Actress Shanola Hampton visits her alma mater, Summerville High School, to inspire students
SUMMERVILLE, S.C. (WCBD) – Lowcountry native and television star Shanola Hampton was in Summerville speaking with students about hard work and perseverance.
The Summerville High School alum and star of the NBC show 'Found' reminisced with school staff about her time as a 'Greenwave,' a place she dreamed of being an actor.
'I bleed green and gold, and I love my Greenwave and all of the staff,' she said.
Hampton said she knew being an actor was something she wanted to do from her days walking the school halls. 'I always wanted to be an actor, and so I knew I had to start somewhere. So even when I was doing the minor roles, when you're from South Carolina you're like I have arrived and then you get a taste of that and you dream a bigger dream.'
Hampton graduated from Summerville High School in 1995. She remembered many of her teachers and talked about how they helped shape who she was.
'Ms. Perkins took me under her wing and just really accepted — I have a very big personality, and it's been like this forever. It can be a lot when you are in school, let's be honest, right? And so she was one person who never tried to dim my light and so much of Summerville I can say that. Mrs. Profit who was my English teacher here, and she was hard-core. But she was so good and cared so much about her students.'
Hampton then judged a student talent show at the school.
She said it took 10 years in the business before her first big break, which was playing the role of 'Veronica Fisher' in the TV show 'Shameless.'
Hampton is now a producer and star of 'Found,' which is in its second season on NBC.
'The arts, and the media, the theater and the campus is so large and the students are so kind. It means so much to me to be back to know that this is where my foundation started,' she said.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
44 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Hampton gamer brings ‘Complex Loss' to virtual reality world
Jamal Johnson was chilling at his buddy's house in Hampton in 2022 when his friend casually asked if he'd like to try out a new virtual reality gaming system, all hooked up in the living room. Yeah man, Johnson said. If his friend was into it, sure, why not give it a go? So he slipped a VR headset over his forehead and across his eyes, and the real world disappeared as he was transported into a virtual 3D realm. When he raised his arms in his friend's living room, his character's arms went up in the game. He turned his head, and his field of vision in the game rotated from left to right, he said. It felt like magic. 'At that instant, I was like, 'I gotta learn this. I gotta figure this out.' I was like, 'Nothing else matters to me anymore.'' The experience prompted Johnson, 44, to change the entire business model of his Hampton-based company, the Music Video Training Center. For more than a decade, the company had been making iOS apps and helping artists, private firms and government agencies produce videos. But in only a few minutes of wearing that headset, Johnson saw virtual reality as the future of media — and, thus, the future of his company. And after several years of experimentation and learning the necessary programming, Johnson and his creative team released, early this year, their first VR game. It's called 'Complex Loss.' Complex Loss can be played on the Meta Quest 2 or Meta Quest 3, which are standalone virtual headset systems, made by Meta Platforms, Inc., the company founded by Facebook-creator Mark Zuckerberg. Anyone who plays the game, plays as its main character. You, in the game, are an asset recovery agent sent on a mission to take back a business complex that's been stolen from the fictional RCM Corporation by a former, disgruntled employee. The game, which has received positive reviews online, has 10 levels. Each one is a different room, floor or outside area at the corporate office building such as a loading dock, recreation room and robotics lab. Its basic premise is based on the concept of an escape room, and in each level, the game's