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Nick says that the emphasis of his life had been traveling and living on the road, “But winter was so much fun here,” and he’d already made many friends. “Skiing was really good and the access to public lands for backcountry skiing was amazing, and then this community,” he says were all factoring into his realization that he wanted to stay here. His new friends had convinced him to stay for the fabulous summer, so he took the time and felt it out, eyeing the real estate market. As summer rolled around that first year, he wound up at Mesa Campground in Gunnison, “Because it was super cheap back then.” Later, Nick ended up buying a fixer-upper condo on the mountain in 2019, just before the COVID real estate spike. He later sold that and moved into a deed restricted condo in Pitchfork where he currently resides today.
A year later in 2015, Nick got a bit of wanderlust, sold his house in Columbus and bought a camper trailer. He hit the road since he could work remotely from anywhere as long as there was decent cell connection or internet. “I had a passion for the outdoors and the mountains. I grew up skiing on little hills in the Midwest and I loved skiing,” he says. But it wasn’t until college that he visited the slopes of Copper Mountain to ski with his uncle. “That was the catalyst moment when I thought, this is epic. I wanted to move to the Rockies. For me, it was the first time being west of Mississippi and it was transformative.” As soon as Nick returned home he bought a new ski setup and made various skiing outings a couple of times a year following the snow to resorts in Utah, Montana and Whistler. “It was that cool adventure of skiing and traveling to national parks that was the impetus to hit the road and sell the house.” Leaving Columbus with his camper, he traveled around to western locations with a focus on visiting national parks, and he hit about 30 of them, sometimes having to stay longer in places where there was internet or cell service for connectivity to upload and download large files for work.
With his main influences mostly revolving around BMX biking and the skateboarding culture, Nick felt that it was a little more attainable in being able to recreate the scene and the process, plus, “I enjoyed riding and skateboarding. It was a cool way to keep up to speed with what the pros were doing. The videos made by different filmmakers were so cool and I’d watch them over and over again, not only for the sport but the technical aspect of filming,” he says of his motivation. He developed his own unique skills for logo design, web videos and ads for local businesses. “It was fun seeing stuff you made yourself on TV.” 
Nick started out in the suburbs but his family moved out to the country during his middle school days until he left for college. There he’d create little films with GI Joe figures. “It would take all day,” he explains of the stop-animation style, like Claymation, where his staged soldiers would fight battles. Later, Nick created more action-type films at the skate park, filming skateboarding and BMX biking in his mini DV format. In high school and throughout college, Nick had saved up enough earnings from shooting weddings to buy better, more professional equipment. “I was always ambitious and there was never a dull moment,” he smiles. From early on, he knew he wanted to pursue this path in the art world, so he focused on how to monetize it in commercial ways to enable him to pay the bills by doing filming, editing and visual effects for everything from logo designs and promotional videos to weddings. 
Nick had heard of Crested Butte and its reputation of, “rad, fun, steep and challenging terrain.” In the fall of 2016, he arranged to come to CB. He had visited that prior spring to explore options for camping, of which there were none, so he rented a cabin in Almont for the winter and parked the trailer, arriving in time for Vinotok. Coming from down-valley Nick recalls, “You don’t see the mountains, but then wrapping around Round Mountain, it was epic – this is insane and so beautiful kind of epic. Even now, it still blows my mind how beautiful and special it is.” Once winter hit, Nick was skiing and playing hockey, which he had played in Ohio when he was in his 20s. He joined the Gunnison rec hockey team’s fall league and then joined the CB town league. 
During those years paralleling with school, when opportunities arose to do work related graphics and animations Nick would take those odd jobs which became his auxiliary income that allowed him to further his craft through college. In his senior year at college, Nick got an internship at a local studio called Spacejunk, a video production and animation company, which he still occasionally works for. “That was my first big foray into the field.” After he graduated in 2008, he was hired full-time, working with them for eight years until 2014. That’s when Nick decided to go freelance and create his own company, LOVEcinema. He still worked with Spacejunk, subcontracting and teaming up on some projects. “There was plenty of work, it’s a fairly large industry and it’s not regional. There was plenty of non-local work,” he says.
After Nick graduated from high school in 2004, he enrolled at the local Columbus College of Art and Design. It was a solid school for a creative design curriculum, and he got a reasonable scholarship with partial grants. He took everything from painting courses to architectural drawing courses to color concept and film, all while working. “It was the busiest time in my life,” he tells. The first three years, Nick worked random jobs including shooting weddings, working at Home Depot and even as a window cleaner dangling from ropes on dangerously tall buildings. “There were a few moments that we had some scares on those buildings,” he recalls. He’d pull all-nighters after work sometimes to get his school projects and course homework completed. “There was a big workload at that school. It can take like eight hours to create content.” He earned his BA degree in Fine Arts with a major in Time Based Media Design, which is basically, he explains, film and animation. 
By Dawne Belloise 
When living on the road during the winter, Nick would try to stay in a ski town and in the 2015/16 winter, he split his time between Breckenridge and Park City living in his trailer at an all-season RV park. “You’d have to wrap the pipes with heat tape and then skirt the bottom of the trailer, but it was cool because you could somewhat affordably stay in a ski town. The heat was mainly propane, and I’d have to fill the tanks every week,” he says and can now laugh about how the windows would freeze up and the pillows would freeze to headboard due to the moisture caused by propane heaters. “It was an adventure!” he remembers.
As a kid growing up on the outskirts of Columbus, Ohio, Nick Couts says he always loved art, drawing and making little films of his friends’ escapades on their BMX bikes with his VHS camera. He’s carried that creativity into his freelance business, LOVEcinema, where he does 3D animation, motion graphics and design, from text and titles for commercials and films to animating characters for ESPN. His company has a broad spectrum of styles and clients and he can service them from his home in Mt. Crested Butte.
Nick says that what makes him tick is his love of the outdoors. “I do trail running and fly fishing in the summer when I’m not working. Outdoor adventures here have only gotten more exciting,” which he shares with his fur buddy Australian Shepherd, Murphy. “So long as I have the choice, I want to be here.”

