summer - Reed College of Media
Transcription
summer - Reed College of Media
Perley Isaac Reed SCHOOL OF JOURNALISM SUMMER 2011 Expanding Our Reach Students and faculty use their expertise to improve lives both locally and globally ADMINISTRATION James P. Clements President West Virginia University Maryanne Reed Dean Diana Martinelli Interim Associate Dean Steve Urbanski Director of Graduate Studies Chad Mezera Director of Online Programs EDITORIAL STAFF Kimberly Walker Editor Angela Lindley Bailee Morris Katlin Stinespring CONTENTS 1 Message from the Dean 2 Around Martin Hall 4 PR students bring long-term impact to rural economy 6 Integrated marketing communications on wheels 7 Student project honors 29 lost miners 8 Mobile app signals change, opportunity for rural area 10 Students serve as content curators 13 Career journalist exports TV talents PHOTOGRAPHY 14 Students develop campaign for client in Ireland DESIGN WVU University Relations, Design SPECIAL THANKS TO: Forrest Conroy, Graham Curry and Karyn Cummings Mobile app signals change, opportunity for rural area 12 Digital media experience helps young journalist land editor position Christa Vincent WVU University Relations, Photography 8 16 Road Tour project shares alumni success stories 19 Student organization makes West Virginia history 20 Journalism Week 2011: Game changers under 40 23 Alumna finds niche market in Snoburbia, U.S.A. 10 Students serve as content curators 24 Covering the hot zone of Afghanistan 25 IMC students complete online master’s degree while serving their country 26 Exploring “The Real World” 27 The young and the ambitious 28 May Commencement 30 About Our Donors 31 About Our Scholarships 32 Faculty Briefs 16 Alumni share success stories 34 Class Notes WVU is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Institution. West Virginia University is governed by the West Virginia University Board of Governors and the West Virginia Higher Education Policy Commission. James P. Clements is the 23rd president of West Virginia University. Message from the Dean W Welcome to the SOJ Insider, our magazine for alumni and friends of the P.I. Reed School of Journalism. In this edition, we focus on the School’s growing engagement with the wider world – beyond Martin Hall and the WVU community. Rooted in Appalachia, the School has always embraced its role within the University’s land-grant mission: to serve West Virginia and help improve the quality of life for its citizens. This community-based focus has influenced every aspect of the School’s culture – from teaching and creative scholarship, to training and outreach. But within today’s dynamic digital environment, we are poised to have an even greater impact. Faculty research projects, such as the West Virginia Uncovered mobile initiative, are helping rural media and their local communities become players in the digital realm. Through service-learning projects, such as the Ritchie County Buy Local Initiative and the Soldiers of the Coalfields interactive exhibit, our students are hoping to increase civic participation and enhance local economies through new media tools. WVU Photo Services New technology also has enabled us to expand our outreach to the global community. This spring, students in the Health Public Relations capstone course developed a social media campaign and mobile app for Shine, Ireland’s largest mental health organization. The School’s IMC master’s degree program is providing its cuttingedge marketing communications education to an international audience, including members of the U.S. military currently serving overseas in active duty. Going forward, the School will be developing partnerships with universities around the world, leading Save the Date! Join us for WVU Homecoming 2011 on Saturday, October 1. opportunities for the School of Journalism to expand its impact and reach. By Details about the School of Journalism’s annual homecoming tent will be available on the website. further engaging our faculty in innovative approaches to strengthening journalism journalism.wvu.edu to a cross-cultural exchange of students, faculty and curricula. WVU’s new strategic focus on raising its research profile will create even more and community in the digital age, the School can become an incubator of new ideas that will benefit our students and the profession. We welcome your ideas, suggestions and support, so that we can continue to provide our students with a quality, relevant journalism education and the opportunities to apply their skills in a global marketplace. Sincerely, Maryanne Reed Dean 1 Around Martin Hall IMC program joins forces with PRSA In June, the School of Journalism’s Integrated Marketing Communications (IMC) program partnered with the world’s largest public relations organization, Public Relation s Soc iety of A m erica (PRSA ) to augment and enhance the IMC learning opportunities available through PRSA. Findings from a recent PRSA survey predict that IMC will be one of the top five proficiencies for public relations and communications professionals in the next five years. Through the collaboration, IMC faculty, students and alumni will share content Google executive visits SOJ Google executive David Pavelko returned home in October 2010 and paid a visit to Martin Hall. The Morgantown, W.Va., native talked to students about the “Changing World of Advertising.” Pavelko gave students a crash course on the billion-dollar industry of searchadvertising, the future of mobile and their interconnectivity with media. He also provided a real-time demonstration of “Google Instant,” a new search enhancement tool that shows query Alex Wilson Google executive David Pavelko talks with SOJ students about the future of mobile advertising during his October 2010 visit to Martin Hall. results as you type. Pavelko is the head of travel for the eastern region at Google and manages marketing and advertising campaigns for travel businesses, including airlines, hotel chains, cruise lines and car rental companies across through PRSA newsletters, magazines, conferences Google search, display, YouTube and television advertising platforms. and the online Jobcenter. IMC and PRSA also will School of Journalism co-sponsors state’s 2010 U.S. Senate Debate work together to develop relevant industry research and professional development opportunities. Learn more about the partnership and the IMC program at http://imc.wvu.edu/prsa. SOJ students share their learning experiences from abroad SOJ students have been blogging this summer as part of course-related work and study abroad programs. Public relations senior Katlin Stinespring blogged about her experience studying abroad in the United Kingdom while interning at the London-based sports PR and marketing firm, Totally Sporty. On October 18, Dean Maryanne Reed moderated the 2010 West Virginia U.S. Senate Debate. The live event, which was held in Morgantown, was co-sponsored by T h e Associated Press and the School of Journalism. WVU Photo Services People across the country SOJ Dean Maryanne Reed moderates the 2010 West Virginia U.S. Senate debate at West Virginia Public Broadcasting studios in October 2010. tuned in to C-SPAN and West Virginia Public Broadcasting to watch four candidates debate for an opportunity to fill the vacant seat left by the late U.S. Senator Robert Byrd. Democrat Joe Manchin, Republican John Raese, Mountain Party candidate Jesse Johnson and Constitution Party candidate Jeff Becker answered questions from a panel of four journalists. Then-West Virginia Gov. Joe Manchin would go on to win Byrd’s seat on Capitol Hill just 15 days after the debate. http://sojuk.wvu.edu/ L e d by Vi s i t i n g S h o t t C h a i r o f Jo u r n a l i s m Lois Raimondo, a g roup of students traveled to China in June as part of the International Media course. Students studied Chinese media, politics a n d c u l t u re a n d d o c u m e n t e d t h e i r a d ve n t u re s. http://steepingtea.wvu.edu/ 2 Scan the QR code to watch the debate video http://journalism.wvu.edu/webcast Student Awards “WVU NEWS” NAMED BEST STUDENT NEWSCAST IN THE COUNTRY The fall 2010 crew for “WVU News” had a remarkable year, earning regional, national and international recognition for the student-produced newscast. BROADCAST EDUCATION ASSOCIATION Best of Festival King Foundation Award First Place in the “Student Newscast” category COMMUNICATOR AWARDS Gold Award of Excellence as “Best Informational Newscast” Silver Award of Distinction in the “Broadcast Newscast” category The fall 2010 “WVU News” cast and crew received numerous accolades last year, including being named “best newscast in the country” by the Broadcast Education Association. “I feel incredibly lucky to have been able to work with and be a part of the ‘WVU News’ team. Winning an award for all of our hard work really makes it all worth it. It was definitely a team effort.” – Keri Gero, television journalism senior and fall 2010 executive producer of “WVU News” Scan the QR code to visit the “WVU News” website http://sojnewscast.wvu.edu MARCOM AWARD Gold Award in the “Best Broadcast TV Program” category AVA AWARDS Platinum Award for “Best Broadcast Newscast” SOCIETY OF PROFESSIONAL JOURNALISTS REGION 4 MARK OF EXCELLENCE AWARDS Second Place in the “Best All-Around Television Student Newscast” category ACCOLADE COMPETITION Award of Merit in the “Broadcast Newscast” category This spring, “WVU News” also launched its website at http://sojnewscast.wvu.edu/, which features the producers’ blog, current and archived newscast videos, a Twitter feed, student cast and crew information, and more. “WVU News” airs statewide on West Virginia Public Television and on Time Warner Cable in North Central West Virginia and is available for download on WVU’s iTunesU and YouTube. 2010 SOCIETY OF PROFESSIONAL JOURNALISTS REGION 4 MARK OF EXCELLENCE AWARDS Dean Reed receives positive five-year review In fall 2010, WVU Provost and Vice President Michele Wheatly reappointed Dean Maryanne Reed to her position following her favorable five-year review. A committee composed of nine internal and external stakeholders evaluated Reed’s performance as the School of Journalism’s Chief Academic Officer during 2004-2010. Those serving represented faculty, staff, administrators and external constituents. Several sources of information were used to assist in the review process including the Dean’s self-evaluation, her presentation to the committee, and a faculty/staff questionnaire. Reed was evaluated in the areas of leadership and planning, personnel management, program/budget management, enhancement of quality, faculty governance/internal relations, students, external relations, and FIRST PLACE AWARDS Chelsi Baker, Breaking News Photography Ashton Pellom, Television General News Reporting Andrea Sauer, Television Sports Reporting SECOND PLACE AWARDS Tony Dobies, Sports Column Writing THIRD PLACE AWARDS Shannon Teets, Television Feature 2010-2011 HEARST JOURNALISM AWARDS PROGRAM Erica Mokay 10th place Radio Category, Broadcast News Competition WVU STUDENT ORGANIZATION OF THE YEAR WVU’s Public Relations Student Society of America (PRSSA) 2011 ZENITH PR AWARD, SOCIAL MEDIA CATEGORY Matt Morris, Lauren Paslawsky, Brittany Vallina, Paige Selle and Alyssa Schmid Case study: “Facebook’s Privacy Issues” overall assessment. In a memorandum to the School’s faculty and staff, Wheatly wrote, “Dean Reed is clearly doing an excellent job and is highly valued by virtually all with whom she interacts as dean.” 3 PR STUDENTS BRING LONG-TERM IMPACT TO RURAL ECONOMY I BY KATLIN STINESPRING A PUBLIC RELATIONS JUNIOR ENROLLED IN THIS COURSE Imagine driving 30 or more miles just to purchase basic grocery staples, such as milk, eggs and bread. With only two grocery stores in the entire county, this is reality for many Ritchie County, W.Va., residents. Roy Griffith, owner of the Independent Grocers Alliance (IGA) in Harrisville and Pennsboro, W.Va., works every day to maintain the two stores to prevent Ritchie County residents from traveling even farther away. Griffith is just one of many small-business owners struggling to survive in a rural community with a declining economic base. With support from the Buy Local Initiative, a new movement in Ritchie County, this outlook is beginning to change. The Buy Local Initiative is a long-term campaign to educate Ritchie County residents about how shopping at locally owned businesses can contribute to the economic growth of their communities. School of Journalism public relations students spent the spring semester helping to increase the public’s understanding of the importance of buying locally and supporting community businesses. Led by Dr. Rita Colistra, the students collaborated with the Ritchie Progress Alliance and a class at Glenville State College to implement the initiative. Colistra was awarded a $5,000 Campus-Community LINK grant from West Virginia Campus Compact, a statewide service-learning initiative funded by the Claude Worthington Benedum Foundation and coordinated in partnership with the West Virginia Community Development Hub and WVU’s Center for Civic Engagement. 