Meet Me at the Movies
On episode 401 of Meet Me at the Movies, Noel Manning & Tim Foster interview Christian Jessup (director/composer/editor) and Thomas Manning (executive producer/assistant director) about the journey of making this feature-length doc on the historic basketball run for the Gardner-Webb Runnin' Bulldogs.
GWU Alumni- and Student-Produced Documentary, led by Christian Jessup, Captures Men’s Basketball Journey to the 2019 NCAA Tournament
Written by Office of University Communications | Gardner-Webb University
A new documentary, directed by Christian Jessup, celebrates the Gardner-Webb University Men’s Basketball team’s magical 2018-’19 season, which ended with an appearance in the NCAA Tournament, a first in men’s Division I basketball history. “The Dancin’ Bulldogs: A 16 Seed’s Journey to the NCAA Tournament” debuts Oct. 16, 2020, on YouTube. The film follows the team’s and coaching staff’s entire journey, from the early wins against NCAA powerhouses to heartbreaking losses, the tournament appearance and coming home after the loss to No. 1 seed Virginia. Also featured are several interviews with players, coaches and NCAA officials, and never-before-released footage of the team’s championship run.
Jessup, a 2018 GWU alumnus, makes his directing debut with this 80-minute film that started out as a short tribute. He got the idea for the documentary from watching ESPN’s “The Last Dance,” a documentary series that followed Michael Jordan’s NBA finals run. Jessup compared the feelings he had watching the series to those he had while witnessing Gardner-Webb win the Big South Championship on television and then participate in the NCAA tournament.
He texted his friend, GWU student Thomas Manning, who is a member of the North Carolina Film Critics’ Association and was on the ESPN Plus camera crew that filmed the men’s basketball team that year. “When I first texted him about the idea, it was like, ‘What if we did a 5-minute tribute?’” Jessup shared. “Then, it was like we can stretch it out to a 10-minute tribute. Somehow along the way, I roped Thomas into helping me make a full-length documentary.”
The two enlisted the help of GWU 2018 alumni, Eli Hardin and Brendan Boylan. “Eli is second assistant director and a writer,” Jessup said. “He was really a huge help when it came to fact checking. He is a stats guy and keeps up with all of these news articles. Brendan is producing it and gave a ton of voice work. Some scenes didn’t quite have the original audio. Brendan helped call some game shots and provided some much-needed commentary to make sure the documentary moves along.”
A new documentary, directed by Christian Jessup, celebrates the Gardner-Webb University Men’s Basketball team’s magical 2018-’19 season, which ended with an appearance in the NCAA Tournament, a first in men’s Division I basketball history. “The Dancin’ Bulldogs: A 16 Seed’s Journey to the NCAA Tournament” debuts Oct. 16, 2020, on YouTube. The film follows the team’s and coaching staff’s entire journey, from the early wins against NCAA powerhouses to heartbreaking losses, the tournament appearance and coming home after the loss to No. 1 seed Virginia. Also featured are several interviews with players, coaches and NCAA officials, and never-before-released footage of the team’s championship run.
Jessup, a 2018 GWU alumnus, makes his directing debut with this 80-minute film that started out as a short tribute. He got the idea for the documentary from watching ESPN’s “The Last Dance,” a documentary series that followed Michael Jordan’s NBA finals run. Jessup compared the feelings he had watching the series to those he had while witnessing Gardner-Webb win the Big South Championship on television and then participate in the NCAA tournament.
He texted his friend, GWU student Thomas Manning, who is a member of the North Carolina Film Critics’ Association and was on the ESPN Plus camera crew that filmed the men’s basketball team that year. “When I first texted him about the idea, it was like, ‘What if we did a 5-minute tribute?’” Jessup shared. “Then, it was like we can stretch it out to a 10-minute tribute. Somehow along the way, I roped Thomas into helping me make a full-length documentary.”
The two enlisted the help of GWU 2018 alumni, Eli Hardin and Brendan Boylan. “Eli is second assistant director and a writer,” Jessup said. “He was really a huge help when it came to fact checking. He is a stats guy and keeps up with all of these news articles. Brendan is producing it and gave a ton of voice work. Some scenes didn’t quite have the original audio. Brendan helped call some game shots and provided some much-needed commentary to make sure the documentary moves along.”
Jessup, who doubled majored in music composition as well as film and video at Gardner-Webb, wrote and performed the music for the documentary. He has been a composer for film and visual media since 2016 and interned in 2017 with Hans Zimmer (Pirates of the Caribbean, The Lion King, Dark Knight Trilogy). He also writes music for television and radio advertisements with VisionPoint Marketing.
