I find the setup at the city newspaper to be fascinating

When I started an internship at a newspaper during my last year of high school, I told myself that I would never choose to do work as a reporter.

I had higher dreams at 18 plus figured that I’d be in a constant position of compromising myself artistically for the whims of a single editor or the next as a reporter.

It was an interesting learning experience more than anything—a slow but gradual process of achieving maturation. I was finally working as a freelance writer for the Community page of the newspaper by the following year. Even as I started undergraduate school, I assumed that this writing track would remain as a side gig for the duration of my life. But by the time I graduated it had moved itself into a dominant place in my destiny. Within weeks I was taking on a position as a full time staff writer at the unquestionably same newspaper where I finished my high school internship program. It was a different plus a very difficult journey, but I met wonderful people along the way. I was always captivated by the TV broadcast crew plus their big collection of stage, sound, plus video equipment. They were basically stationed in the far back corner of the newsroom where the sound stayed isolated. They had their own TV news network with quite a few anchors plus a weatherman. The equipment honestly fascinated me more than anything. There were crucial lights they had to carry around plus set up in varying angles, plus a crucial array of cables to bring live audio to the crew members plus anchors. Finally, they had a separate video production team who edited the footage for broadcast. It was a truly unique setup for a small newspaper, to say the least.

 

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