4 PR 324 students pause for an informal photo before giving their Buy Local Initiative presentations at the WV Campus Compact Conference in Fairmont, W.Va., in April 2011. Front Row: Lauren Sandberg, Alexa Hadfield and Julie Hildenbrand. Middle Row: Brittney Nuckols, Lindsay Kenders, Dr. Rita Colistra, Bridget Feeney, Taylor Scarnato, Jacqueline Manley and Katlin Stinespring. Back Row: Samantha Esposito, Erin Gomez, Jared Lathrop, Andria Alvarez, Kelly Dodds and David Scott (Ritchie County Buy Local Committee co-founder). “I knew I had to be a part of the Buy Local Initiative because I am a native West Virginian who grew up in a rural area,” said Colistra. “I’m a strong believer in service learning, and I want to give back to the state in a way that can help communities help themselves.” By promoting the Buy Local Initiative, the class not only practiced the public relations skills they are learning in the classroom but also gained practical experience by executing a real campaign. Jared Lathrop, a public relations junior, said the project opened his eyes to the power of public relations. “The Buy Local Initiative has shown me what few resources Ritchie County would have without local businesses and why our efforts can have so much impact,” said Lathrop. “Being a part of it has really given me the confidence to be a public relations professional.” The students’ efforts are contributing in more ways than their Ritchie County contacts ever thought possible. Senior Lauren Sandberg’s logo design (left) was selected by members of the Ritchie Progress Alliance to represent the Buy Local Initiative. “I am really excited about [the Buy Local Initiative] because it is nice to have this infusion of students with the community and all of the “The Buy Local Initiative has shown me what few resources Ritchie County would have without local businesses and why our efforts can have so much impact.” – Jared Lathrop attention to buying local,” said Linda Bowlby, small-business owner and co-chair of the Ritchie Progress Alliance’s Buy Local Committee. “The Alliance often has good ideas but no manpower to accomplish them. With the students involved, we can make a greater impact.” Throughout the semester, the students created newsworthy, professional media for the Buy Local Initiative and gained exposure for the many businesses that thrive within the hills of Ritchie County. The students explored North Bend State Park, discovered a butterfly farm that operates Photos by Chris Tokarcik about 90 miles southwest of WVU’s campus, and learned the distance that residents travel to sell arts and crafts created in this rural community. Senior Lauren Sandberg discovered that many Ritchie County residents find social communities within local businesses. “Dodd’s Sporting Goods is the local hangout for hunters and gun enthusiasts. People come from all over West Virginia, Pennsylvania and Ohio to visit this store,” Sandberg said. “I realized this is the way locals interact – this is their way of life. Visiting Ritchie County changed the way I look at rural communities.” “Working with the Buy Local Initiative has truly shown me how much hard work, devotion and time these local [business] owners put into their stores,” said Julie Hildenbrand, a public relations junior. “I hope the initiative can better these businesses and show residents how important they are to the community. By making residents more aware that their support does matter, the initiative has great potential to change the spending habits of Ritchie County residents in the long run.” Excited to share these stories with both local residents and an audience beyond Ritchie County, the students blogged about their experiences, uploaded videos and photos, and wrote regular posts. In addition, they also learned that public relations is about doing good and making an impact in a community. “Because of this class, I learned that money is not the bottom line of PR, nor is it just providing a service. It’s showing that we care about our clients and the people that we come into contact with,” Lathrop said. “[My final trip to Ritchie County] was the moment when I actually felt like a publicist. I felt that my trip was the bookend of this project. I came to Ritchie County to make a difference – not just for a grade in my PR class. I realized that I completed my goal. I made a difference in Ritchie County, and no one will ever be able to take that away from me.” Arrows line the wall of Dodd’s Sporting Goods, a highly specialized firearms store in Ellenboro, W.Va. Public relations students Samantha Esposito, Jacqueline Manley and Lauren Sandberg talk with Ronnie Dodd Sr. to learn more about his store, Dodd’s Sporting Goods. Handmade marble from Davis Marbles in Pennsboro, W.Va. Even with customers from around the world, the family craftsmanship is part of a prominent West Virginia landmark – two marbles serve as the eagle’s eyes atop the Capitol dome in Charleston, W.Va. Scan the QR code to visit the Buy Local blog http://buylocalinitiative.blogs.wvu.edu/ Tin toys and bulk candy are just some of the treasures to be found at Berdine’s Five & Dime, the oldest store of its kind in America at more than 100 years in operation in Harrisville, W.Va. 5 Integrated marketing communications on wheels BY CHRISTA VINCENT W When Daniel Gutzmore (BSJ, 2002) and Juan Perez (BSJ, 2001) were sitting in their advertising classes in Martin Hall they had a vision – to be entrepreneurs. Now their ingenuity is on display for a quarter-ofa-million commuters in New York City other like-minded young Highbrid Media entrepreneurs in the School o f Jo u r n a l i s m . S o o n , Highbrid Entertainment, a promotional company for musical artists, was born. “Looking back on it now, I can say that experiences like putting on shows at 123 Pleasant each week. SOJ alumni Daniel Gutzmore (left) and Juan Perez (right) began their own Street [a Morgantown, commuter-van marketing agency, Highbrid Media, converting private mass Nearly seven years ago, the duo created W. Va . , mu s i c ve nu e ] , transportation into rolling advertisements. Highbrid Outdoor – now called Highbrid Media – p re p a re d u s fo r wh at a premiere commuter-van marketing agency. The we are doing now with company has exclusive contracts to convert private Highbrid Media.” mass transportation into rolling advertisements. They also strive to take on clients that serve After graduating and moving to New York Gutzmore and Perez, both Brooklyn natives, City, Gutzmore and Perez tried to keep Highbrid their communities in some way. Clients like didn’t have the idea for their venture until after Entertainment alive. However, trying to support New York State’s Child Health Plus Program, they graduated from the School of Journalism. themselves while making it in the competitive which helps to educate New Yorkers about However, they say their time at the School helped music industry proved to be too much. reliable healthcare at little or no cost to anyone them lay the foundation for their future. During a brainstor ming session one under the age of 19, benefit from the company’s “As soon as we got involved in the creation afternoon, they conceived a way to branch out. services. Gutzmore and Perez believe their strong of Highbrid Media, I snapped back to what I Mutual friends in the printing industry approached commitment to building community has helped learned sitting in the classroom at the J-School,” them about installing vinyl advertising on vehicles them grow as respected business leaders. said Perez. “At the time it really didn’t connect for independent record labels, but Gutzmore and “Daniel and I are always striving for greatness,” with me because we weren’t said Perez. “Sometimes being in the trenches, it on Madison Avenue. We “As soon as we got involved in the creation becomes hard to see how far you’ve come because were just learning theory always looking forward, but I can remember a of Highbrid Media, I snapped back to what you’re in a classroom, but it really time when we only had one client. Now, looking into became apparent that we I learned sitting in the classroom at the the evolution of Highbrid Media, it’s interesting to were trained well.” look back and realize we’ve worked with Fortune 500 J-School.” – Juan Perez It wasn’t only the companies like McDonald’s and Western Union.” advertising curriculum that prepared Gutzmore Perez took the idea even further. Although Gutzmore and Perez have a lot and Perez to launch Highbrid Media – experiences “It was kind of like this lightbulb moment,” to look forward to – expanding their business to in and out of the classroom also offered life lessons. said Gutzmore. “We knew we had this mass North Jersey, Philadelphia, Connecticut and South Both entered WVU with different aspirations. transportation system in New York City, and there Florida this year – they never forget where it all Gutzmore started as a marketing major, and Perez were these blank surfaces rolling all throughout the started for them. Both men are still involved in the was going in a completely different direction with City – all throughout the neighborhoods – where WVU Alumni Association and the WVU Alumni his education. Business Council. billboards aren’t prevalent.” “I was actually looking to become a “Whatever we can do for the school,” said Gutzmore, the president of the company, and biomedical engineer, but after a year-and-a-half of Perez, the CEO, refer to Highbrid Media as the Gutzmore. “My four-and-a-half years [at WVU] struggling through calculus and physics, I needed a “Moving Marketing Experience.” In addition to really shaped me into the man that I am today.” change of pace,” said Perez. “I took an advertising outdoor mobile marketing, their services include “We love this school,” said Perez. “And that’s course and really found it to be something I was digital signage in the vans’ interior, traditional not just a sales pitch.” passionate about. After taking the class for one billboard campaigns, print advertising campaigns, day, I changed my major.” direct marketing, SMS marketing and customized Once the two young men were introduced, retail marketing. The messages they create for their it didn’t take long for them to join forces with clients are highly targeted and hyperlocal. 6 Student project honors 29 lost miners BY ANGELA LINDLEY O On April 5, 2011, a small community in the actual service tuned in to Katie Griffith southern West Virginia gathered to remember 29 watch it live. “Though there will coal miners who lost their lives a year earlier in one of the worst mine disasters in state history. And, e ve n t u a l l y b e a p hy s i c a l thanks to the School of Journalism, their gathering memorial, this website is a place where anyone can go,” Lavender was accessible to a national audience. The “Faces of the Mine” website was said. “They don’t have to be in developed from an assignment for the West West Virginia to visit the site.” “In creating a site where Virginia Uncovered project by SOJ seniors Paige Lavender and Evan Moore, as well as the public could gather online AmeriCorps VISTA member Katie Griffith. and contribute the majority of Officially launched on April 5, the site allows the content, students have been the public to post their memories of miners who able to see first-hand the power perished in the explosion at the Upper Big Branch of the media to give people Mine, the largest mining disaster in West Virginia a voice,” said West Virginia Uncovered project coordinator since 1970. “Faces of the Mine” is an interactive site, and SOJ lecturer Mary Kay Twenty-nine pieces of coal, each painted with the name of a miner killed in the disaster, sit under a cross at a temporary memorial in Whitesville, W.Va. created for the Whitesville, W.Va., community, McFarland. Though students built the where people can post stories, photographs and videos and share the impact of the mining site and publicized it with an aggressive social deal of work to gain the trust and commitment disaster on their lives. It includes photos and media campaign utilizing Facebook and Twitter, of those involved. biographies for each miner, links to media the site was always intended to be handed “Reaction has been quite positive in the off to community community,” Gwinn said. “The site has taken c ove r a g e o f t h e m e m b e r s f o r on a life of its own. It’s expanded beyond its disaster, a blog with “It’s the social aspect of ‘Faces of them to manage. original scope, and that’s because of the flexibility information about Long before the and willingness of its creators. The quality of the community and the Mine’ that makes it more than just a tribute page.” – Mike Gwinn site went live, the the website itself is a reflection of those who progress updates We s t V i r g i n i a created it.” on the permanent Uncovered team met with the Upper Big Branch memorial being built near the mine. Katie Griffith Mining Memorial Group, Inc., to discuss what Built using free applications and software, the site also featured live-streaming video the community needed and how the site could coverage of the one-year memorial service. be sustained after it was built. On April 5 – the one-year anniversary of Hundreds of people who couldn’t attend the mine disaster – the website was officially Katie Griffith handed over to the communities of Whitesville and Montcoal, W.Va., where many of the miners’ families live. The site will be managed by the Upper Big Branch Mining Memorial Group. Mike Gwinn, a member of the Memorial Group and the site’s community moderator, said Journalism senior Paige Lavender checks her camera settings while filming the “Remember the Miners” tribute this is a unique way to memorialize the miners. concert in Morgantown, W.Va., in November 2010. “The interactive nature of the site makes it different from other memorials,” Gwinn said. “It’s the social aspect of ‘Faces of the Mine’ that Scan the QR code to visit makes it more than just a tribute page.” the project website Gwinn said he wasn’t initially sure how A miner’s helmet, flowers and a flag sit in the UBB http://facesofthemine.com/ the website would be perceived by the miners’ Miners Memorial gazebo, a temporary memorial in Whitesville, W.Va. families but that the SOJ students did a great 7 Mobile app signals change, opportunity for rural area West Virginia Uncovered project extends beyond newspaper support CONTRIBUTORS: DAN SHRENSKY, CHRISTA VINCENT AND KIMBERLY WALKER “They’re doing the hard work to bring mobile resources into their own community rather than have national brands bringing those resources to them.”