And The Emmy Goes To …
… FMN Kathryn Pasternak for the Outdoors Maryland segment titled “Ghost Rivers”. Ghost Rivers tells the story of Sumwalt Run, a stream that once flowed through Baltimore’s Remington neighborhood. In the early 20th century it was buried in a brick and concrete culvert up to 40 feet below street level. The same fate as natural streams in cities throughout the world, including a network of streams in Arlington, Alexandria, and Washington, D.C. – But I digress.

MPT’s David Wainwright (sound) and Brian Windle (camera) filming Ghost Rivers tour led by artist Bruce Willen – photo Kathryn Pasternak
Artist Bruce Willen memorialized Sumwalt Run by tracing its path through the neighborhood, marking it with a sinuous blue line and adding educational markers that tell the environmental, cultural and historical story of the stream along the path it takes all the way to the Jones Falls, and then out to the Chesapeake Bay. Kathryn and the team worked with Bruce filming the final stages of the Ghost Rivers public art installation, and accompanied him on a walking tour he gives with local residents. They also filmed the Baltimore Department of Public Works inspecting the interior of the Sumwalt Run culvert using a crawler camera, and then doing water testing at the outflow of Sumwalt Run at Jones Falls.

DPW inspecting Sumwalt Run culverts – photo Bruce Willen
The Outdoors Maryland Episode received the Emmy Award and like all their episodes, it has three stories. The 3 stories stitched together in Episode 3603 each have a different theme about water. Series Producer Stefanie Robey describes it this way: It was a Bay/water themed episode, with stories about submerged aquatic vegetation restoration work, open-water swimming, and the Ghost Rivers project.

Brian Windle films Bruce Willen during installation of Ghost Rivers Site #2, Wyman Park Dell at 29th Street, Baltimore. – photo Kathryn Pasternak
Kathryn thinks part of what helped them win was that the episode told stories about water from three totally different perspectives — a more science/restoration focused piece, a recreation focused piece, and then a historical/cultural/arts focused piece with Ghost Rivers. Kathryn’s segment starts at the 9:45 mark of the episode and runs to the 18 minute mark. But the entire episode is interesting.
Eight months work for eight minutes of video. That’s tenacity. The episode won for Science/Environment Long Form. (Watch here: Outdoors Maryland, scroll down to Episode 3603).

Sumwalt Run expelling into Jones Falls – photo Kathryn Pasternak
Kathryn (Pasternak Media) became an FMN in 2021 but she is also a veteran of wildlife, conservation, and cultural films; and recipient of two National Emmy Awards for ‘Best Science and Nature Program’. She spent 15+ years at National Geographic Television working on high-end programs for international distribution. Since 2007, she’s been producing media independently both as a freelancer and small business owner.
Acknowledgments:
Outdoors Maryland: Series Producer Stefanie Robey principally, and Executive Producer, Frank Batavick.
Photos: FMN Kathryn Pasternak and Bruce Willen




