Shine Board Member Profile: Regan McCarthy

Shine Board Member Profile: Regan McCarthy

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Shine Board Member Profile: Regan McCarthy

 

As part of an ongoing series, we want to introduce you to the Shine Global family and especially our outstanding and hard working board members who help move Shine forward.

Name: Regan McCarthy
Joined Shine Board of Directors: 2016
Title: Senior Partner at Songmasters
Current Role on Board: I have served on the Development Committee and am currently Chair of the Governance and Nominations (G&N) Committee for the Shine Board.   The governance part is something I love (but it can put some folks to sleep), because good governance that is clean, simple, human and compliant with law make lives in organizations easier all around. The nominations part is fun – it is the future of the Board and we get to meet great people interested in Shine.

What I do in my day job: I am currently Senior Partner at Songmasters, where I am responsible for three related but different areas: I manage Songmasters’ relationships with charitable and philanthropic organizations (since everything we do benefits these organizations in some way); I create and co-produce media and technology projects (a great deal of fun designing logos, websites, slogans, brands, etc); and I oversee the marketing and communications projects we take on with and for non-profits, a growing part of our business. I have been blessed by having many adventures over the course of an interesting professional life but will spare us from the details here. It is simply faster and easier to refer those who might want to know more to view my bio on the Songmasters website.

Why did you join Shine’s board?

Sometimes there is a convergence of opportunity, timing, interest and skill that all meet at a perfect moment – and a decision seems both easy and inevitable.  It was like that for me about joining the Shine Board. I had many years in academic and non-profit administration and fundraising under my belt, media and technology development (including producing for PBS and others), board development, and marketing/branding both for- and non-profits, so I hoped I had a skill set that could help a solid emerging organization. And I have a long personal interest and history of using media and technology to both push the envelope in reaching kids educationally but also in using their power to bring attention to important places and civic issues, including media reform in post-war zones.  When I was approached by the then Chair, Don Melnick, about joining the Shine Board, everything came together for me personally.  But just as important – perhaps even more important – was how amazing both the Board and the actual work of Shine is – who could not be proud and eager to bring shoulder to the wheel of an organization that does great work consistently, needs help in growing so it can do this more and for a long time, and operates with such integrity of both vision and operations?

What’s a favorite Shine moment for you?

Previewing The Eagle Huntress was an astounding moment.  It was like being given a private glimpse into a small part of the world making a dramatic change at a time when that part of the world will increasingly figure more and more prominently in world affairs.  Mongolia is in most peoples’ minds a country of yaks and steppes. But it is a vibrant country with emerging cities surrounded by large areas sparsely inhabited by traditional peoples.  The Eagle Huntress brought us into the vast yet small story of how the love of a father and grandfather for their daughter allowed them to respectfully break with a millennia of tradition to let her gender-bending passion and talent for eagle hunting take flight, literally.   At that preview, I felt great gratitude to see the preview and awe for the real people whose story I was witnessing.

How do you use your specific skill set in your work as a Shine board member?

I probably answered this above, so just let me add this:    I try to use my skills to anticipate and solve practical problems of Shine from the perspective of Board roles and responsibility.  This is really different from doing this from an executive or staff role, because it requires a new balance in the leadership dynamics of an organization.  It can be a challenge, requiring tact and respect, yet firmness  and clarity. These are attitudes more than skills –  and I hope I bring these to Shine as well.

What is a Shine challenge that you feel supporters should know about?

Shine uses the power of film to tell stories of resilience of children and their families in really tough circumstances.  It uses documentary filmmaking to do this and documentaries are the hardest form of film to get funded.  Documentaries can receive wide acclaim but attract limited viewers. Yet they are the most influential in changing hearts and minds, in raising awareness of what is really happening, and in generating real action if needed.  This is the challenge I believe both potential and current supporters of Shine should know about:  that changing the world based on evidence is hard.  We march forward only through truth.  The real support of folks committed to that mission is essential, imperative, and simply, very basic.

See the full list of Shine’s Board of Directors Members and Board of Governors Members here and read the profiles of board members Dario Spina here, Keith Brown here, Kay Sarlin Wright here, Marilyn DeLuca here, Al Cattabiani here, Bill MacArthur here, Don Melnick here, Robert Baker here, Anne Prost here, Adrienne Lopez here and Gail Khosla here.

Shine Board Member Profile: Dario Spina

As part of a new series, we want to introduce you to the Shine Global family and especially our outstanding and hard working board members who help move Shine forward.

Dario Spina - Shine Global Board of DirectorsName: Dario Spina
Joined Shine Board: November, 2011
Title: Executive Vice President, Viacom Velocity Integrated Marketing
Current Role at Shine: Member of the Board of Directors, Chair of the Marketing Committee

I’ve been born and bred in Essex County, New Jersey – living in several different towns growing up in this county and now living with my wife and raising my three children in Verona, NJ.  So, you can say I’m a very provincial Jersey boy.  I currently work at Viacom as the EVP of Marketing for an internal branded entertainment agency group called Viacom Velocity.  I’ve been at Viacom for sixteen years and before I was working in the branded entertainment side of the business, I was the head of marketing for Spike TV.  Prior to that, I’ve had stints in the digital division of MTV Networks, running my own promotions agency, working at two different ad agencies and also spending some time in the record business.

Why did you join Shine’s board and why have you stayed on for several years?

I joined Shine’s board as I personally knew Shine’s founders, Albie Hecht and Susan MacLaury.  I truly love and respect them both personally and professionally and I believed in their mission of telling global stories around issues affecting children through film.  They’re passionate storytellers and I was intrigued by the notion that quality filmmaking can truly shine a light on important subject matters and drive change through awareness.

What’s a favorite Shine moment for you?

A favorite Shine moment for me was having the honor of attending the ten-year anniversary party for several reasons.  The first reason was that I couldn’t believe this organization grew up that quickly.  The second reason was seeing the children that were featured in several of our earlier films, grow up to become such vibrant and conscientious adults.  That evolution and transformation of their lives was truly impactful for me.

How do you use your specific skill set in your work as a Shine board member?

I use my skill set as a marketer in both the consumer and Madison avenue space to help guide growth and change for the organization around their positioning, focus and messaging direction.  I also run a marketing committee that meets fairly often to help prioritize media, press and marketing work for the organization overall.

What is a Shine challenge that you feel supporters should know about?

One of the biggest challenges that Shine faces as a prosocial organization is of course resources and funding.  Shine does an amazing job at finding and then telling interesting stories primarily through quality and theatrically-driven documentary films.  But the challenge is that it takes a lot of resources and funding to then get those films completed; on the doc film festival circuit; sold to distribution partners; and then marketed properly to trade and consumer constituents. The amount of resources that it takes to do all of the above and then also provide outreach to the educational community, other donors, potential corporate partners and local prosocial organizations that can provide direct impact on the issue that’s being highlighted, requires a lot of man power and funding.

 

See the full list of Shine’s Board of Directors Members and Board of Governors Members here.