– Dana Coester George Cicci, a May 2011 graduate of the School’s Integrated Marketing Communications master’s degree program, designed the app as part of his research and graduate work. T Tucked away in the mountains of West Virginia’s Potomac Highlands, Tucker County, may seem an unlikely place for digital and journalistic innovation. But School of Journalism faculty and students have been working with The Parsons Advocate to produce a new mobile application that represents much more than a technological advance or a chance to boost advertising sales. In this first iteration of the mobile initiative, the School is piloting the app with the Advocate, a weekly newspaper that serves the area. The project is aimed at creating economic opportunity for an entire community that may also serve as a model to help bolster the flagging newspaper industry. The new technology comes to the Advocate courtesy of Assistant Professor Dana Coester, who is using a $200,000 grant from the Ford Foundation to lead an experiment in rural mobile media. The 8 Ford grant will enable Coester and the School of Journalism to deploy the mobile app and research its impact on several rural communities throughout West Virginia. The experiment is an extension of the West Virginia Uncovered multimedia training project. The project, which began in 2008, is designed to help rural newspapers in West Virginia transition to the digital age. The project began with students and faculty training newspaper staff to produce multimedia and interactive content for their websites. Coester’s mobile app project in Tucker County is focused on building a mobile community by showcasing the county’s natural attractions, such as Canaan Valley Resort State Park, Blackwater Falls State Park and Dolly Sods Wilderness to boost tourism dollars. The app enables community members to promote their businesses and the area in general. Christa Vincent Coester describes the initiative as a “leapfrog event,” meaning participants have been asked to work with the latest technology without first learning and mastering more basic processes. “We have business owners participating in the app who don’t even have a smartphone,” Coester said, “so they can’t even look at the app and see how it works. But if I waited for all of the technology to be in place, they would miss an opportunity to enter something early, be players and take advantage of what these tools and resources can do to make their community more competitive. “They’re doing the hard work to bring mobile resources into their own community rather than have national brands bringing those resources to them.” Another goal is to strengthen legacy media by providing new sources of revenue through the mobile app that can supplement traditional advertising. Former Advocate editor Kelly Stadelman said the timing is right for the partnership. “I think the people of this community are ready for it,” she said. “You walk into the high school, and it’s amazing how many kids have smart phones. All the tourists who come here have smart phones. The community has to be ready. If not, technology’s going to pass us by.” Coester is eager to track the results of the app. She says it can be adopted by other rural communities and, depending on its degree of success, perhaps be used to infuse much-needed capital into newspapers worldwide. “The big disruption in the journalism industry is the lack of an economic model: how does news get paid for?” Coester said. “A lot of people are racing to deliver this kind of solution. We think rural communities have just as much innovation to bring to this challenge as urban centers.” This fall, Coester and her students will launch the second iteration of the project, “Mobile Mainstreet,” which proposes strategic “community branding” as a viable economic model for local media working in partnership with community members. “Envisioning the community as a curated mobile brand sponsored by local media puts a new twist on traditional audience-building efforts,” said Coester. She and her interactive marketing students will partner with multimedia reporting students to develop content for the Parson’s app, as well as deploy the app in at least two other communities. West Virginia Uncovered by the numbers 17Including: How many papers are involved with the project? The Parsons Advocate Hampshire Review Charleston Daily Mail The Pocahontas Times The Journal Glenville Democrat and Pathfinder The Register-Herald Two-Lane Livin’ The Inter-Mountain The Times Record Moorefield Examiner Coal Valley News The Observer Clay County Free Press The Nicholas Chronicle Spirit of Jefferson 55 The Shepherdstown Chronicle How many students have taken the class? since fall 2008 Total amount of funding the project has received to date: $575,000 Ford Foundation: $300,000 Benedum Foundation: Scan the QR code to download the app http://bit.ly/parsonsadvocate $190,000 McCormick Foundation: $85,000 9 Three soldiers decorated with the French Croix de Guerre for bravery under fire near LeMans, Sarthe, France. Left to right: 1st. Lt. William J. Warfield, Sgt. Lester Fossie and Pvt. Alonzo Walton. 2nd A.C. Photo by Pvt. William B. Gunshor, U.S. Army Signal Corps, January 1, 1919. Students serve as content curators Interactive exhibit honors African American veterans W Photo courtesy of National Archives BY CHRISTA VINCENT What started as a class project at the School of Journalism has evolved into an interactive exhibit, a website and an online store, and more importantly, the opportunity for one rural West Virginia community to examine its cultural heritage and share with the world lessons from the past. who migrated to McDowell County from the The small town of Kimball in McDowell with the McDowell County memorial and its A guest at the exhibit opening on Veteran’s Day 2010 views one the photo essay walls of images from the National Archives. County, W.Va., is home to the Kimball World board members in 2004 while working on his Coalfields” opened to the public in November War I Memorial, one of the nation’s only documentary, “Fighting on Two Fronts: The 2011. Housed in the Kimball Memorial Building, memorials honoring WWI black veterans. Joel Beeson rural South in the early 1900s to work in the coal mines and who served in WWI. “The miners bonded together under dangerous conditions – their jobs often trumped skin color,” said Beeson. “One of the quotes often heard from school children was ‘when our fathers came out of the mine, they were all black.’” Beeson, the director of the West Virginia Veterans History Project, became acquainted Untold Stories of African American WWII the display contains two full wall exhibits of In 2009, SOJ Associate Professor Joel Beeson Veterans.” After talking with community photographs from the World War I time period, shared the idea of creating a photo exhibit for the leaders in Kimball and receiving a WVU as well as a recording room for veterans to share memorial with students in his visual storytelling Grant for Public Service, Beeson and his their stories with future generations. Assistant class. He wanted to use photographs, multimedia students were able to make his vision of an Professor Dana Coester served as faculty interviews, timelines and war memorabilia to interactive exhibit and website a reality. art director, advising students and providing narrate the unique story of African Americans 10 2 “Forgotten Legacy: Soldiers of the oversight of the exhibit installation. Joel Beeson A.J. Lawson Photo courtesy of National Archives Visual journalism senior, Evan Moore (center) applies acid-free adhesive to the bottom of a print at the Kimball Memorial Building in November 2010. Visual journalism senior, Andrew Lawson (right), documents the progress, while anthropology student, Maisie Fraley (left), lends a hand. SOJ graduate student and Kimball Project AmeriCorps VISTA coordinator Brianna Swisher (below left) aligns a sequence of prints with Assistant Professor Dana Coester prior to the exhibit opening. Brianna Swisher, a 2010 SOJ graduate and store is hosted through Café Press, an online revenue and tourist opportunities for the AmeriCorps VISTA coordinator, helped lead retailer of stock and user-customized, on- memorial and the community. Board member the project from its inception. In addition demand products, including exhibit-related E. Ray Williams said he has high hopes for the to using her skills in a real-world setting, posters, t-shirts, notebooks and postcards. project’s impact on the community. Swisher understands the impact this project will have for years to come. W h i l e i n K i m b a l l fo r t h e l a u n ch , “The Kimball World War memorial students from Beeson’s multimedia reporting project brings to light a tremendous amount “This wasn’t an assignment we turned in for class gathered oral histories, conducted of history, important to healing cultural a grade. We had people excited and counting on interviews and worked to recruit area youth wounds caused by deeply entrenched racism,” us to follow through with our plans,” said Swisher. in McDowell County to participate in a said Williams. “Creating a larger market “As a West Virginia native, I am honored to be multimedia workshop to be held this summer. for products will provide drastically needed part of a project that brings to life forgotten legacies in the hopes that these oral histories won’t disappear as generations pass. The history of these veterans is an important part of the history of our state and our country.” In November, Beeson and his students launched the website, www.forgottonlegacywwi.org, with infor mation about the “The miners bonded together under dangerous conditions – their jobs often trumped skin color. One of the quotes often heard from school children was ‘when our fathers came out of the mine, they were all black.’” – Joel Beeson financial support to tell the story of these soldiers and this community to the world.” In addition to the impact on the McDowell County community, Beeson’s students are gaining intensive real-world ex p e r i e n c e, re p o r t i n g a n d gathering content for interactive jour nalism across multiple platforms. project, the Kimball Memorial and a virtual The workshop, funded by a Major Grant “This is the future – journalists as ‘curators tour of the exhibit including historical World from the West Virginia Humanities Council, of content’ working with computer scientists, War I images and a photographic social survey will teach participants how to collect and who code and construct the interface based of McDowell County coal miners by the famous record digital oral histories and personal on in-depth reporting,” said Beeson. “We are Farm Security Administration photographer artifacts to produce additional content for very excited about the School of Journalism Russell Lee. the project. taking a leadership role in defining new media In October, Beeson also received a Campus- The innovative project will continue Community LINK grant through the West into the fall 2011 semester, when Beeson’s Virginia Campus Compact and WVU’s Center multimedia storytelling class will join a team for Civic Engagement to help support continuing of computer science students to create rich efforts during the spring 2011 semester. multimedia content for an interactive touch Scan the QR code to visit the project website Beeson and his students then added table, as well as mobile and iPad applications. www.forgottonlegacywwi.org an online store to the website. The virtual Such applications will provide further reporting, as well as making an impact on rural communities throughout the state.” 