When you think of D.C.-area transportation agencies, “comedy” probably isn’t the first thing that comes to mind. But that’s what makes the official Northern Virginia Department of Transportation Twitter account a standout. It provides information crucial for drivers and a healthy, sometimes gut-busting, dose of humor, which always seems in short supply during the coronavirus pandemic. And you can thank VDOT Spokesperson and Senior Public Affairs Officer Ellen Kamilakis for that. Kamilakis told WTOP she started tweeting for the agency right about when she started her gig in 2015. 
Just gonna leave this right here (again) … 😷 pic.twitter.com/AVWlthdMM3
— VDOT Northern VA 😷 (@VaDOTNOVA) July 14, 2020
Kamilakis said she wanted to work Ted Levine’s “Lambs” villain Buffalo Bill into the “cutesy” messaging about mask usage. “And I thought of this and I was like, ‘Somebody has to have created this gif. Somebody has to have done this,'” she said. “And I searched and searched and searched — nobody had done it.” So she made it herself, “because that’s our personality.” “I think if we were to be talking in very formal terms, and very generic language, it would have less of an impact because it wouldn’t sound like us,” Kamilakis said. Her cautions on COVID-19 aren’t without cause. Beyond being a social media manager and focusing on driver safety, her brother is a physician and her mother, who got a kick out of the Twitter account, died from the coronavirus. “So the concept of listening to science, believing in science, listening to Dr. (Anthony) Fauci, washing hands, masks — all of that, to me is very important,” Kamilakis said. She added that people are going to take something more seriously when they can relate to it or feel like it affects them. One person who helps Kamilakis stay focused on getting impactful, accurate information out is WTOP’s own Dave Dildine — one of the D.C. region’s most recognizable voices, especially when it comes to traffic. “Dave is a huge motivator for me in terms of staying focused on accuracy and useful information,” Kamilakis said. “Before the pandemic, I would teach a module every month in our new employee orientation on public affairs, and some of the slides were talking about my greatest fear, which is for me to be inaccurate in something that I say, and not only as [public information officer] to be inaccurate, but to be called out for it. And that Dave has no problem calling out anybody on Twitter, if the information is factually incorrect.” Dildine himself said Kamilakis is an “All-Star information officer.” “She’s tireless and knowledgeable,” Dildine said. “And she definitely sets a standard.” He noted that she has found clever ways to engage drivers, even though traffic information isn’t really regarded as “sexy.” “But through creativity, you can get a few more looks and likes and get your message out just a little bit louder. And she does that effectively and famously. Getting people to engage with a public service announcement about road rage and distracted driving isn’t easy,” Dildine said. “People come to social media to be entertained, not lectured, right? So social media should be social if it’s going to be effective. And that’s what she does well.” Full disclosure: Kamilakis nominated Dildine for an American Traffic Safety Services Association award, which he won in 2020. 
am i a social media influensewer
— NE Ohio Regional Sewer District (@neorsd) February 5, 2021
Follow VDOT NoVa on Twitter. And, for Pete’s sake, drive safe out there.
