Category: Features

  • From ECU to Red Carpet: Dan P. Lee’s Styling Journey

    From ECU to Red Carpet: Dan P. Lee’s Styling Journey

    When Dan P. Lee was younger, he didn’t have the kind of money that could get him the latest trendy items or designer clothes. Growing up as the oldest of six, he had to get creative if he wanted to buy the things he dreamed about, like a pair of Nikes or Jordans. 

    As soon as he was old enough, he began cutting grass around the neighborhood to earn some cash, sweating under the hot summer sun as he pushed the lawnmower. Before long, Dan had saved up enough to buy himself a new and cool pair of sneakers. 

    But the sneakers were just the beginning, Dan’s real passion was fashion. Now 31, living in New York City, he’s turning that passion into a reality, working as a stylist for well known actors and musicians.

    “I’ve worked with musical artists Kodak Black, Afrobeat artist Fireboy DML,” Dan said. “And also the actor Isiah Whitlock Jr. from “The Wire” and Jean Elie.”

    Dan grew up in Elizabeth City, North Carolina, about an hour from the Outer Banks. He said fashion has always been a part of his life, especially since his mother had a strong sense of style. Unfortunately she died when he was only 7. 

    Dan said while his father was frugal and didn’t prioritize fashion, Dan did have people in his life who cared about style. He would get clothes from his older cousins and his godmother would take him shopping, letting him pick out the clothes and shoes he wanted.

    “My stepmom also introduced me to thrifting, so I started going to thrift stores and finding different pieces,” Dan said. “I’d customize them, cut them up and make them my own.”

    Photo by: Dan P. Lee

    Dan initially enrolled at East Carolina University for its pre-dental program, drawn by the new off-site dental campus being built in his hometown. He said he saw it as the perfect opportunity to complete his degree and then attend dental school in Elizabeth City so he could stay close to his family. 

    However, Dan struggled with the chemistry courses and he knew they were crucial for the dental program. One day, after failing another chemistry test, he sat on a bench outside Joyner Library, feeling defeated. At that moment, his mentor, Jamar Sampson, happened to walk by, consoled him and told him about ECU’s fashion merchandising program.

    “And then that same year, I found out that celebrities had stylists,” Dan said. “I just did a deep dive on social media and was following a lot of people in New York and LA.”

    When Dan returned for his junior year at ECU, he was fully dedicated to the fashion merchandising program. He said he remembered his visual merchandising professor in particular who supported his dream and didn’t discourage him when he expressed his desire to become a stylist.

    Dr. Marina Alexander, an associate professor at ECU, still teaches visual merchandising and said while Dan wasn’t as motivated by some of the more technical fashion classes, he was fully engaged in visual merchandising.

    “He was very creative in that class,” Alexander said. “He was so involved and had such great out of the box ideas.”

    Alexander said Dan was also actively involved with the Apparel & Interior Merchandising Organization on campus. She said he took part in several fashion shows and was always positive and eager to engage.

    She said even after Dan graduated, his influence continued to be felt, with other students keeping track of him. She said whenever she reached out to invite him to speak to her class, he found time to do so.

    “I think he’s the kind of student who doesn’t forget where he came from,” Alexander said. “He’s someone that always extends a helping hand to other people.”

    Photo by: Dan P. Lee

    Dan said since he switched his major halfway through college, he knew he had to fit four years of work into just two. He threw himself into learning everything about becoming a celebrity stylist, using Google to research the role and track down the emails of top stylists. 

    For two years, Dan persistently sent emails to stylists, sharing his vision of transforming the relationship between talent and brands. He said at the time athletes weren’t taken seriously in the fashion industry and he wanted to change that. 

    After all his hard work, he finally received a response and it was from one of his styling idols, Rachel Johnson. 

    “She said she can’t promise me anything,” Dan said. “But if I can get to New York after January first, she would allow me to intern and we’ll take it from there.”

    Dan said he graduated on Dec. 18, 2015, and moved to New York City the following day. After settling in, he printed 50 copies of his resume and distributed them to various stores across the city. He said he got hired on the spot as a visual merchandiser at Club Monaco, a designer men’s and women’s clothing store.