11 Digital media experience helps young journalist land editor position BY ANGELA LINDLEY Chris Jackson T Tricia Fulks always wanted a career in journalism. Even before graduating from the School of Journalism with her newseditorial degree, the Clarksburg, W.Va., native had experience writing for the Charleston (W.Va.) Daily Mail, the State Journal and the Daily Athenaeum. But with the trend toward media convergence, Fulks knew that she had to expand her skill set beyond print journalism. Her experience as one of the founding students of the “West Virginia Uncovered” project did just that and ultimately led the 24-year-old to her current position as editor of The Shepherdstown (W.Va.) Chronicle. Fulks credits her exposure to multimedia production through the project as one of the major impacts on her career path. In 2008, Fulks and another student collaborated with SOJ Associate Dean John Temple to create a multimedia project that would give students essential experience with digital storytelling. Their initial idea developed into the project, “West Virginia Uncovered: Digital Journalism in the Mountain State,” through which students and faculty partner with rural newspapers to help bring them into the digital age. During the project, Fulks worked with several West Virginia newspapers, including The Parsons Advocate, a weekly paper in Tucker County. “West Virginia Uncovered” has since 12 22 flourished, benefitting both SOJ students and small newspapers around the state each year. “Starting out, I had no idea ‘West Virginia Uncovered’ would grow so big,” Fulks said. “I just knew I needed multimedia experience to have a successful career.” After graduating in 2009 – during what she calls “the worst possible time for a journalist” – Fulks found herself in a world where the economy was suffering and jobs were scarce. She took an internship in Florida but ultimately returned to West Virginia to serve as an AmeriCorps VISTA coordinator for the project she helped initiate. She spent a year working with high school and middle school students in Tucker County, training them in citizen journalism. “This project came about because we had worked with the owners of The Parsons Advocate for ‘West Virginia Uncovered,’” Fulks said. “We branched off to work with children in the county schools. The paper thought it would be a natural fit to work with the schools and teach students to be citizen journalists.” After completing a year as a VISTA, Fulks applied for a copy editor position at a newspaper in Martinsburg, W.Va. The editors were impressed by her extensive knowledge of digital media and experience with small weekly newspapers. “That kind of experience is rare among graduating students today,” Fulks said. A week after her interview, she had an even better position: the editor of their sister paper, The Shepherdstown Chronicle. Almost a year into her new job, Fulks has already produced multimedia pieces for the paper’s website. “This is a college town,” she said, “so I know some readers will be interested in an online version of the paper. My goal is to focus on increasing online readership while maintaining the integrity of the print paper.” Shepherdstown’s proximity to Washington, D.C., has allowed Fulks to continue her education at American University. She is currently pursuing her master’s degree in interactive journalism in a weekend program designed for working professionals. The “West Virginia Uncovered” project not only shaped Fulks’ education but will continue to play a part in her career for years to come. “The idea to go to graduate school in interactive journalism came from loving my experience with ‘West Virginia Uncovered,’” Fulks said. “I really enjoy digital media. Down the road, as long as I’m doing multimedia projects, I’ll be happy.” W Career journalist exports TV talents Hunsicker joins Peace Corps at age 47 BY ANGELA LINDLEY W Steve Hunsicker When was a student at WVU, he had no idea how far his training in broadcast news would take him. As it turns out, he’s been around the world and back again. After graduating in 1983, his first stop was WAJR radio in Morgantown, W.Va., where he was a news reporter. A year later, he moved to a television station in Tallahassee, Fla., where he became acting news director just five months after his arrival. “It was a trial by fire,” Hunsicker said, “but that experience is what got me interested in management.” Shawn Quast His career as a broadcaster and news director took him to television stations in Gainesville, Fla.; Harrisburg, Pa.; Honolulu, Hi.; and Chattanooga, Tenn., before he became Executive News Director at a station in West Palm Beach, Fla., in 2003. Although he was responsible for eight hours of local news programming on two TV stations and managed more than 70 people, Hunsicker felt distanced from the news and from what initially attracted him to the profession – public service. “The best times of my news career were when I was helping viewers solve problems,” he said. After a 23-year broadcasting career, Hunsicker took a dramatic change in course, but it certainly wasn’t due to a shift in personal philosophy. At age 47 – nearly 20 years older than the typical participant – Hunsicker was accepted to serve in the Peace Corps and traveled to the Kingdom of Tonga, an island country in the South Pacific. It was the fulfillment of a dream he had held since college, when he had the opportunity to interview Lillian Carter, a noted Peace Corps volunteer and President Jimmy Carter’s mother. I n To n g a , H u n s i c k e r u t i l i z e d h i s background in management and worked as a small-business advisor. He also was able to transfer the skills he learned in his career to help Tongan-owned businesses, including building websites and creating videos. Hunsicker said one big challenge he faced was creating a business training video, which was produced in the Tongan language. In the video, he profiled successful Tongan business people. Shortly after he returned to the United States in December 2009, Hunsicker took a position as a Peace Corps recruiter in South Florida. He works from his home and spends a great deal of time on college campuses speaking with students. Hunsicker has written one book about his experiences in the Peace Corps and is coauthor of another. “Steve’s Adventures with the Peace Corps” is available in both printed and electronic versions on Amazon.com and by other booksellers. “Tonga” is a travel book published by Other Places Publishing. The co-authors of the travel book with whom Hunsicker collaborated are returned Peace Corps volunteers. Hunsicker credits his remarkable career to the groundwork laid by the School of Journalism and WVU. “WVU gave me a great foundation for a wonderful career,” he said. Inset: At age 47, Steve Hunsicker fulfilled a personal dream and joined the Peace Corps. He is pictured here in 2009 in the Tongan Rain Forest on the island of ‘Eua, the southernmost island in Tonga. Background: A Tongan man gives his horse a drink on the island of Nomuka in the Ha’apai island chain in Tonga. Hunsicker conducted a business workshop on the island in 2008. Steve Hunsicker 23 13 Students develop campaign for client in BY BAILEE MORRIS L “Life changing.” That’s how one public relations senior described her experience in Ireland as part of this spring’s Health Public Relations capstone course. SOJ adjunct instructor Chuck Harman and 13 students traveled to Dublin during spring break to meet with executives at Shine, Ireland’s leading mental health organization. But the overseas excursion was only one part of the journey throughout the 16-week course. Each semester, Harman leads an alternative public relations capstone course focused on developing a PR campaign for a real-world healthcare client. The class functions as an agency, giving the students a hands-on approach to public relations – working as a team to meet tight deadlines, manage demanding clients and adhere to budgets. This spring, Harman introduced his students to Shine. Based in Dublin, Shine also operates Ireland’s national media monitoring program to promote responsible and accurate coverage of mental health issues. As director of external relations at the National Alliance on Mental Illness (NAMI) based in Arlington, Va., Harman has had several encounters with Shine’s national projects manager, Kahlil Thompson-Coyle. Harman knew Shine was a perfect match for his class. “I mentioned the idea to Kahlil nearly three years ago,” said Harman. “It took a lot of time to come to fruition, but it was worth the wait.” Coyle was just as enthusiastic, seeing the 14 inherent benefits of working with Patty Harman the college class. “We were excited about having the students get involved with our organization because it offered an opportunity for fresh eyes to consider what we are doing and how we might do things better,” Coyle said. The class also had the added bonus of working with SOJ alumnus and “agency mentor,” Mike Fulton (BSJ, 1979), executive vice president of GolinHarris, one of the world’s leading public relations and government affairs firms. Fulton offered the students real-world advice on working in teams toward a common goal – staying focused on the client’s goals as well as responding to and enhancing tactical elements. One of the class’ first challenges was to brand their agency. The group of soon-to-be college graduates aptly named their firm “Young and Able.” With the time difference and geographic distance to consider, the agency “met” with their client via Skype video conferencing and email to discuss Shine’s public relations problems and identify their long- and short-term goals. Most of the real work, however, was done outside of the classroom. “Outside of class is where all the brainstorming, team meetings, research and implementation took place. This was an experience From left to right: Chuck Harman, Kahlil ThompsonCoyle, Amanda Ciktor and Dan Frey visit Newgrange, an ancient temple located in Ireland’s Boyne Valley built more than 5,000 years ago. “They helped us to stand back and gain a different perspective, which has been a very valuable learning experience for us. They have also helped to ignite change within the organization in a positive way and helped us to focus in on some key developments that are very achievable for us to implement.” – Kahlil Thompson-Coyle in itself,” said Amanda Ciktor, public relations senior. “Having to come together as a group outside of class to create and implement an entire PR plan was definitely challenging.” The students assembled themselves into three teams to match the needs of the client: updating their helpline services, reorganizing their membership options and promoting their emerging art program. Charged with developing this three-part campaign, Young and Able set to work conducting research and developing tactics for a comprehensive plan. By March, the class was ready to present their plan to Shine’s senior management. The group traveled to Patty Harman Dublin for a seven-day trip. Each team presented their findings and pitched their campaign Young and Able group photo. Front row: Amanda Ciktor, ideas to the client. Prior to the trip, Shine explained Lindsay Kenders, Jordan Weisenborn, Missy Marlow that they did not have any funds for the agency’s and Kristina Snider. Second row: Adrienne Lundell, work and that any ideas generated by the students Dan Frey, Caitlin Melvin, Johnna Shumate and Lindsay needed to be implemented without costs. Bailey. Third row: Chuck Harman, Lauren Paslawsky, Marissa Leuzzi and Apollo Marple. After presenting their plan, Shine’s Director John Saunders was so impressed that he “hired” Young and Scan the QR code to watch a video Able to implement the about the project plan and provided a budget of 5,000 euro http://journalism.wvu.edu/projects/ireland_pr (approximately $7,200). While in Ireland, the group also heard lectures by Irish public relations professionals, and two of the students presented a lecture at Griffith College Dublin. They also traveled by train to Kilkenny to visit a regional Shine office and toured a famous archeological site built in 3300 BC. “They helped us to stand back and gain a different perspective, which has been a very valuable learning experience for us,” Coyle said. “They also helped to ignite change within the organization in a positive way and helped us to focus in on some key developments that are very achievable for us to implement.” By semester’s end, Young and Able revamped Shine’s website; implemented a new blog and Facebook page for the Shine Arts program; created new membership levels; developed new promotional materials; and worked with SOJ advertising senior Armand Patella to build a smartphone app, saving the organization thousands of dollars in production costs. Ciktor said the experience gave her more than just a final grade on her transcript. “Working firsthand in healthcare PR has made me realize how important it is to fully support and believe in the cause you are representing,” Ciktor said. “A successful healthcare PR campaign doesn’t just satisfy the client, but it creates a positive impact on the wellness of individuals.” Harman felt the group went above and beyond what was expected of them as students. “The students were strategic, creative and extremely professional,” Harman said. “It is hard to determine whether this experience had a more profound effect on the students or Shine. Clearly, this was an experience that made a positive difference for a number of people.” 