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Volleyball’s Season Ends In Round Of 32 to No. 3 Wisconsin

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MADISON, WISC – Carolina volleyball falls to No. 3 Wisconsin Badgers (25-14, 25-21, 25-27) in the second round of the NCAA Tournament. 

The Tar Heels improved after each set, raising their hitting percentage from .146 to .317. Laynie Smith led the way offensively as she hit .400 with seven kills on only 15 attacks.

Carolina dropped the first set 25-14, but Bridget Malone was the bright spot as she came off the bench and hit above .444 with four kills.

The Tar Heels had a much better second set, putting together an impressive 7-2 run in the middle of the match that brought the score to 17-18. The Tar Heels continued to fight back against the top-ranked Badgers.

The Tar Heels battled back in the third set as the final set was tied 19 times and there were ten lead changes. 

Maddy May wrapped up her legendary Tar Heel career tonight. May played  in every single set (445) of every single match (118) over her four-year career. May currently sits third all-time in program history with 1622 digs. The senior closed out her time in Chapel Hill on a high note, as she was named Second Team All-ACC for the first time in her career.

 



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Arizona State volleyball advances to NCAA Tournament second round

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Dec. 5, 2025, 7:31 a.m. MT



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Purdue volleyball vs Baylor NCAA tournament final score, game result, next

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8:25 pm ET December 5, 2025

When is Purdue volleyball’s next game? Purdue volleyball next game in Sweet 16. Who does Purdue volleyball play next?

Aaron Ferguson

Barring an upset, the Boilers are headed to Pittsburgh, the No. 1 seed in their quadrant. Times for next weekend are to be determined, and Purdue will know its opponent late Saturday night. Florida punched its ticket with a sweep of No. 7-seed Rice in an upset, and the Gators will play either No. 2 SMU or Central Arkansas.

It may set up a potential rematch with SMU, which Purdue beat 3-1 on a neutral court.



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Live updates, how to watch

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The Longhorns celebrate after winning the game against Florida A&M during the first round of the NCAA Tournament at Gregory Gymnasium in Austin, Friday, Dec. 5, 2025.

The Longhorns celebrate after winning the game against Florida A&M during the first round of the NCAA Tournament at Gregory Gymnasium in Austin, Friday, Dec. 5, 2025.

Mikala Compton/Austin American-Statesman

Texas volleyball, with its first No. 1 seed in three years, began what coach Jerritt Elliott hopes is a three-week journey through the NCAA Tournament Friday with a resounding sweep over Florida A&M Friday at Gregory Gymnasium.

But the competition will significantly stiffen Saturday when the Longhorns (23-3) face defending national champion Penn State in a second-round meeting. The eighth-seeded Nittany Lions (19-12), which beat South Florida 3-1 in the first game Friday at Gregory Gymnasium, have endured a rocky season that included the September departure of All-American setter Izzy Starck because of mental heath concerns.

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But Penn State still has a championship pedigree that includes eight national titles, and the team still has an All-American attacker in 6-foot-6 Kennedy Martin.

“It’s one of the storied programs we have,” said Texas coach Jerritt Elliott, who’s led the Longhorns to three of their five national titles. “Obviously, two tradition-rich programs in the sport, and that makes it great for TV and great for our fans. We’re excited to be part of it.”

Based on how they played against overmatched Florida A&M (14-17), the Longhorns look primed for the challenge. Rattlers coach Gokhan Yilmaz said a Texas defense powered by a record-setting performance by Emma Halter proved more impressive than the array of Longhorn hitters led by Torrey Stafford (13 kills).

 “I think their defensive effort was great,” he said. “In a match where everybody knows it would be a lopsided, they didn’t just hang around. They were going after every ball. That’s really impressive to see.”

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Halter led that defense with 25 digs, which set a school record for most digs in a 3-set match. 

“Honestly, it felt really good from earlier today in warm-ups,” Halter said. “I was just like, ‘I’m kind of feeling it today.’ It’s tournament time. It’s live or die, and so I’m trying to get every ball.”

Read below for a replay and highlights from the Texas Longhorns’ win over the Florida A&M Rattlers in a NCAA Tournament first-round match. 

MORE: After long journey to Austin, Texas’ Torrey Stafford leads Longhorns into NCAA volleyball tournament

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Torrey Stafford ended with 13 kills, and the Longhorns got contributions from across the lineup in an easy first-round sweep. Up next? Defending champion Penn State.

Stat leaders for Texas: Torrey Stafford with 13 kills, Ella Swindle with 20 assists, Emma Halter with 23 digs and Ayden Ames with seven total blocks. Texas leads 2-0.

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FAMU has more hitting errors than kills in this match as Texas continues to work through its bench and eye the champs in a second-round match Saturday. Whitney Lauenstein, one known as “Big Hit Whit” during her time at Nebraska, has four kills on five swings and three blocks off the bench. Texas leads 2-0.

Too much size, too much talent from Texas, which takes a 2-0 lead. Penn State is in the cheap seats watching, but I’m not sure what the Nittany Lions can glean from this match. Texas leads 2-0.

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Whitney Lauenstein has been getting some run late in the season for Texas, and she fires a pretty ball. Her first kill of the match leads to another Rattler timeout. Texas leads 1-0.

A service ace from Torrey Stafford caps a quick 3-0 spurt by Texas, and FAMU takes a time out. Texas leads 1-0.

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No drama in set one. Torrey Stafford paces Texas with five kills, Ayden Ames has three kills and three blocks, and Emma Halter tallied a whopping 10 digs.

Ayden Ames is having her way at the net for Texas with three kills on three swings and three blocks, but it’s the diving saves from Emma Halter and Rella Binney that really get the crowd going.

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That last post may have jinxed FAMU. Texas keeps swinging away, Abby Vander Wal comes off the bench for three quick kills, and Texas is on a 6-0 run.

FAMU is hanging in there early. The Rattler are making Texas work for its kills, and that’s all you can do as a big underdog.

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Ayden Ames starts it off with a spike for Texas. NCAA Tournament first round. Winner faces Penn State tomorrow.

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Penn State, the defending national champion, shook off a first-set loss and beat South Florida 3-1 and will face either Texas or Florida A&M Saturday at 6:30 p.m. in a second-round matchup. The Nittany Lions (19-12) have endured a rocky season that included the in-season departure of All-American setter Izzy Starck because of mental heath concerns, but they flashed their firepower against South Florida. Texas and Florida A&M will start at 7:08 p.m.  

The matchup between Texas and Florida A&M will likely start after its scheduled time of 7 p.m., based on the current battle between Penn State and South Florida. The Longhorns and Rattlers need their allotted warm-up time, so their match will start approximately 30 minutes after the conclusion of Friday’s first match at Gregory Gymnasium. Penn State just took a 2-1 lead after winning the third set.

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Volleyball Falls at No.4 Pitt in NCAA Tournament

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PITTSBURGH – The America East champion UMBC Volleyball team season came to end as No.4 Pitt swept an NCAA Tournament first round match-up (25-10, 25-17, 25-13) on Friday night. 

Jalynn Brown led the Retrievers with eight kills, while Pittsburgh-area native Hannah Dobbs added seven kills, three digs and a block. 

Hannah Howard tallied a match-best 11 digs and ended the season with 457 digs, the tenth most in a single season in UMBC history.

Laura Fuehrer had four kills and two blocks and finished the season with 114 blocks and 101 assisted blocks, good for sixth and fifth most, respectively, in a single season in program history. 

Claudia Lllamas picked up six kills, Helen Frankovich had four on .500 hitting with two blocks and Izzy Ostvig added a kill with 12 assists and a team-high three blocks

Serin Maden had 13 assists and finished her stellar career in the black and gold with 2,461 assists.

Ella McAllister chipped in with two digs and Ema Djordjevic also saw action in the contest.

This was both the Retrievers fifth America East championship and NCAA Tournament appearance in the past six seasons.

 



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Michigan Sweeps Xavier to Advance to NCAA Tournament Second Round

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» Michigan swept Xavier in the first round of the NCAA Tournament.

» Allison Jacobs tallied a match-leading 19 kills on a .326 hitting percentage.

» Maddi Cuchran recorded four aces, becoming just the fifth Wolverine with four or more aces in a tournament match.

» Serena Nyambio hit .583 with eight kills on 12 swings.

PITTSBURGH, Pa. — The University of Michigan volleyball team swept eighth-seeded Xavier 25-19, 25-15, 25-23 on Friday (Dec. 5) in the opening round of the NCAA Tournament at the Petersen Events Center.

Michigan (22-10) was led by Allison Jacobs, who tallied a match-leading 19 kills on a .326 hitting percentage. She was the only player who recorded double-digit kills in the match. Ella Demetrician had nine kills, including Michigan’s final two and Serena Nyambio hit .583 with eight kills on 12 swings. Maddi Cuchran tallied four service aces to become just the fifth Wolverine in program history with four aces or more in an NCAA Tournament match. Morgan Burke and Camille Edwards led the U-M offense to a .287 hitting percentage, with Burke recording 17 assists and two aces while Edwards had 18 assists and one ace.

A kill from Nyambio opened the match, but Xavier (26-5) responded with a kill. The Wolverines used a kill from Jacobs and an ace from Cuchran to take the lead. Xavier tied the set at five and six, but U-M kept the Musketeers from taking the lead. Michigan followed with a 4-1 run, led by an ace from Burke and a block from Nyambio and Cymarah Gordon. Xavier brought the set to within one at 10-9, but a Nyambio kill ended the threat and jump-started four straight Michigan points. A block from Gordon and Jenna Hanes put Michigan up 15-11 going into the media timeout. The Musketeers took two of the next three points out of the timeout, and Michigan followed with a 5-2 run with kills from three different players and an ace from Burke to go up 21-15. Xavier took four of the next five points to force a Michigan timeout. Out of the timeout, Jacobs recorded a kill followed by a block from Hanes and Gordon to reach set point. The Musketeers called their second timeout of the set, and out of the timeout, Jacobs ended the set with a kill for a 25-19 set one win.

Xavier started the second set with two quick points to take an early lead, but it was all Michigan after that. A 5-0 run led by Cuchran, who recorded her third ace of the match, put the Wolverines ahead 8-3. After the teams traded points midway through the set, U-M went on a 4-0 run to build a 15-7 advantage, but Xavier countered with a 4-0 run of its own. A Nyambio kill and Musketeers attack error forced Xavier’s second timeout of the set, trailing 17-11. After the timeout, Michigan took eight of the final 12 points, with a kill from Demetrician finishing off the set 25-15.

In the third set, the Wolverines jumped out to an early lead, once again 8-3, led by service runs from Edwards and Jacobs. Xavier hung around and tied the match at 11 before taking the lead. A kill from Gordon tied the match at 12 and Cuchran’s fourth ace put Michigan back in front. From there, neither team held a lead bigger than two points the rest of the way, with the final 14 points alternating back and forth. Demetrician tallied the final two Michigan points as U-M took the third set 25-23 to advance to the second round.

The Wolverines will take on either top-seeded and No. 4-ranked Pittsburgh or UMBC on Saturday (Dec. 6) at 7 p.m. in the second round of the NCAA Tournament at the Petersen Events Center. The match will be streamed live on ESPN+.



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