Briana Joseph and Claire Nemmers were facing a Fairmont High School girls tennis season in flux thanks to COVID-19.
So when their coach urged them to "focus on what we can control," Joseph said, the teammates hit on an idea: Create a video to win over a largely skeptical Martin County community and encourage it to start masking up.
In just a few days, more than 30 students produced an upbeat video aimed at persuading mask-resistant neighbors to cover their faces to not only slow the spread of COVID-19 but help get kids back to their classrooms, ball fields and tennis courts.
"We wanted it to be positive, especially since the county, the state and the whole country is divided," said Joseph, a junior who also serves as a student representative on the school board. "These kind of issues shouldn't be that controversial. Unfortunately, it is."
Nemmers, also a junior, said the intent of their message was "that everyone's actions can affect others. But we wanted it to be positive."
Nine months into the COVID-19 crisis and with case numbers exploding statewide, health officials acknowledge it is getting tougher to convince a pandemic-weary public to keep wearing masks and maintain social distancing.
Much of the Fairmont High video features masked students respectfully asking community members to wear masks to preserve their sports seasons and keep them safe. In delivering that message, the video features distance high-fives, mask-averse dogs and members of the girls tennis team perched on playground equipment.
The video was produced with a gentle and a deft touch, said Kris Ehresmann, state infectious disease director.