15 “Road Tour” BY BAILEE MORRIS D Project shares alumni success stories During the summer of 2010, fellow School traveling to videotape interviews with alumni of Journalism student Corey and I were sent on a in their home environments and work places. mission to gather stories of SOJ alumni. Quickly By the end of the summer, we had interviewed dubbed the “Alumni 20 graduates who Road Tour,” the effort Christa Vincent shared their success focused on collecting stories and ref lected the testimonials of SOJ on their time at WVU graduates living and and the School of working in West Virginia Journalism. and the mid-Atlantic While on the states. road, we also blogged Corey and I worked about our experiences as a cross-disciplinary a n d s h a re d s a m p l e s team, combining our of interviews. skills into a multimedia, We d i s c u s s e d t h e story-telling production ch a l l e n g e s we f a c e d ef fort. Corey was a SOJ broadcast graduate Corey Preece (left) and and the lessons learned broadcast news graduate PR senior Bailee Morris worked as a multimedia along the way – from to collect alumni video testimonials during a n d s t a r t i n g i n t h e team n av i g a t i n g T h e B i g the summer of 2010. j o u r n a l i s m m a s t e r ’s Apple to changing our program, and I was a public relations senior daily plans at a moment’s notice. with some of my own photography and video Though it was initially designed to be part experience. We were quick to step up to the of the School’s recruitment and marketing challenge. It seemed like a perfect fit. efforts, the project revealed many more We began our efforts in late May 2010, lessons and benefits than anticipated. researching, identifying and contacting While we learned to deal with alumni; scheduling meeting times; and t h e c h a l l e n g e s o f b e i n g o n - t h e - ro a d 16 correspondents, we were also inspired by SOJ graduates who use their degrees in both traditional and non-traditional professions. We met with bloggers, entrepreneurs, social media experts, radio personalities and more. “One of the great things about the project was learning about the different areas of modern journalism,” said Corey. “I graduated with a degree in broadcast, but I found myself dipping into the public relations when we had to communicate with alumni and post to our blog. I realized that I could use my broadcast skills and apply them into other elements of journalism.” Corey and I agree that while we were able to enhance our professional skills through this project, one of the biggest rewards was making connections with an extended SOJ “family” and ultimately feeling like we were part of a larger community. We’re happy to have had the chance t o m e e t t h e m , a n d m o re i m p o r t a n t l y, share their stories with past and future generations of SOJ students. Here are some of the people we met along the way. “It’s all about being able to tell a good story. That’s what I learned at WVU.” – Kellen Henry Bailee Morris Bailee Morris Bailee Morris Ranelle Sykes Kellen Henry Michael Pehanich As “DJ Rane” on WPGC 95.5 in Washington, D.C., Ranelle Sykes (BSJ, 2000) has had the opportunity to meet big names in the hip-hop music industry but said it’s the everyday people that “rock” her world. Sykes started out at the School of Journalism with an open mind and a strong storytelling desire. In addition to her classwork, she put her skills to work at the college radio station, U92 FM, and at various internships in the Pittsburgh, Pa., area. Sykes loved being in the studio and knew that it was the right direction for her career. Her love for telling the stories of the people, she said, “was born at the School of Journalism.” Shortly after graduating with her journalism degree in broadcast news, Sykes landed a job at WAMO 106.7 in Pittsburgh, Pa., where she reconnected with a former coworker from an earlier internship at Black Entertainment Television. He encouraged Sykes to return to the D.C. area – “to come home” – and work at WPGC. Now, Sykes uses her radio power to rally the community for local efforts and initiatives and finds her inspiration in the people of the D.C. area. She said, “I remember the people more than I remember the celebrities.” n Kellen Henry (BSJ, 2008) knows the news. Whether covering a local concert for the WVU campus newspaper or writing for sites like Marketwatch.com or the PBS Newshour’s blog, “Run Down,” Henry has always been able to sniff out a story. While a news-editorial student at the School of Journalism, Henry covered stories for The Daily Athenaeum and organized events for WVU’s chapter of the Society of Professional Journalists. Henry said her education allowed her to “hit the ground running” when she graduated. “I remember Professor Bonnie Stewart telling me in reporting classes, ‘Think about who are the players, what is the game and what is at stake.’ That’s what it all comes down to . . . it’s all about being able to tell a good story. That’s what I learned at WVU,” said Henry. Now, just a few hours away from Martin Hall, Henry is able to apply those lessons to her career. As a web producer for Bloomberg Gover nment in Washington, D.C., she facilitates daily publishing on the BGOV.com website and helps to build brand recognition on social media channels. n Michael Pehanich (BSJ, 2001) never imagined that someday he would be working for the NFL. As the Director of Communications for the Washington Redskins, he credits his career as an “NFL PR Guy” to the strong writing skills he learned at the School of Journalism. H av i n g g rad u ated f ro m th e n ew s editorial program, Pehanich gained the confidence he needed to translate those skills across communication platforms. “I’m in the PR field now, but I never would have gotten into this without the writing background that I have, which I got at the P.I. Reed School of Journalism.” After graduation, Pehanich worked with the Miami Dolphins – first as an intern and then in a full-time position for five seasons. He eventually moved into his current position in Washington, D.C. “You change and you evolve in life, and you start to find your niche,” said Pehanich. Right now, his niche is with professional football. n 17 Scan the QR code to watch 2010 Alumni Road Tour Interviews the videos. http://journalism.wvu.edu/alumnistories West Virginia and Pennsylvania Linda Arnold (BSJ, 1976) – Chairman and CEO of The Arnold Agency – Charleston, W.Va. . Chip Fontanazza (BSJ, 2009) – MetroNews Interactive Reporter and Producer at West Virginia Radio Corporation – Morgantown, W.Va. David Lied (BSJ, 1976) – Vice President Consumer Promotional Services at Brunner, Inc. – Pittsburgh, Pa. Rose Lied (BSJ, 1976) – Vice President, Group Account Strategy Director at Brunner, Inc. – Pittsburgh, Pa. Anne Linaberger (MS-IMC, 2009) – News Director at KDKA – Pittsburgh, Pa. Lauren O’Connor (BSJ, 2008) – Founder of nonprofit organization, “Driving for Danes” Washington, D.C. Metro Area Bailee Morris Andrew Worob Andrew Worob (BSJ, 2005) wanted to be a sports journalist when he graduated from the School of Journalism but discovered a different passion along the way. Always a proponent of adopting new skills, his penchant for media technology has paid off. While a news-editorial student at WVU, Worob wrote for The Dominion Post in Morgantown, W.Va. Though trained as a print journalist, he didn’t limit himself to a single medium. Worob also spent time in the U92 FM campus radio station and worked WDTV television station in Bridgeport, W.Va. After graduation, Worob wrote for web-based publications, including MLB.com and Rivals.com. In 2006, he transitioned his media experience into the public relations industry, managing media relations and national media placements for such companies as G.S Schwartz and Linden Alschuler & Kaplan. In 2008, he moved to an account supervisor position at Ruder Finn in New York. Since starting his own personal PR blog, “PR at Sunrise,” and gaining national attention for his work, Worob has carved his own niche within Ruder Finn. Currently serving as manager of digital communications, Worob helps clients enhance their online presence and educates Ruder Finn staff on the changing PR landscape in the digital realm. n 18 Michael Fulton (BSJ, 1979) – Executive Vice President at GolinHarris – Washington, D.C. Karina Gomes (MSJ, 2004; BSJ, 2001) – Producer at Al Jazeera news network – Washington, D.C. Kellen Henry (BSJ, 2008) – Web Producer for Bloomberg Government – Washington, D.C. Sarah McLean (BSJ, 2008) – Account Coordinator at Concepts Inc. – Bethesda, Md. Jason Neal (BSJ, 1999) – Engineering Services at NBC – Washington, D.C. Michael Pehanich (BSJ, 2000) – Communications Director for the Washington Redskins – Washington, D.C. Ranelle Sykes (BSJ, 2000) – Radio DJ at 95.5 WPGC – Lanham, Md. Kristen Thomaselli (BSJ, 2009) – Staff Assistant to Senator Jay Rockefeller – Washington, D.C. New York, N.Y. Courtney Balestier (BSJ, 2005) – Senior Associate Editor at “Every Day with Rachael Ray” magazine – New York, N.Y. Megan Bowers (BSJ, 2009) – Associate Content Producer at Shatterbox.com – New York, N.Y. Jennifer Manton (BSJ, 1991) – Chief Marketing Officer at Loeb & Loeb Law Office – New York, N.Y. Kaila J. Raines (BSJ, 2008) – Sales and Events Manager for Restaurant Associate – New York, N.Y. Scott Widmeyer (BSJ, 1975) – Chairman and CEO of Widmeyer Communications – New York, N.Y. Andrew Worob (BSJ, 2005) – Independent blogger and Manager of Digital Communications at Ruder Finn – New York, N.Y. W Student organization makes West Virginia history SOJ home to first state chapter of National Association of Black Journalists BY CHRISTA VINCENT W When the students and faculty who founded the West Virginia University Association of Black Journalists (WVUABJ) set out to start the group, they didn’t want to create just another student organization. They wanted to build a community. “It was really important for students of color to feel like they have some type of organization, or some kind of community, that was a support system for them,” said Chelsea Fuller, newseditorial senior and WVUABJ President. “We have SPJ and PRSSA, but there wasn’t anything that actually dealt with issues regarding journalists of color.” Fuller, along with broadcast news senior Ashton Pellom, journalism senior Morgan Young and the club’s faculty advisor, Visiting Assistant Professor Tori Arthur, started laying the groundwork for WVUABJ in fall 2009. By fall 2010, the National Association of Black Journalists officially accepted the group as a charter member. They would become the first chapter of the National Association of Black Journalists (NABJ) in West Virginia. “I think this says ‘yes, we are committed to diversity,’” said Arthur. “These types of organizations can contribute so much to our School and our greater community by introducing people to a host of issues – maybe even people – they were never aware of before.” Dean Maryanne Reed encouraged Arthur to start the student organization as part of a longterm strategy to attract and retain students and faculty from diverse backgrounds. “As a School of Journalism, we need to ensure that our population reflects the diversity of the greater society,” said Reed. “Student organizations like WVUABJ expose our students to a wider range of ideas, experiences and perspectives, which will help them succeed in an increasingly multicultural, global community.” One of the goals WVUABJ undertook was to raise awareness of diversity in the media. During the spring 2011 semester, the organization sponsored and co-sponsored, several events, including a panel discussion on the racial climate at WVU; a screening of the movie “American History X” in the Mountainlair; a reception to commemorate the historic “Bloody Sunday” march in Alabama; and a presentation by CNN’s Roland Martin. In April, WVU took notice of the group’s hard work. At the University’s first NAACP Image Awards, coordinated by the Center for Black Culture and Research and the WVU student chapter of the NAACP, WVUABJ won Student Organization of the Year for their efforts in promoting social justice on campus. Pellom, who served as Vice President of the student organization during the 20102011 academic year, was recognized with the Outstanding Achievement Award at the same event. He said being a part of the WVUABJ enriched his life both personally and professionally. “I used to spend all of my time in class, at work or at home,” said Pellom. “I’ve done more things in the community and met more people this year alone than I have my first three years here – all because of WVUABJ.” Although Fuller and Pellom stepped down from their executive positions after May graduation, both of them plan to attend the NABJ convention in Philadelphia, Pa., this August. This The 2010-2011 WVUABJ executive board and members pose with CNN’s Roland Martin after his presentation in the Mountainlair Ballroom in February 2011. Pictured from left are Diane Jenty, Melanie Perry, Selarra Armstrong, Ashton Pellom, CNN’s Roland Martin, Tori Arthur, Tierra Thomas, Chelsea Fuller and Jocelyn Ellis. Not pictured are Kyle Hayes and Brandon Radcliffe. will be Fuller’s second year as a participant in the NABJ Student Multimedia Project, a studentrun newsroom where participants report on the convention. As for the future of WVUABJ, the board will vote on new student officers in September. Both Fuller and Pellom