demo Reel
The work presented in this demo reel was created in Premiere Pro, After Effects, Final Cut 7, and Davinci Resolve. - It is a small sampling of projects in which I have served as a: Producer, Video Editor, Director, Assistant Director, Cinematographer, Shooter, Colorist, and a Production Assistant.
NBC Today Show | Kidvice Mothers Day
Editor: Luigi Romano Featured on the Today Show on May 11th, 2015, in this installment of TODAY's Kidvice series, adorable children offer their tips for how to ace Mother's Day.
Robot Furniture Makes Tiny Apartments Seem Big
Vocativ Next Tech: Tiny apartments are about to seem slightly less-tiny and slightly more anthropomorphic, like a Betty Boop cartoon but without the faces, thanks to a partnership between Ori Systems and MIT. Robotic furniture, which might be on the market as soon as 2017, can make a tiny mini-apartment that measures only 200-300 square feet, seem much larger.