With support from the California Arts Council, Media Arts Center San Diego (MACSD) will produce Connected Voces, a collaborative digital media storytelling initiative and work readiness opportunity for system-engaged young adults ages 18-30 living in Encanto, a neighborhood in Southeast San Diego. MACSD will collaborate with Second Chance, a non-profit that offers reentry services for formerly incarcerated individuals, and local filmmaker Amada Torruella, to guide program participants through an intensive filmmaking course designed to produce short documentaries about mental health in the age of COVID-19 and in the aftermath of flooding that affected the Encanto community in January 2024. Torruella will collaborate with participants on the structure and direction of the media projects. Participants will earn stipends and may be eligible for apprenticeship, internships, and/or future work through MACSD community partnerships.
MACSD programs, events, and film festivals are inclusionary—designed with audiences, participants, and community collaboration in mind. A summary of core organizational programs and services can be broken down into three categories:
WATCH—San Diego Latino Film Festival (SDLFF) celebrates its 32nd anniversary in March 2025 introducing viewers to contemporary US-Latino and Latin American cinema. Additional programming includes the Que Viva Outdoor Cine Latino Series, and daily screenings of at our Digital Gym Cinema.
LEARN—Media education programs for youth include: Teen Producers Project, Youth Media & Tech Camps, ¡Tu Cine! Student Film Showcase, the iVIE Awards & Student Film Festival and in-school media programs.
CREATE—Tools for community-based media production and collaboration include: Frontera Filmmakers, a grassroots training course for independent filmmakers; and Video Production Services, helping community groups make digital media presence accessible and affordable.