said they look forward to seeing the group thrive in coming years. “It’s kind of our child, you know? You want your child to grow up and be successful,” said Pellom. “We laid the foundation. Now we just want to see it grow.” 2010-2011 WVUABJ OFFICERS Chelsea Fuller President Ashton Pellom Vice President Tiara Thomas Secretary Jocelyn Ellis Treasurer Melanie Perry Social Media Chair Kyle Hayes Community Service Chair Visiting Assistant Professor Tori Arthur Faculty Advisor 19 Game Changers Under 40 JOURNALISM WEEK 2011 BY CHRISTA VINCENT thebobthe Notice how many of Dave’s ideas were realized via free tools (e.g., wikis) - you don’t need to be technical to innovate. #jweek 04/05/2011 3 RETWEET cornerstone of any strong campaign. “It’s not just about messaging your audience,” she said. “It’s about how well you can make adjustments based on incoming information from the public. I think that we’ve seen a lot of success because we’ve been willing to listen, change and adapt to what the public wants.” In fact, Harman said it was the general public that decided the Red Cross would create another texting campaign to help the victims of Japan’s earthquake and tsunami in March 2011. She WVU Photo Services Journalism Week speaker and SOJ alumnus Andrew Scritchfield works with SOJ students in a multimedia editing suite following his class presentation and small-group workshop. W When students at the School of Journalism first learned that a Pulitzer Prize winner was coming to Martin Hall for Journalism Week 2011, they might have expected to see someone twice their age. Instead, they met 28-yearold newspaper reporter, Daniel Gilbert. Gilbert, like the School’s four other featured speakers, is changing the face of journalism and creating his own opportunities. This year’s Journalism Week speakers are bringing a young, tech-savvy approach to an already transformed media landscape. Rather than having to adapt to the times, they are leading the way, redefining journalism and strategic communications in the digital age. Wendy Harman, director of social media for the American Red Cross, kicked-off the series of events in April with her presentation, “Mobilizing Your Audience Through Social Media.” “I have the best job in the universe because I play on Facebook for a living,” Harman said. “Hopefully, I’m doing that for a good reason.” 20 When a devastating earthquake hit Haiti in January 2010, Harman utilized social media to raise money for relief efforts. She and her team established a texting campaign, and in just 72 hours, the Red Cross raised $3 million – $10 at a time. “There were no other PR or marketing efforts behind it other than WVU Photo Services David “DigiDave” Cohn talks one-on-one with SOJ students after his presentation about communityfunded journalism during Journalism Week 2011. said that users were so accustomed to “Text Haiti to 90999” that they began texting the number again – without any prompting from the Red Cross. wvuncovered “[Japan relief] trended on Catch @ascritch discussing how he Twitter a good eight hours before reinvented TV news at @WVUJournalism 1pm our senior leadership made any in Martin Hall for #jweek 04/07/2011 RETWEET decisions about fundraising,” said Harman. Audience participation is also at the core of David “DigiDave” the spread that people like you gave it on Cohn’s community-funded reporting project, Twitter and Facebook,” said Harman. “Clearly, Spot.Us. Cohn, a fellow at the Reynolds this was a whole new way of fundraising.” Harman told students that using social media for nonScan the QR code to watch profit is more than just sending videos of J-Week speakers tweets or posting on Facebook http://journalism.wvu.edu/jweek2011 and that listening remains the T “Mobilizing Your Audience Through Social Media” Wendy Harman WVU Photo Services Director of Social Media, American Red Cross Monday, April 4, 2011 Talia Mark shares her experience managing NASCAR’s diversity programs with advertising students during her Journalism Week presentation. Journalism Institute at the University of Missouri, launched the web-based project in November 2008 after his idea won the 2008 KnightNews Challenge. The “experiment” allows people to pledge money to the stories they want to see produced. “I didn’t invent donating to journalism. People do that all the time,” Cohn said, citing National Public Radio as an example. “The difference is . . . covering your eyes, throwing money over a fence and hoping it lands on something you believe in versus a sense of transparency and control over where the money goes.” The open source project is helping to pioneer what Cohn refers to as “community-powered reporting.” Through the Spot.Us website, the public can make tax-deductible contributions to stories that interest them. Once a project is fully funded and produced, Spot.Us partners with news organizations to distribute the story. During his Journalism Week presentation, “Promoting Diversity: Changing the Face of NASCAR” Talia Mark Manager of Diversity Affairs, NASCAR Tuesday, April 5, 2011 “Spot.Us: An Experiment in CitizenFunded Journalism” David “DigiDave” Cohn Online journalist and innovator Tuesday, April 5, 2011 hollykhildreth #jweek ‘As a journalist, when I can, I like to not just raise questions but answer them.’ 04/06/2011 RETWEET “Spot.Us: An Experiment in Citizen-Funded Journalism,” Cohn told students that the end goal was not necessarily to be a huge success but to experiment and to learn something along the way. “Journalism is a process, not a product,” said Cohn. “I believe journalism will only succeed on the shoulders of its failures.” Cohn also said that he believes journalism schools and their students have a new obligation – not just to learn but also to push the industry forward. He also encouraged students to “steal” his idea and create their own models. “I wasn’t much older than some of you when I purchased my first URL for $10 and started raising money for stories,” said Cohn. “Right now, you have a distinct advantage – youth and a lot of leeway.” While Cohn may be taking a progressive “Small Papers. Big Stories: Investigative Reporting in Rural Areas” Daniel Gilbert Pulitzer Prize for Public Service 2010 Wednesday, April 6, 2011 Sponsored by the Ogden Newspapers Seminar Series “Reinventing TV News: Multimedia Journalist Covers the World” Andrew Scritchfield Cameraman, NBC News Thursday, April 7, 2011 21 wvusojshannon Journalism will only succeed on the shoulders of its failures #jweek 04/05/2011 RETWEET WVU Photo Services Andrew Scritchfield meets with television journalism students during Journalism Week 2011 to offer career advice to the upcoming graduates. approach to his career, Pulitzer Prize-winning reporter Daniel Gilbert is proof that there are still opportunities to shine in legacy media. As a staff writer at the Bristol (Va.) Herald Courier, Gilbert wrote a series of articles exposing flaws in Virginia’s administration of natural gas royalties. In 2010, the series earned him the Pulitzer Prize for Public Service. “That’s the great opportunity that exists at that level,” said Gilbert of working at a smaller paper. “Sometimes papers and journalists at the micro-level will be the only ones to know that something is wrong before national journalists start digging.” During his presentation, “Small Papers. Big Stories: Investigative Reporting in Rural Areas,” sponsored by the Ogden Newspapers Seminar Series, Gilbert encouraged students to proactively tackle stories that may seem out of reach. “I learned that the best way to do investigative reporting is to do investigative reporting,” said Gilbert. “Send a signal to people in the community that if they want to get something out to call or email you.” Although he was working for a small-town camp” run by Investigative Reporters and Editors (IRE) at the University of Missouri, Gilbert was able to build a database to gather and analyze the data necessary to uncover the missing gasescrow payments. Gilbert has since made the jump to The Wall Street Journal, where he covers the energy industry. capnwinters RT @dougWalp: DigiDave’s ideas and concepts seem more impressive the more he explains them, I’m think I’m sold. #jweek 04/05/2011 RETWEET He admits that while he is not an expert on the subject, he strives to learn more every day so he can “cover his beat with authority.” Already a “go-to guy” at NBC News at Washington, D.C., SOJ alumnus Andrew Scritchfield (BSJ, 1998) is helping to enhance the skills of network journalists. Eager to tackle a project outside of the engineering department, Scritchfield offered to train NBC producers and correspondents how to use small video cameras and editing equipment to file their own stories. As “backpack journalism” is viewed as pajaroamore a cost-saving measure in newsrooms “fail early, fail often - try again” new life across the country, NBC executives motto? #jweek 04/05/2011 2 RETWEET took Scritchfield up on the offer. “Anyone entering the business now is expected to know how to use a newspaper, Gilbert said his resources weren’t camera, write and edit,” said Scritchfield. “It’s limited. After attending a six-day reporting “boot no longer a nice-to-have – it’s a must have to break 22 into any TV market right now.” Scritchfield’s initiative earned him additional opportunities. When planning a trip to Africa, one of the producers requested Scritchfield to be the cameraman on the assignment. When he returned, NBC offered Scritchfield a promotion, making him the youngest full-time cameraman at the network. Since then, the 34-year-old has had the opportunity to travel to Iraq, Afghanistan, Oman, United Arab Emirates and Haiti. Scritchfield shared his story to show SOJ students that, with the right skills and enough determination, they can achieve anything. “You’ve got to have that kind of drive. You’ve got to know what you want to do,” said Scritchfield. “It’s not going to be that glamorous at first, but nowadays you can shorten the curve from freshly out of school to where you want to be.” That same determination led Talia Mark to her position as the manager of diversity affairs for the National Association for Stock Car Auto Racing, Inc. (NASCAR). Challenged to “change the face” of NASCAR, Mark had a lot to learn about the historically white, male-dominated sport. “I didn’t know what NASCAR was,” said Mark. “I couldn’t tell you what it stood for or even name a driver.” But her open-mindedness and desire to learn propelled her into a rewarding career. Mark used her public relations and advertising education to grow NASCAR’s fan base while preserving its brand. She led community outreach programs like NASCAR Street Tour, an interactive mobile marketing initiative, to bring the sights and sounds of auto racing to a variety of audiences. She also founded the relationship between NASCAR and DUB Magazine and promoted NASCAR’s Diversity Internship to college students across the country. “The challenge of diversity in NASCAR is a generational challenge,” said Mark. “A lot of people thought, think and will continue to think that NASCAR is just for one type of person…but it’s really not.” W A scene from Lydia Sullivan’s “Snoburbia” in Montgomery County, Md., a wealthy Washington, D.C., suburb. Lydia Sullivan Alumna finds niche market in Snoburbia, U.S.A. BY MARYANNE REED W the ecosystem of Borneo or When Lydia Sullivan something.” (BSJ, 1984) drives her Sullivan credits her teenager to his soccer match, h u m bl e We s t Vi rg i n i a her dented 2003 Toyota upbringing for keeping her Sienna mini-van stands grounded, and she credits out among newer model her School of Journalism Volvos and Mercedes SUVs. professors – including Paul The car is emblematic of a Atkins, Pam Yagle, Charles woman who is both part of Cremer and Frank Kearns “snoburbia” and a clever – for teaching her how to critic of its pretentious ways. write and “get it right.” A Huntington, W.Va., She also learned about the native and broadcast news importance of internships, graduate, Sullivan now which helped her land a job lives in Kensington, Md., Margriet Oostveen, NRC Handelsbad after graduation as a media in Montgomery County, Sullivan stands in front of her “Snoburbia” spokesperson for Cedar Point a w e a l t h y s u b u r b o f home in Montgomery County, Md. amusement park in Sandusky, Washington, D.C. Two Snoburbia/Adrienne Price Ohio. years ago, she launched a The “I Got In” tee is one of Sullivan’s designs at After that job, Sullivan moved to Los “Snoburbia,” a t-shirt site and blog that celebrate blog and t-shirt business, called Snoburbia, to “skewer the rampant overachiever-ism” of Angeles, where she was a lobbyist for Gannett. and gently poke fun at the overachiever suburbs of Washington, D.C., and other big American cities. Then she moved to Washington, D.C., where her fellow suburbanites. “People here are on hyper-drive, and they she served as advertising director and then A recent comment questioning why a are super competitive,” Sullivan said. “I didn’t publisher of the small but respected D.C. grow up in that environment, and I find it funny magazine, Washington Monthly. In 1992, she “smart, well-educated” person like Sullivan isn’t – there are humorous elements to it. At our local left the full-time job market to be