    Kirsten McGovern, a New York City-based celebrity stylist, recalled meeting Dan while freelancing for costume designer Jason Rembert. She said his vibrant personality and positive energy made him memorable.

    Kirsten said she remembered talking with Dan about their career goals and knew early on that he’d be an important part of her journey. She said in an industry where finding the right people is key, Dan has become someone she truly trusts.

    “He’s definitely one of my people,” Kirsten said. “I can rely on him, he motivates me so much and supports me when I need it.”

    Dan said one of his early career highlights was working as a styling assistant for Zayn Malik on “The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon.” He said when he was an assistant he took on a variety of projects and got to be involved in projects with Michael Jordan, Will Smith and Samuel L. Jackson.  

    After almost a decade in the industry, Dan launched his own styling agency, Plot Twist Styling, LLC. He said he’s focused on building his own clientele and making a name for himself.

    “I’m still rising,” Dan said. “I’m also a senior assistant, so I take opportunities as they come while I continue to strive forward.”

    Dan said in the future, he hopes to dedicate himself to his styling agency full time and expand his business by bringing in young, eager assistants, so he can help them grow in their careers.

    He also advises anyone aspiring to be a stylist to ensure they have the right skill set and a strong work ethic. Dan said the industry is far from glamorous and that there is a lot of hard work and long hours.

    “This industry is a long-term industry, so be careful wanting to have instant success,” Dan said. “I’m on year 10 now and I feel like I’m just really kind of scratching the surface.”

  • Bishop Samuel Jones Mission Uplifts Many 

    Bishop Samuel Jones Mission Uplifts Many 

    (Bishop Samuel Jones Jr. standing near the purpose of God Annex outreach center in Washington, N.C. Photo taken by Darian Hale

    Darian Hale/ Unfurls/ 4/15/25 

    In the heart of Washington, North Carolina, Bishop Samuel Jones Jr. is more than a preacher; he is a leader and a provider, a mentor whose faith fuels his mission to uplift the community. 

    On most days, you can find him at the outreach center diving into his paperwork, speaking with those in need, and putting his service into action in his shops and programs. 

    Sundays, you can find him at the Purpose of God Church, where he speaks with passion in each sermon. Jones did not always have this life, though. Before he was a minister, before he created a community campaign to help youth, he was a man with a vision from God nearly 25 years ago. 

    “There was so much hardship I went through, and I thought to myself that if I was able to do something, I would do it, not for me alone but for others in the same position, and God was speaking to me that night, saying, ‘You have to do this,” said Jones. 

    And that he did. In April 1999, Jones, his wife Regina Jones, known as “Mother Jones,” for her leadership at the Purpose of God church, and co-founder Harold Gardner started their programs helping ex-offenders and the poor. 

    Aimed at serving youth ages 6 to 15, Jones’ program originally started to provide after-school activities. Later, Jones and others adopted and expanded more programs like Project New Hope, Refuge Intervention and Refuge Home. 

    Project New Hope helps ex-offenders from ages 16 to 55 to rehabilitate back into society by providing them with educational skills, job-search training and housing. 

    Jones has binders full of memories of the center, with pictures of smiling faces of all the dozens of those who benefited. The walls of the Annex outreach center are covered in newspaper clippings and stories from Jones’ work. 

    (Photos of graduates from Bishop Jones programs and newspaper clippings. Photo taken by Darian Hale) 

    “I saw young men going down a dark path, and this hit me hard,” Jones said. “I wanted to guide them. We do not have many resources in Beaufort, but I try to be one.” Jones explained that his goal was to help those in need, even those who did wrong, who deserved a second chance. 

    Judges at the county courthouse have often referred convicted felons to Jones’ program to guide them in the right direction after they have finished their jail sentences. 

    The programs are sometimes the only lifeline for people to rebuild themselves. Noting that he has seen all walks of life, Jones said that someone from the street could come in and find some help at any minute. 

    The Purpose of God Annex Outreach Center is a nonprofit organization with 501(c)(3) status. It is funded by the City of Washington, the Juvenile Crime Prevention Council and the United Way. 

