Here is a little video I made that briefly describes my semester and how much I grew from the experiences I had here.
There is much to be learned and get exposed to but you must keep an open mind, sharp eye, and a thirst to absorb what you DON’T know. Trust me, you don’t know it all so just accept that you are a tiny guppy in a large ocean and learn from it. If you do this, I promise that you will walk away from your time in D.C. thoroughly satisfied. ~Ryan
For one of the recent Semester in Washington Journalism assignments students were asked to create a 1-2 minute haiku using a small Flip video camera. Watch and see what students came up with. If you had to make a video about yourself, what would you say?Listen to Natalie and her story.
For one of the recent Semester in Washington Journalism assignments students were asked to create a 1-2 minute haiku using a small Flip video camera. Watch and see what Margaret had to say. If you had to make a video about yourself, what would you say?
For one of the recent Semester in Washington Journalism assignments students were asked to create a 1-2 minute haiku using a small Flip video camera. Watch and see what students came up with. If you had to make a video about yourself, what would you say?
When asked to describe myself in one minute, I had an hour’s worth of words to use. Then I was asked to describe myself in a minute’s worth of video and that was hard. After much thought and preparation, this is what I came up with. Below is me, Brittney Cooley and my Haiku.
For one of the recent Semester in Washington Journalism assignments students were asked to create a 1-2 minute haiku using a small Flip video camera. Watch and see what students came up with. If you had to make a video about yourself, what would you say?
For one of the recent Semester in Washington Journalism assignments students were asked to create a 1-2 minute haiku using a small Flip video camera. Watch and see what students came up with. If you had to make a video about yourself, what would you say? Take a look at what its like to live as a photography intern here in Washington DC.
On May 24, I took the biggest leap of my life in moving from Petal, Mississippi to Washington, D.C. Although I had vacated in the big city, I had no idea what lie ahead. The nearest “big city” to me back home is Hattiesburg, with a population of approximately 50,000 (less than one tenth of the population of D.C.)
After the settling in and finishing the rigorous week long boot camp, I was sent out to my internship at the Hispanic Link to make something of myself. My first day in the office, I was sent to the press club to a luncheon to hear former Vice President Dick Cheney give his speech to the press. I couldn’t believe it. My first official day as a reporter and I was standing just a few feet away from Dick Cheney.
Me and Natalie
As the week continued, I was given my own business cards, a congressional press pass and open access to just about any event I wanted to cover. It was incredible! Who would have thought that a small town southerner would be reporting in Washington D.C.?
Time passed and there were more events, more celebrities and more stories. But the big city glamor began to fade away. I missed my family and friends, my boyfriend, fishing at the lake, my swimming pool, the summer gardening and so much more.
My hopes of making it in the big city began to dissolve as I realized that my home in the south is where I belong. Never in a million years did I think that I would be saying this; but I am. I’m a southern girl who’s heart is in the south.
Before coming to DC I joked with my family and friends about how Barack Obama was my neighbor and because of my awesome basketball skills, he might invite me to shoot hoops at the White House (one can only dream)! Obviously the second part will never happen unless I grow another foot and become a basketball all-star like Dwight Howard. But… I am proud to say I stood within 10 feet of Obama at his 4th White House Press Conference.
Last Tuesday, Rebecca Cooper (the anchor I work with at WJLA/NewChannel 8) and I set out for the White House Rose Garden, but when we arrived we were informed we’d be crammed into the Press Briefing room (which isn’t as big as it looks) because of “humidity”. Reporters later said, “It was the most packed [they've] seen the briefing room since the Monica Lewinsky scandal during the Clinton administration.”
Me and Helen Thomas
Rebecca told me before it began I had to do the “first-time reporters” thing. First I met HELEN THOMAS…. most well-known White House journalist.
Then I stood at the podium President Obama was about to speak from…
Me At The Podium
Finally, I stood my ground at the front to hold a place for Rebecca to stand (seats reserved for daily press). I did this for about 2 hours (In the photo below I’m in pink, holding a newspaper along the wall.)
Waiting Waiting Waiting
When the President walked in, the room was silent (with the exception of cameras going crazy).As Obama took the podium to address the US position on Iran, health care and the economy (as usual), I stood in awe of the president. I couldn’t pay attention to the words coming out of his mouth because I was in awe of how surreal this was. Finally I came to when he began to answer questions and actually learned a lot. Evidently I was on TV too!!!
This is my favorite moment of my internship so far and I’m so grateful to Rebecca for giving me the chance to go. I’m still hoping to take on the President in a 1 on 1 challenge though. So President Obama if you’re reading this… call me and we’ll set the time and place!
It had been a slow day at SlateV, the place where I intern. Legendary actress Farrah Fawcet died, but that did not give us much material other than a feathered hair competition for a slate initiative – double XX.
The interns and I were planning to embark on a culinary adventure, that night we were trying Turkish food. And then- it happened. A confirmed report that the legendary Michael Jackson had died. Expletives ran through our heads- no Turkish tonight!
Well, SlateV, the video company I intern with, wanted to do a compilation video as a kind of tribute of Micheal Jackson’s moonwalk. MJ perfected the move and it became a pop culture movement. Others tried, most failed.
So, I spent a couple hours on YouTube pulling clips and editing and the V team ended up with a pretty awesome video! Its definitely something we were proud of, take a look!
~Lindsay
Like usual, we threw it up on YouTube and it started to gain momentum. First 25,000 hits then 50,000 then 100,000 hits. As I am writing this, it has close to a million hits! And that wasn’t the end of this viral video’s success. MSN called us over at Slate, they wanted my video for their homepage-oh wait and Dateline and the Today Show called too.
Pretty darn cool! It is the most successful SlateV video to date and it has opened up many doors for SlateV. YouTube is talking to us about how we can gain more prominence in our partnership and we may have a deal with MSN for sharing video sometime soon!
This blog is called “What is Journalism?” for the students in the Semester in Washington Journalism Program and at least for me, for today, it’s the moonwalk.