a stay-at- doing “more” with herself received this response: public school – a Newsweek Top 100 high school, home mom. Sullivan has four children, ages “Two words: Four. Children.” Sullivan isn’t quite sure where her of course – there was not one but two Intel 11, 15, 17 and 18. These days, in addition to freelance editing newfound celebrity will take her, but for now semifinalists this year. Seriously.” A proud WVU alumna, she points out work, Sullivan satisfies her creative drive through she’s enjoying the ride. “It’s a fun exercise for me. I don’t do it for the absurdity of pushing kids academically her blog, which is starting to gain a following. so they can get into the “best” schools. One Within three days of an article about her that the notoriety or the gain,” she said. Nor does she plan on leaving “snoburbia” of her t-shirts says, “My internship is more appeared in The Washington Post, her blog impressive.” Another depicts an ivy leaf, received 70,000 hits, and the number of her any time soon. In fact, Sullivan, a self-described Facebook fans rose from 98 to 332. She’s “political animal,” was recently elected to a seat emblazoned with the statement, “I got in.” Sullivan has many pet peeves about upper- received comments from all over the country and on the Kensington Town Council. “I live here, and I am part of it. At the middle class suburban life, including a particular world – mostly positive. Those critical of her same time, I’m making fun of it.” commentary often get a taste of her sharp wit. aversion to food snobbery and “foodies.” “When I go to a party . . . I can usually be found by the potato chip bowl,” Sullivan said. “I live on nuclear-orange Cheetos (I know, I Scan the QR code to visit the Snoburbia blog know) and Pepperidge Farm Sausalito cookies. I recently proclaimed my love for Nutella on http://blog.snoburbia.com/ my blog, and someone told me I was destroying 23 Sebastian Junger (left) and Tim Hetherington (right) talk with guests after their public presentation at WVU in February 2011. A Acclaimed author and photojournalist share their experiences with students B Covering the Hot Zone of Afghanistan Between the two of them, veteran journalists the sense of brotherhood these men have and to Sebastian Junger and the late Tim Hetherington have empathy for these men,” said Hetherington. shared more than 20 years of experience covering “In the film and in our books [“WAR” and conflicts and wars from Bosnia to Afghanistan. “Infidel”], we show the war – warts and all.” During the time that Junger and Hetherington However, they had never told a story from a soldier’s perspective – that is, not until they made were embedded off and on with the Second Platoon their award-winning documentary, “Restrepo,” and of Battle Company of the 173rd Airborne Brigade, they essentially became soldiers. Both of the men Junger wrote his nonfiction book, “WAR.” “We weren’t really making a film about war,” said did five one-month trips – sometimes together, sometimes apart. They went on every patrol. They Junger. “We were making a film about young men.” Documentary co-directors Junger and slept where the soldiers slept and ate where they ate. “We became part of the fabric, part of Hetherington spoke at the WVU Creative Arts the platoon,” said Center in February as Hetherington. part of WVU’s David C. “We hoped to challenge people to The only thing Hardesty Jr. Festival of think differently – to put a human Junger and Hetherington Ideas. The presentation was co-sponsored by the face on the war.” – Sebastian Junger didn’t do was carry weapons, even though School of Journalism’s they were with the soldiers during multiple attacks Ogden Newspapers Seminar Series. Junger and Hetherington shared photos and and were both injured. “I found combat to be so scary at first,” said stories of the year they spent embedded with a platoon of U.S. soldiers in Afghanistan’s Korengal Junger. “My fear dropped as my inclusion in the Valley. They spent most of their time in the remote, group increased. I felt if I got hurt or killed out there, 15-man outpost, Restrepo, named after platoon it would be okay because I was doing something medic Juan Restrepo who was killed during battle. that would be good for other people. I felt at peace.” Both men agreed that although reporting on Working as freelance journalists for Vanity Fair, the men logged 150 hours of intense video footage of wars and conflicts is dangerous work, it’s a necessary not only the fighting but also what civilians don’t see role for journalists. In a small-group session with – the camaraderie, the boredom and even the humor. SOJ students in Martin Hall, Junger told students “We hoped to challenge people to think that, in his opinion, the point of journalism is to differently – to put a human face on the war, to get ultimately alleviate human suffering. 24 BY CHRISTA VINCENT WVU Photo Services “It could be human suffering in terms of how the local school district is being run. It doesn’t have to be on the grand scale of genocide and civil war,” said Junger. “But you have to do it in a way that really is impartial and neutral. It’s tricky, but it can be done.” Visual journalism junior Matt Sunday found those words to be encouraging for both journalists who want to stay close to home and others, like himself, who want to work internationally. “I already have the ambition as a journalist to go to places where people don’t like to go,” said Sunday. “For me, I’ve been looking at pictures of Egypt non-stop for the past few weeks. Just hearing [Junger and Hetherington] talk about throwing themselves into an environment and going with their gut reactions makes me want to cover something like [Egypt] even more.” In April 2011, Tim Hetherington was killed while covering the civil conflict in eastern Libya. Hetherington and three other photographers fell under attack in the besieged city of Misurata, Libya’s third-largest city. At a memorial service in New York City’s Manhattan’s First Presbyterian Church on May 24, Junger said of Hetherington and his work: “He went to those places with an open heart, and he allowed those places to change him. He was such a good journalist because of precisely that.” vices IMC students complete online master’s degree while serving their country BY BRIANA WARNER A As a master’s degree candidate in the School of Journalism’s Integrated Marketing Communications (IMC) program, Captain Christopher Siekman of the U.S. Marine Corps does his studying in an atypical learning environment. He logs-on, studies and completes assignments from Helmand Province, Afghanistan. “I chose the WVU IMC program because of its reputation, academic excellence and user friendliness,” Siekman said. “The program provides just enough guidance to structure the week but allows for considerable autonomy to complete my coursework, which has enabled me to further my degree while deployed under very demanding time constraints.” Online education has become increasingly popular as military students look for programs that fit into their busy lives, no matter where they are. According to a recent report by the U.S. Government Accountability Office, the number of service members enrolled in online college classes has more than quadrupled since 2000, and online courses accounted for 71 percent of military higher education in 2009. More than 500 veterans, military personnel and Lance Corporal Richard Sanglap their dependents are currently furthering their education at WVU. The University offers hundreds of online classes, Captain Christopher Siekman, U.S. Marine Corps, works on IMC classes at his home base in Afghanistan. three online undergraduate degree completion programs and more than 20 graduate degrees. WVU also employs a full-time veterans more than 22 years in public affairs in the U.S. Air Force, Greg Smith enrolled in the program on the G.I. Bill and was a member of the first WVU IMC advocate who serves as a one-stop-shop for veterans and military students. In addition, WVU has been recognized nationally as having one of the graduating class in 2005. While his combat team redeploys to the United States this year, most veteran-friendly campuses in the United States. WVU veterans advocate Terry Miller says that the University is dedicated to providing military students Siekman is still on track to graduate in December with only two more courses to go. He sees great value in his IMC degree and appreciates the and veterans the best educational experience possible. “One of the many ways we can help current service members and fact that he found a program where he could further his education without veterans is by providing unique, online opportunities like the IMC program having to put his life on hold. “The IMC degree I’m obtaining is a professional degree with unlimited so they can further their education from anywhere in the world with the utility and potential,” Siekman said. “There is a science aspect to IMC – same Mountaineer support they would get in Morgantown,” Miller said. Before leaving for Afghanistan, Siekman worked with IMC program sure. But there is certainly an art to IMC that can enhance any organization’s advising director Shelly Stump and program faculty to make sure that his efficiency and effectiveness, and I look forward to utilizing my degree in deployment would not delay his graduation. He has successfully completed the future. I could not be more pleased with the program, and I wouldn’t trade this opportunity for anything.” four consecutive courses while in Afghanistan. Siekman isn’t the IMC program’s only student serving in active duty. Faith Thomas, former AT1(AW) in the U.S. Navy, completed her master’s degree in 2007 while serving in Okinawa, Japan, and Whidbey Island, Wash. While Scan the QR code to read serving in the U.S. Army as a flight medic, Stephanie Luke “attended” class interviews with IMC students online and finished the program in 2009. She used her IMC skills to work with media embeds while deployed to Afghanistan and to create her company’s http://imc.wvu.edu/military_students Facebook page. Major Andy Schmidt also completed his IMC degree in 2009 while serving in the West Virginia Air National Guard, having his first child and working to help build the company iSIGHT Partners, Inc. After serving 25 Exploring THE L A E R D L R WO “ ” INTERVIEWS BY BAILEE MORRIS AND CHRISTA VINCENT Popular TV series helps launch graduate’s comedy career Since starring in the hit MTV series, “The Real World: New Orleans,” 2007 public relations graduate Eric Patrick’s stand-up comedy career has taken off. Patrick has performed in venues from The Big Easy to The Big Apple, warming up audiences for bigtime acts like Louis C.K. Learn about his experience on the hit reality show and how it impacted his life. Q: How did you get your audition on “The Real World”? A:My lit t le bro t h e r e mai l e d M T V pretending to be me. [The email] was the worst! It said: “Yo, my name is Eric, but people call me E-Money. I work for the State Department. I’m a comedian, and I love to party. Holla!” What was your “character”? What was it like to have the cameras rolling 24/7? The whole house was like a TV set – cameras everywhere. The camera and production crews could almost predict when things were going to go down. You’d be at home, and the cameras weren’t really around. Then all of the sudden they’d swoop in and [a housemate] would scream: “Why did you eat my Cocoa Puffs?” What was the audition like? What did you like the most about being on “The Real World”? It was long and strenuous. If you add up the minutes from all of the auditions, it’s probably like nine or 10 hours. There is also a psychological test to make sure you’re not going to eat anyone’s ears. You’re kind of like a guest of honor of the city. We got to ride [a float] in the Mardi Gras parade, which is a huge deal. I’ve never been a VIP, before. I’m usually just a “P.” Tell me about your first day of taping “The Real World.” What didn’t you like about being on the show? It was surreal. I was waiting for someone to tell me it was a joke. I’d meet someone and think, “Oh, he’s nice or she’s nice. And then I’d spend a couple of days with them, and it’s like, ohhh, that’s why he’s here. He has issues.” I realized at the end of the day, it’s a reality show. So they are definitely going to have some characters on there. [The producers] want the drama and the tension. The filming experience got a little monotonous. There’s no television. There’s only one phone. You’re kind of just trapped in this world, and there’s no way to leave. 