    Yet, Jones said that the money only goes so far. So, every year his center and church hold a fundraiser for the programs. 

    “I care a lot about these young men and women. And it heals my heart when I see them do good,” said Jones, wiping his glasses and holding back some emotions. 

    Jones also operates The Share Shop in Washington, which provides household furniture, items and clothes for free for anyone in need, as well as Miracle Meals, which sells affordable food and produce. 

    Both projects came from a need that Jones saw in the community. “I thought a Share Shop was a perfect solution and a win-win situation. People get furniture and we get whatever they want. It’s a process that helps everyone.” 

    Miracle Meals functions differently. A fee of $7 allows customers to purchase a wide range of items, from food to household items. 

    The program started as an idea from Jones and Mother Jones, who saw rising inflation as an obstacle to many families in Beaufort County. 

    “Prices were rising, and many families could not afford to keep up,” Jones explained. “We needed to do more than just offer programs like Share Shop or Annex; we wanted to feed people.”  

    Jones said he also wanted to create a bond with the community, especially during the 2020 George Floyd protest, when he noticed racial tensions rising. 

    (The Share Shop. Photo by Darian Hale) 

    But Jones is not the only one involved in these projects. He has another hand from Harold Gardner III, who was recently in the spring sunlight, lifting boxes of clothes.  Gardner said that Jones’ vision was needed. 

    “I remember the day he told me about the idea for starting Annex. I heard he wanted to create a haven for the youth, and I was on board right then,” said Gardner. 

    When he is not at work, Gardner is helping the ministry, and when he isn’t helping the ministry, he is working with Jones and others on a number of Annex programs. 

    (Photo provided by Purpose of God Annex Center. Left, Harold Gardner III, and right, Bishop Samuel Jones. ) 

    Gardner remembers the early years of the Annex when it was just he and Jones trying to map out a vision and activities for guiding the youth who attended after school. 

    He explained that Jones has been not only a bishop at the ministry but also a dear friend who guided him to follow in the footsteps of action. 

     (Inside the Share Shop. Photo by Darian Hale) 

    Talessia Whitfield, a shop volunteer, said she is always amazed at the diversity at the Annex. “White, Black, Hispanic—we all are here trying to help or be helped. We see people from Pitt, Martin, Hyde and Bertie, all counties coming here.” Whitfield became a volunteer four years ago. 

    (Tres Pugh, outside the Share Shop. Photo Taken by Darian Hale) 

    Tres Pugh said he has been volunteering with Jones to turn his life around. 

    “Bishop Jones, he is helping me get back on my feet. I just got out of rehab, and I don’t have a job. Doing this volunteer work and learning from him is a step in the right direction.” 

    Pugh said that Jones’ program gave him something to do and is a gift for him and others who have had a bad time with the law. “I’m trying to put that past behind me, and Bishop is helping me find a job and help me regain myself.” 

    In the meantime, “It is better to be here than somewhere bedridden or causing trouble, and I’m blessed Bishop Jones is doing something to help people like me,” Pugh said. 

  • ECU Club Boxing Takes Next Steps

    ECU Club Boxing Takes Next Steps

    As it slowly gets closer to 7 p.m. on any weekday, ECU students can be seen making their way to the basement of Christenberry Memorial Gym. At the bottom of the stairs, rap music blares off the speaker, jump ropes connect with the concrete floor, and the sound of gloves hitting the heavy leather bag reverberates. This routine has been typical for ECU Club Boxing members for the past couple of years, but the hard work is finally paying off with their eyes now set on competition for the first time in the club’s history.

    Aaron Lutz, the co-president of Club Boxing, joined the club soon after arriving at ECU. “I showed up with no expectations, and I fell in love with the environment and the people,” said Lutz, a senior marketing major. Lutz became co-president after expressing interest in running the club’s social media account.

    Lutz wanted to make the club feel like a family but also give the members who wanted to take boxing seriously a platform to do so. This would lead to creating a competitive boxing team, which started this semester. Lutz said that he and the club’s coach, Jacob Gillem, hand-selected the members that would be part of the competitive team.