player finds clues that will unlock further progression. A player walks around the virtual environment picking up objects and uses a special scanning tool on their wrist to log recovered assets, and later confronts and fights bad guys. With its creators' previous film experience, the game sound effects are particularly unique. From beeps of pushed buttons to footsteps on different kinds of floorings to the thudding of objects a player can pick up and throw against walls, desks or anywhere of their choosing in the immersive-virtual space, each sound is a customized creation by the gamemakers. Complex Loss was recently spotlighted by SideQuest as one of the best VR games by independent gamemakers of summer 2025, and its release was a major step forward for a local media technology company — co-owned by Johnson and his 26-year-old partner, Dashawn Tucker-Bailey, from Newport News who joined the organization in 2018. The Music Video Training Center has had a hand in the creation of 21 films since Johnson founded it in 2008 and around 70 music videos that include MTV and BET credits, including a couple starring members of hip-hop supergroup the Wu-Tang Clan. In his first venture into video games in the mid 2010s, Johnson designed an Android app game, 'The Struggler,' for Hampton University that encouraged financial literacy. In it, a gamer plays as a 'struggling' person who must run down a street while being chased by bill collectors, Johnson said. 'Now each bill collector had a different power. So pink would be child support. If you got hit by child support, then money you had already collected to help you progress through the levels would be taken away.' It was a far simpler programming job than what's required for a virtual reality game. To create Complex Loss, Johnson teamed with his lead programer Robert Connell, who lives in Georgia. 'Our idea was that we already had a formula that everybody likes and enjoys in an escape room,' Connell said, 'so now how far can we take that within an immersive VR environment?' Building on the momentum of Complex Loss, Connell and Johnson have already begun work on its sequels with a plan to create a brand new series of escape room VR games. Colin Warren-Hicks, 919-818-8139,


Miami Herald
an hour ago
- Miami Herald
As the Beckham family feud rages on, one son just made a personal decision: report
Deep sigh. Romeo Beckham was single for a hot minute, and now has possibly moved on. David and Victoria' Beckham's middle son, 22, was just spotted with a gorgeous woman in Paris, days after reports he had split with Kim Turnbull. The latter relationship was apparently one of the catalysts for a feud currently simmering within the famous English family who lives in Miami part time. According to widespread media reports, Turnbull used to have a little something something with Romeo's older brother Brooklyn, 26. Despite being happily married to Nicola Peltz, the aspiring chef understandably didn't want to have to hang with the London-based DJ when the whole gang got together. OK, so Turnbull isn't the only cause of the alleged friction. We hear that Victoria and Peltz are not exactly besties, with problems dating back to the 'Transformers' star's 2022 wedding to the ex Spice Girl's eldest in Palm Beach. The fact that the socialite chose to wear Valentino apparently didn't sit well with her mother-in-law, a haute designer. Whatever caused the drama, and if it's still ongoing is unclear. But we do know Brooklyn recently covered up his 'Mama's Boy' chest tattoo with flowers. Ouch. Back to Romeo and his sitch: TMZ identifies his new ladyfriend as Caroline Daur, a German fitness influencer. According to her eponymous website, the 30-year-old is 'a successful self-made entrepreneur and actress' with over 4.6 million followers on Instagram. Time will tell if the Beckhams can heal from the all this tumult. Insiders tell UK's The Sun the soccer icon and former pop star are hoping they can all reunite to celebrate daughter Harper's 14th birthday, which falls on July 10. But another source threw cold water on that theory: 'It doesn't seem likely at the moment.'
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
‘She's got tunnel vision': Wendi McLendon-Covey reveals what she loves most about her character Joyce on ‘St. Denis Medical'
'It was, like, four hours after we were canceled, and that's no joke.' That's how long it took for Wendi McLendon-Covey to receive the first script for St. Denis Medical after the demise of her long-running comedy The Goldbergs. As the actress tells Gold Derby, she read the pilot with no expectation of making a series commitment, but she says she became hooked because her character, Joyce, is 'such an oddball and reminded me of so many women supervisors that I had working other jobs.' The transition from one show to another did prove challenging, though, as she shot the first episode of the NBC medical mockumentary while promoting the series finale of her family sitcom and felt like she was 'cheating' on her television family. (Watch our full interview above). McLendon-Covey's character is at the center of the St. Denis Medical cast as the top hospital administrator who tries to motivate the doctors, nurses, and staff of her regional medical center in her quest to make it a destination hospital. Although the character comes across as an 'oddball,' the actress stresses that 'she's not an idiot. She's an accomplished woman who is a doctor.' The television vet crafted a backstory to explain her character's offscreen journey, sharing, 'In my mind, she became an administrator because she got tired of being told how to practice medicine.' But now, instead of battling with insurance companies over patient care, all she does now is 'beg for money all day.' The actress describes this as the 'delicious line' she gets to walk. More from GoldDerby Michelle Williams on 'Dying for Sex,' finding the perfect role and embracing pleasure: 'Can you leave shame at the door?' Marlon Wayans on laughing through tragedy in 'Good Grief' and why social media has made comedy 'toxic' Tony Talk: Dissecting those shocking wins for 'Purpose,' Nicole Scherzinger, Darren Criss, and full show analysis SEE 'I know this dude!': David Alan Grier explains why he leapt at the chance to play a 'burned-out' doctor on 'St. Denis Medical' McLendon-Covey stars in the series alongside Emmy Award nominee Allison Tolman and Tony Award winner David Alan Grier. While those performers have 'proven track records,' the Emmy-nominated Reno 911! star has been equally impressed with the cast members who she didn't know prior to joining St. Denis. 'When I watch Mekki Leeper, dear God, just take me out, turn the cameras off me because I'm laughing my head off,' exclaims the actress, continuing, 'Same with Josh Lawson, same with Kaliko [Kauahi], who can level me with one line delivery per episode. She knows how to get in, say her thing, steal all the focus, and get out. Kahyun [Kim], I'm so impressed with her because she learned English from watching television in her twenties. She's fantastic.' Joyce's relationship with Grier's character, the burned out doctor Ron, has emerged as one of the most pivotal in the series, as the snark they show toward one another thinly masks deeply-held respect. 'We haven't talked about it that much. We had a meeting of the minds and started playing it the same way,' the actress says of the duo's dynamic. The series has revealed that the two doctors were residents together at St. Denis decades ago, so the performer hopes Season 2 will feature a flashback to those years, confessing, 'I do want to see what they (a) looked like in the '90s, and (b) how that worked out when they were working 18-hour shifts together.' WATCH our video interview with Allison Tolman, 'St. Denis Medical' One of McLendon-Covey's best episodes from the first season, 'Listen to Your Ladybugs,' follows the hospital's awareness campaign to encourage women to get their mammograms in a timely fashion. But when Joyce gets her screening for the cameras, it turns up an inconclusive spot that needs further testing, causing Joyce to panic. 'We're just playing the reality of working in a hospital, and things turn on a dime. Sometimes you're the ones getting the bad news,' stresses the actress about why the installment works so effectively. The Bridesmaids star also reveals that Joyce's situation, in which a mammogram led to a more invasive biopsy, happened to her. Just like her character, the McLendon-Covey says, 'Mammograms suck! It is like a panini press. This is the best we can do for women? It's humiliating. It hurts. I've got a whole sermon I could preach.' McLendon-Covey most enjoyed shooting the 'big episodes' of St. Denis Medical's first season, including 'Some Famous Internet Guy,' where the hospital hosts a concert for its pediatric patients, and 'Bruce-ic and the Mus-ic,' in which Joyce helps Ron emcee a fundraising gala. The actress says she delights in the installments in which 'there's just chaos going on behind the scenes, and Joyce has to pretend like there isn't any chaos.' She also mentions 'Ho-Ho-Hollo,' the Christmas episode, which finds Joyce suddenly passionate about the hospital going viral online. 'The absurdity of Joyce getting a goal in her mind and trying to reach it … she's got tunnel vision," McLendon-Covey says, "and I like that in a character.' SIGN UP for Gold Derby's free newsletter with latest predictions Best of GoldDerby Brandon Scott Jones on CBS' 'Ghosts': 'I enjoy playing characters that are desperate' Marlon Wayans on laughing through tragedy in 'Good Grief' and why social media has made comedy 'toxic' Minha Kim 'confronted all new emotions that I had never anticipated' in Season 2 of 'Pachinko' Click here to read the full article.