16 26 Photo courtesy of MTV I wondered about that myself, but I figured it out. I was the placebo – the “reaction” guy. I think that maybe they were hoping that my comedic side would come out more, but some of my roommates were just wacky! I couldn’t really be funny. I was trying to make sure I didn’t go crazy! Do people recognize you on the street? Yeah! And I’m always amazed when people recognize me in New York because I’m thinking, “There are real celebrities here! Why me?” SOJ alumnus Eric Patrick poses for a press photo for MTV’s “‘The Real World: New Orleans” reality show. What did you gain from the experience? Exposure. I’m the same comedian I was before I went on “The Real World,” but because of the experience, I have an agent. I have a manager. I’m able to get gigs that I wouldn’t have gotten had I not had the TV credit. How else has your stint on “The Real World” helped your career as a comedian? Before I was doing comedy on the side, but now it’s my income. I get to meet a lot of comedians I’ve always loved and never got the chance to see in person. Since I’m doing comedy every night in New York, they look at me as a peer. That’s really cool. The Young and the Ambitious SOJ students put their skills to work before graduation BY CHRISTA VINCENT Students at the School of Journalism aren’t waiting for graduation to begin their careers. Several full-time students either started a business or freelanced this year. Teeming with ambition, they saw opportunities in an evolving media WVU Photo Services marketplace and began paving their own paths as agents of change. Kate Ramsey ARM A N D PATE LLA L I N D S AY BAIL EY People took notice when Lindsay Bailey began building her brand in October of her senior year. Shortly after starting her blog, “Accessory Obsession: and Other Fashionable Addictions by Lindsay Bailey,” public relations agency, Dream Cartel, contacted her about a virtual internship. Lindsay, who graduated from the public relations program in May, thought it was too good to be true until she spoke to the owners of the company, with offices in both New York City and Los Angeles. She began writing press releases and assisting them with event planning. She also had the opportunity to attend a networking party for Fashion Week 2011 in New York City. “Getting to go to Fashion Week was truly a life-changing experience for me,” said Bailey. “I was so excited to get some hands-on experience. It confirmed for me that I want to be part of the fashion industry.” While there, she interviewed with another fashion PR firm, Shine Media. She landed a social media internship and hopes to parlay it into a permanent position. n Armand Patella III knew from the age of five that he wanted to be his own boss. “I always wanted to do my own thing,” said Patella, who graduated from the advertising program in May. “When I told one of my good friends about what I was doing, he reminded me of the time that I screamed at his dad, ‘You’re not the boss of me!’” Pa t e l l a e ve n t u a l l y c h a n n e l e d h i s entrepreneurial spirit, and he began developing smartphone applications for small businesses. The idea sprang from an assignment in Assistant Professor Dana Coester’s Direct Marketing: Mobile Edition class. Coester asked students to create a concept for a mobile or tablet application (“app”), determining the audience and ascertaining what need the app fulfilled in the marketplace. Patella relished the assignment and sought help from University Relations Web staff to take the project to the next level and actually build the app. After learning the process, Patella began designing apps for real-world clients, including a law firm in Charleston, W.Va.; a mental health facility in Ireland; and musician and blogger Lydia Simmons. “What’s exciting to me is that I get to help build something that someone is going to use every day . . . to put something really cool in the palm of their hand,” said Patella. “It’s a great feeling to say, ‘Wow, I did that!’” n M ATT S U N D AY Visual journalism junior Matt Sunday has two goals as a photographer – to land his photos on the cover of Rolling Stone magazine and in The New York Times. While they may seem like lofty goals, Sunday is already halfway there. When Osama Bin Laden was killed in May 2011, Sunday documented the reaction of Morgantown, W.Va., residents. The Daily Athenaeum photographer captured a photo of former WVU Men’s Basketball star John Flowers celebrating with others on High Street. Two days later, The New York Times ran the photo. “Having accomplished that at this point is the most rewarding thing that I’ve had happen,” said Sunday. “I was literally in tears when I found out about it.” This isn’t his only accomplishment. In fall 2009, Sunday started his own business, Sundazed Photography. While his work ranges from portraits, news, travel destinations and sporting events, his primary focus is concert photography. Sunday’s Flickr account includes photos of such artists as Cee Lo Green, Snoop Dogg, Whiz Khalifa and Wyclef Jean. S u n d ay s a i d h e h a s a lw ay s l ove d photography but was inspired to make it his career after taking an introductory photography course with Lois Raimondo, the School’s Visiting Shott Chair of Journalism. “Seeing the photos she has taken in Iraq and being around someone who has immense experience definitely helped,” said Sunday. “I wouldn’t look for the things I do [when taking photographs] if I hadn’t taken her classes.” n 27 MAY COMMENCEMENT National Public Radio host encourages SOJ grads to “ride the wave of convergence” BY CHRISTA VINCENT of historic convergences – of cyclical collisions future, to take risks and to learn the technology of politics and technology.” She highlighted so that they can continue to tell their stories to examples of how inventions like the penny press the world. and television changed the rules and how new “No matter what you end up doing with media is changing the rules again. your life, you will have the tools to thrive in a “You, my friends, are graduating in the world that runs on the most renewable energy middle of another historic convergence – the source there is – information.” biggest yet,” said Gladstone. “Our current era of political fragmentation is converging with a communications technology that thrives on audience fragments.” The SOJ class of 2011 is a Brooke Gladstone, co-host of NPR’s “On the Media,” reflection of Gladstone’s statements – a delivered the keynote address at the SOJ’s 2011 May group comprised of students already Commencement ceremony on May 15. blazing new trails. These include More than 200 graduates crossed the advertising major Armand Patella III, Morgantown Event Center stage during the who parlayed a class project into an School of Journalism’s 2011 Commencement entrepreneurial effort building iPhone Ceremony on May 15. Among them were apps for small businesses; students the first graduates of School’s new converged in a public relations capstone course Journalism major. who used technology to develop a full The young men and women who MAY campaign for a healthcare client halfway received those degrees represent a new breed across the world; and print journalism School of Journalism Top Graduating Senior of journalists – professionals equipped with graduate Morgan Young, who is now Candace Rose Nelson the skills to producing multimedia School of Journalism Top Scholars produce content content at Public “You have the best possible Lauren Christine Riviello (Advertising) across media Opinion newspaper in training to live in the world you Marissa Dawn Statler (Broadcast News) platforms in Chambersburg, Pa. Candace Rose Nelson (News-Editorial) today’s converged are entering.” – Brooke Gladstone. The top Evan Coffield Moore (Journalism) newsrooms. So, it graduate in the new Christina Donia Kersul (Public Relations) was only fitting that the keynote speaker Brooke Journalism major, Evan Moore, said he Gladstone, co-host of NPR’s “On the Media,” and his classmates are ready to embrace WVU Foundation Outstanding Seniors talked about the changing landscape of the whatever comes their way. Paige Lea Lavender media industry. “The new converged major was Evan Coffield Moore “You have the best possible training to live great because I was able to take away Candace Rose Nelson in the world you are entering,” said Gladstone. traditional journalism lessons while DECEMBER “It’s a world where the old rules and traditional having the flexibility to explore new School of Journalism Top Graduating Senior hierarchies governing media have been fields, which better prepared me to join Andrew D. Lewis overthrown . . . and nowhere is this truer than in the workforce,” said Moore. the profession formerly known as journalism.” Moore entered the workforce School of Journalism Top Scholars Gladstone engaged the audience with her immediately following graduation, Andrew D. Lewis (Advertising) wit and humor as she commented that the rules spending his summer as a web editor for Kyrsten Elizabeth Green (Broadcast News) of journalism are not carved in stone. WELD, a digital marketing company Alexander Andrew Long (News-Editorial) “They weren’t carried down Mt. Sinai by specializing in the outdoor adventure Leah Lorraine Cunningham (Journalism) Edward R. Murrow to be followed for the rest of industry. He’ll return to campus in the Rachel Fay Haring (Public Relations) time,” she said. fall as an MSJ candidate. Gladstone told the crowd of nearly 2,000 Gladstone ended her speech by SOJ’s top May graduates (left to right): Lauren Riviello, Marissa Statler, Candace Nelson, Evan Moore and that the rules of journalism are “the creation telling graduates not to be afraid of the TOP GRADUATES M Christina Kersul. 28 Scan the QR code to watch Gladstone’s speech http://bit.ly/eQbAtG All photos by WVU Photo Services Clockwise from top left: Broadcast news graduates (from left) Ashton Pellom, Tim Reid and Brandon Ruta wait to be called to cross the stage and receive their diplomas during the SOJ’s 2011 May Commencement ceremony. News-editorial graduate Paige Lavender hugs Dean Maryanne Reed after receiving her diploma. A graduate wears a decorated mortar board thanking her mother at the SOJ’s 2011 May Commencement ceremony. Public relations graduate Mel Moraes hugs Dean Maryanne Reed after receiving her diploma. Advertising graduate Armand Patella III poses for a photo with Dr. Sang Lee, associate professor and advertising program chair. Public relations graduate Megan Mischler shakes hands with Dean Maryanne Reed after receiving her diploma. 29 ABOUT OUR DONORS SOJ Giving Societies In recognition of the growing importance of private giving, the School of Journalism honors its friends and supporters through a tiered system of giving levels and inducts new members each fall. Below is a list of new donors or donors who have moved into new giving societies during the past year. MARTIN HALL SOCIETY ($250,000 +) •Ford Foundation FRIENDS OF MARTIN HALL ($100,000 - $249,999) •The Claude Worthington Benedum Foundation P.I. REED CIRCLE OF FRIENDS ($25,000 - $99,999) •McCormick Foundation •Mr. A. Bray Cary Jr. P.I. REED SOCIETY ($10,000 - $24,999) •Ms. Samme Gee •Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Izard •Mr. Norman S. Julian SOJ Donor Honor Roll The School of Journalism would like to thank our donors who have given to the 20102011 annual fund. In addition, the School of Journalism recently established the new SOJ Loyalty Club to recognize donors who have given more than $1,000 to the School’s annual fund. The annual giving list below represents cash and pledge payments received before April 30, 2011. Loyalty Club members are indicated by an asterisk. $50,000 OR MORE •Claude Worthington Benedum Foundation* •Ford Foundation* $15,000 - $49,999 •Mr. and Mrs. Jim Blair* •Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Widmeyer* •Mr. Scott D. Widmeyer and Widmeyer Communications* $5,000 - $14,999 •Mr. Frank B. Ahrens* •Mr. A. Bray Cary* •Cary Foundation, Inc.* •GolinHarris* •Joseph H. Kanter Foundation* •The Nutting Foundation* 30 $1,000 - $4,999 •The Arnold Agency* •Mr. Paul A. Atkins* •Mr. and Mrs. Wendell Cochran* •Mr. and Mrs. C. Michael Fulton* •Ms. Samme L. Gee* •Mr. and Mrs. Raymond G. Gillette Jr.* •Mrs. Luella T. Gunter* •Mr. Marcus Hassen* •Mr. and Mrs. Ralph S. Izard* •Mr. John League and Ms. April Dowler* •Mr. and Mrs. J. Gregory Martin* •Ms. Jane M. McNeer* •Mr. James H. Pugh, Jr.* •Ms. Maryanne Reed* •Mr. Stanley J. Reed* •Mr. James J. Roop* •Mrs. Louise C. Seals* •Ms. Jennifer J. Shaffron* •Ms. Margery A. Swanson* •Mr. and Mrs. J. Richard Toren* •United Way of the Midlands* $500 - $999 •Ms. Bonnie J. Bolden •Mr. and Mrs. Thomas P. Dowling •Mr. Stephen N. Hunsicker •Mrs. Suzy K. Johnson •Mrs. Pamela M. Larrick •Mrs. Judy P. Margolin •Ms. Johanna L. Maurice •Dr. and Mrs. Guy H. Stewart •Mr. Michael J. Tomasky $100 - $499 •Mrs. Margaret D. Bailey •Ms. Johnna G. Barto •Mr. Paul A. Binkowski •Mr. and Mrs. Walter C. Bird •Mr. and Mrs. Thomas J. Birdsong •Maj. John W. Boggess •Mr. Daniel W. Bosch •Mrs. Joyce A. Bower •Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Bowles •Mr. and Mrs. Steven K. Breeden •Mrs. Diane Bridi •Bristol-Myers Squibb Foundation •Mr. and Mrs. James D. Brown •Mr. and Mrs. John H. Brown Jr. •Mrs. Ruth C. Buchanan •Mr. Edward O. Buckbee •Mr. Francis B. Buckley •Mrs. Robyn M. Buckley •Mr. and Mrs. John A. Canfield •Mr. Bill Clark •Chubb & Son, Inc. •Consolidated Edison Company of New York, Inc. •Mr. and Mrs. Darrell G. Cochran •Mrs. Janice G. Comfort •Mrs. Catherine S. Crabtree •Mr. and Mrs. H. Nelson Crichton •Mr. and Mrs. Ronald L. Cutright •Mr. and Mrs. Gary L. Davis •Mrs. Sandra M. Desbrow •Ms. Jane E. Duffy •Mr. Benjamin C. Dunlap, Jr. •Ms. Alice H. Edmondson •Mr. Maurice R. Fliess •Mr. and Mrs. Jay H. Fowler •Freddie Mac Givingstation •General Electric Company •Ms. Ronda J. George •Grant County Press •Rev. and Mrs. Leonard S. