Anonymous wrote:Major in Faking News? I don't think so.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s important to remember that journalism is not a profession. It’s a trade. Which is why I agree they should major in something else and get involved with the school paper/radio station or whatever. It helps as a journalist to have something to write about. Worth taking journalism 101 to learn the basic tenets and maybe any technical classes on, say, digital tools. But the rest remains an on-the-job experience model.
+1000
The smartest journalists I knew were the econ majors
The weakest journalists I knew were the comms majors
- Former newspaper person who saw it all
Anonymous wrote:It’s important to remember that journalism is not a profession. It’s a trade. Which is why I agree they should major in something else and get involved with the school paper/radio station or whatever. It helps as a journalist to have something to write about. Worth taking journalism 101 to learn the basic tenets and maybe any technical classes on, say, digital tools. But the rest remains an on-the-job experience model.
Anonymous wrote:Yea, the journalism industry is in terrible shape.
The only person I know who is a successful journalist (actually works for a major newspaper as a reporter) wasn't even a journalism major - she was a poli sci major, went to peace corps, started writing blogs about peace corps, became an assistant to a major editor (side note: she is also beautiful and very poised, perfect for an assistant role), then became a newspaper reporter.
This is NOT a situation where you go to school, come out, and get a full time job reporting. Just make sure your child is really really realistic about that.
Plus, a lot of people you see who are "making a living" as freelance journalists probably have family money.
Anonymous wrote:You don't need to have studied journalism to be a great journalist. You can study Economics or History or Literature and become a great writer who also writes articles for your college paper(s).
Anonymous wrote:I just heard Ray Suarez interviewed on WAMU, and his story would make me nervous about entering the field at this point. He was SO well regarded and experienced, yet has had trouble finding a full time job. Of course he had ageism working against him also, but still...
I have not heard this podcast, but suspect it will go over his story similarly:
https://economichardship.org/2021/10/a-veteran-journalist-finds-himself-the-center-of-the-story/
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I know a guy who is a correspondent for the NYTimes he supplements his income quite well writing non-fiction, journalistic style books.
Only someone with no direct experience working in journalism of any kind would chime in with this story
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I know a guy who is a correspondent for the NYTimes he supplements his income quite well writing non-fiction, journalistic style books.
Either of those gigs is fantastic. Good for him, and I mean that sincerely. But he's a unicorn, frankly, and his example isn't one that the OP's kid necessarily can apply to his or her own choices in the increasingly fragmented, nontraditional paths currently open to younger journalists. I hate to have to say that but it's reality.
--One of the former journalists from posts above