“I’m grateful that Christian would have me along,” Manning asserted. “He’s the mastermind behind it all. I hope that my efforts have meant something to him. Here we are at three-and-a-half months after he sent the first text asking for the clips. It’s been an incredible experience.”
Jessup confessed that in the beginning he didn’t realize how much work was involved. He started out by searching for anything he could find online related to the Bulldogs season. “Once I had that first outline in place, purely based on the footage and the interviews I found online, that was when we made the executive decision to build this out into a documentary,” Jessup explained. “That’s when we started interviewing others and setting up interviews. There’s no telling how many people Thomas interviewed. We were doing Zoom recordings.”
“I’m grateful that Christian would have me along,” Manning asserted. “He’s the mastermind behind it all. I hope that my efforts have meant something to him. Here we are at three-and-a-half months after he sent the first text asking for the clips. It’s been an incredible experience.”
Jessup confessed that in the beginning he didn’t realize how much work was involved. He started out by searching for anything he could find online related to the Bulldogs season. “Once I had that first outline in place, purely based on the footage and the interviews I found online, that was when we made the executive decision to build this out into a documentary,” Jessup explained. “That’s when we started interviewing others and setting up interviews. There’s no telling how many people Thomas interviewed. We were doing Zoom recordings.”
“I’m excited to share it. I’m so proud of it, and I hope by reliving those moments, people watching it will be proud of Gardner-Webb and what they accomplished.”
- Christian Jessup
One of the reasons Manning had access to so many people was because of COVID-19 restrictions. “Everyone was at home over the summer,” Jessup informed. “The Big South commissioner (Kyle Kallander), Chris Holtmann, the former head basketball coach, who is at Ohio state now, and Jason Williford, Virginia’s associate head coach. A lot of people we might not normally be able to interview, we were able to get in touch with and hold Zoom interviews. Once we got all the interviews in place, that’s when we really did a deep dive, detailed script to build out exactly how we wanted to make this story flow. From there, it was editing and editing, over and over again.”
Manning noted that everyone he interviewed was happy to talk about the men’s basketball team’s accomplishment. “The Virginia associate head coach (Williford)—we spoke to him for 15 minutes,” Manning related. “He was extremely complimentary of Gardner-Webb, and the fight they put up in the NCAA tournament game against Virginia, who went on to win the National Championship that year. It blows my mind—Kyle Kallander the Big South Commissioner—he was very generous with his time. One of the greatest learning experiences from this is that it never hurts to ask. The worst they can say is no. If you approach it with a positive outlook and try to respect their time, they will reciprocate that.”
While wrapping up the documentary and feeling good about the content, Manning and Jessup received a last-minute email that took the film to the next level. “Ryan Bridges (GWU director of Sports Information) emails us and says, ‘Hey I’ve got 150 gigabytes of never-before-seen footage made by Eric Mangum (former director of new media relations). It’s not on YouTube, and it’s never been shown at Gardner-Webb. Would you guys want it?’” Jessup stated. “Of course, we said yes, but I said to Thomas, I’m going to need to change the release date. It was a huge help from Gardner-Webb. The documentary was coming together, but that was a game-changer in terms of the angles and the shots we were able to include. Some of the quotes in that footage we never thought we’d ever find.”
Jessup and Manning are excited for people to see the film and grateful for the support they received in its making. “We’ve had a lot of people enthusiastic about it,” Manning concluded. “We are proud of our entire crew. Christian, Eli, Brendan—all have been fantastic in their respective roles.”
Jessup added, “I’m excited to share it. I’m so proud of it, and I hope by reliving those moments, people watching it will be proud of Gardner-Webb and what they accomplished.”
Manning noted that everyone he interviewed was happy to talk about the men’s basketball team’s accomplishment. “The Virginia associate head coach (Williford)—we spoke to him for 15 minutes,” Manning related. “He was extremely complimentary of Gardner-Webb, and the fight they put up in the NCAA tournament game against Virginia, who went on to win the National Championship that year. It blows my mind—Kyle Kallander the Big South Commissioner—he was very generous with his time. One of the greatest learning experiences from this is that it never hurts to ask. The worst they can say is no. If you approach it with a positive outlook and try to respect their time, they will reciprocate that.”
