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Black Collegian News & Views Young
Black Journalists Prepped on Landing Dream Job
By Shauntel Lowe, Black College Wire
Aug. 21, 2006 - "Black journalists are held to a higher standard than
their white colleagues."
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Photo credit: Craig Young/NABJ Convention Online
Erinn Haines of the Associated Press, left, Gregory H. Lee Jr.,
of the Boston Globe, Kelley L. Carter of the Detroit Free Press
and Andrew Guy Jr. of the Houston Chronicle warned young
journalists of pitfalls. |
This common speculation among young African American journalists was
echoed by a panel of those who are already successful, in Indianapolis
at this year's National Association of Black Journalists annual
convention.
The Aug. 16-20 convention provided its thousands of attendees the
opportunity to network, to participate in discussions about such topics
as career planning, free speech and racism, and to search for jobs and
internships at a job fair. At the Aug. 19 awards banquet, NABJ President
Bryan Monroe put the attendance figure at 2,452.
The "How to Land Your Dream Job Before 30" workshop, held Aug. 18 and
one of more than 50 on the program, was sponsored by the NABJ Young
Journalists Task Force as a way for young journalists to hear wisdom
from older ones.
Workshop moderator Erinn Haines, a reporter with the Associated Press
and a co-winner of NABJ’s Emerging Journalist of the Year award, joined
panelists Kelley L. Carter, a music writer for the Detroit Free Press,
Andrew Guy Jr., features writer for the Houston Chronicle and Gregory H.
Lee Jr., senior assistant sports editor for the Boston Globe.
"You’re always going to be watched because you’re different," Lee
said of young black journalists. "You either accept it as a burden or
you accept it as a challenge."
Guy said he was once told on a job evaluation that his habit of
folding his arms made him seem intimidating. He said he would often sit
and look upward as he was thinking, and in his evaluator's mind, Guy was
constantly rolling his eyes.
"We’re perceived differently," Guy said.
Because "perception is everything in newsrooms," Guy said it was
important for young journalists to choose their battles carefully. His
fights over such small issues as an editor changing his lead prevented
him from rising faster, he said:
"It branded me as young and angry. They saw me as unreasonable."
The panelists said that in addition to watching their images, young
journalists should make themselves more marketable by having a diverse
set of journalistic skills across media genres.
"Broadcast and print was like the separation of church and state, and
now that’s completely changed," Carter said, acknowledging shifts
prompted by technology.
Carter said that though she is a music writer, she has to be prepared
to do television and radio.
But more than skill diversity and image consciousness, panelists
stressed the importance of networking.
Haines, the workshop moderator, said networking at NABJ conventions
had been instrumental in landing all of her jobs and internships.
"Everything on my resume is a direct result of NABJ," she said.
The panelists said networking isn’t limited to journalism
conventions.
"Recruiting doesn’t always happen inside the job fair," Carter said,
recalling about a conversation she had with a recruiter she met while
out having drinks.
Jason Lockhart, a recent graduate of Rutgers University who was in
the audience, said he had been making his rounds through the NABJ's job
fair, talking to recruiters and handing out resumes in search of his
dream job – being a news reporter for a major newspaper in the New York
area.
Speaking to recruiters helped him better understand what they are
looking for in job candidates, he said.
The panelists also said having a mentor can help young journalists
prepare for job interviews and learn how to navigate newsrooms.
But they added that young journalists should not be intimidated by
older journalists or be afraid to embrace their unique positions as
black voices in a world often dominated by white ones.
"I’m always going to be myself," Lee said. "Be who you are."
Shauntel Lowe is a student at the University of
California, Los Angeles and an intern for the Black College Wire. She
can be reached at shauntel.lowe@gmail.com. |