    Lutz said that having a coach takes the stress off the club officers, so they have time to focus on their classes and not on running practice. It also gives the 52 members a different perspective rather than what the club officers already know.

    Gillem, the club’s boxing coach, is a former club member, who joined his freshman year at ECU in 2017 until he graduated in 2023.

    Gillem became the coach in 2024 after he asked a previous club president if he could help the club somehow. Gillem offered to help for free but is paid for his services by the club. When he is not the club’s boxing coach, Gillem works as a maintenance supervisor for Keystone Management’s maintenance department, which manages apartment complexes in Greenville.

    During practice, Gillem has his boxers do conditioning drills that are specific to the sport of boxing. These drills help the boxers to exercise the muscles they will use during a match to help avoid fatigue and build muscle memory. After the conditioning, they practice boxing techniques to help advance their knowledge of the sport.

    “My biggest thing is networking. I’m a young coach, and a lot of boxing coaches are usually in their 40s or 50s,” said Gillem. Networking helps Gillem make connections with other people in the sport to help benefit the club. One recent experience that Gillem used to network was when the club visited Burgess Boxing in Spring Lake, North Carolina. The club’s competitive team visited Burgess to spar in preparation for competition.

    Gillem had trained at Burgess Boxing during his own time as a boxer, but this time he returned as a coach. “Learning how to balance out their nerves as well as my own was hard,” Gillem said, describing his boxers. After each of the clubs’ boxers had a chance to spar, Gillem said his nervous emotions subsided.

    One of the boxers Gillem said has improved the most since he has been coaching is Donte Whitehead, a sophomore psychology major. Whitehead will compete in his first amateur fight at 195 pounds in Asheville, North Carolina, on April 12. Whitehead said he first heard of the club after former club president James Dimalanta approached him at the ECU Student Center. “He kind of talked me into it, and then I decided to give it a chance,” Whitehead said.

    Since starting to box, Whitehead said he lost weight and gained muscle, improving physically and mentally in his development as a boxer. “The mindset really changes when you want to compete because then you have to prepare for a lot more. You have to sacrifice a lot more,” Whitehead said.

  • U.S. Secretary of Education nominee is East Carolina University Graduate

    U.S. Secretary of Education nominee is East Carolina University Graduate

    Most ECU students probably don’t know that President Trump’s nominee for Secretary of Education is an education is an East Carolina University graduate, but faculty in the university’s Department of Foreign Languages and Literature do.

    That’s because Linda McMahon was a French major before graduating from ECU in 1969. Since then, her McMahon Family Foundation established the Linda McMahon Distinguished Professorship in Foreign Languages at ECU in 2009. She was also the ECU’s commencement speaker in 2018.

    President Trump wants McMahon to lead a department he has pledged to eliminate, with scores of employees already ordered on to administrative lead and other staff being pressured to voluntarily quit.

    McMahon was born in New Bern and attended Havelock High School while her parents worked at Marine Air Station Cherry Point. She met her future husband, Vince McMahon, at 13, and after graduating high school, the two got married when she was 17. She then pursued her education at East Carolina University where, in 1969, she received ECU’s “Outstanding Senior Award.”

    The couple moved to Connecticut and primarily lived there in the beginning of their marriage. As an only child, McMahon seemed to thrive as CEO for the professional wrestling promotion company her husband founded, WWE, World Wrestling Entertainment. In 2016, McMahon told Sports Illustrated, “I grew up as my father’s son and my mother’s daughter,” which she believes contributed to her success in the male dominated industry.

    After almost 30 years with WWE, McMahon ran as a republican for U.S. Senate from Connecticut, but lost.

    While McMahon doesn’t often publicly discuss Pirate Nation, she agreed to an interview in 2006 with Kristin Murnane, who wrote for The East Carolinian. In the interview, McMahon described her memories of “sitting in the stands and cheering” and has “all fond memories of being at East Carolina.” She added that in the years she attended, “it was just a nice, sleepy college town” with fewer than 10,000 students.