While wrapping up the documentary and feeling good about the content, Manning and Jessup received a last-minute email that took the film to the next level. “Ryan Bridges (GWU director of Sports Information) emails us and says, ‘Hey I’ve got 150 gigabytes of never-before-seen footage made by Eric Mangum (former director of new media relations). It’s not on YouTube, and it’s never been shown at Gardner-Webb. Would you guys want it?’” Jessup stated. “Of course, we said yes, but I said to Thomas, I’m going to need to change the release date. It was a huge help from Gardner-Webb. The documentary was coming together, but that was a game-changer in terms of the angles and the shots we were able to include. Some of the quotes in that footage we never thought we’d ever find.”
Jessup and Manning are excited for people to see the film and grateful for the support they received in its making. “We’ve had a lot of people enthusiastic about it,” Manning concluded. “We are proud of our entire crew. Christian, Eli, Brendan—all have been fantastic in their respective roles.”
Jessup added, “I’m excited to share it. I’m so proud of it, and I hope by reliving those moments, people watching it will be proud of Gardner-Webb and what they accomplished.”
Runnin’ Bulldogs March Madness trip subject of documentary
Written by Dustin George | The Shelby Star
What started as a short tribute to the 2018-19 Gardner-Webb Men’s Basketball team and its journey to the first NCAA March Madness tournament in school history has grown into a feature-length documentary due out later this year.
The project started earlier this year when GWU alumni Christian Jessup was looking for a project for which to compose music.
“I write music and love writing music for films and videos. So I had been looking for a project I could spend some time on and I’d seen a couple of videos pop up about our trip to the tournament in 2019. The original idea was I’d put together a five or six minute tribute just going through the key moments,” said Jessup.
As he started going through footage and photos from games to find moments he wanted to include in the project, Jessup said the video quickly grew to be about 20 minutes long, then 30.
“And before I knew it we were interviewing people. I’d brought in some of my friends and fellow alumni and students and all of the sudden we had enough to make a full-length documentary,” he said.
What started as a short tribute to the 2018-19 Gardner-Webb Men’s Basketball team and its journey to the first NCAA March Madness tournament in school history has grown into a feature-length documentary due out later this year.
The project started earlier this year when GWU alumni Christian Jessup was looking for a project for which to compose music.
“I write music and love writing music for films and videos. So I had been looking for a project I could spend some time on and I’d seen a couple of videos pop up about our trip to the tournament in 2019. The original idea was I’d put together a five or six minute tribute just going through the key moments,” said Jessup.
As he started going through footage and photos from games to find moments he wanted to include in the project, Jessup said the video quickly grew to be about 20 minutes long, then 30.
“And before I knew it we were interviewing people. I’d brought in some of my friends and fellow alumni and students and all of the sudden we had enough to make a full-length documentary,” he said.
The documentary, titled “The Dancin’ Bulldogs: A 16 Seed’s Journey to the NCAA Tournament,” follows the 2018-19 men’s basketball team’s historic season. The film features interviews with players and coaches from the team as they talk about going from a sixth-ranked preseason player to winning the Big South Championship and nearly toppling a top-seeded Virginia squad in the March Madness tournament.
“Looking back on it it was cool to see the peaks and valleys of the season and what an underdog story it was,” he said. “It follows that early struggle of a team no one expected anything of ending up leading to the team really bonding and us going to the Big South Championship, winning and going to the NCAA tournament.”
Jessup worked with GWU alumni Eli Hardin and current student Thomas Manning to coordinate interviews and compile game footage. Another alumni, Brendon Boylan, took some of the old radio broadcasts of the games and re-dubbed some of the biggest play calls of the year.
Shooting for the documentary wrapped earlier this month and the project is currently in the editing process. Jessup said he plans to have the film ready for release on YouTube and other free streaming platforms on Friday, Oct 16. A trailer for the movie is already online.
“Looking back on it it was cool to see the peaks and valleys of the season and what an underdog story it was,” he said. “It follows that early struggle of a team no one expected anything of ending up leading to the team really bonding and us going to the Big South Championship, winning and going to the NCAA tournament.”
Jessup worked with GWU alumni Eli Hardin and current student Thomas Manning to coordinate interviews and compile game footage. Another alumni, Brendon Boylan, took some of the old radio broadcasts of the games and re-dubbed some of the biggest play calls of the year.
Shooting for the documentary wrapped earlier this month and the project is currently in the editing process. Jessup said he plans to have the film ready for release on YouTube and other free streaming platforms on Friday, Oct 16. A trailer for the movie is already online.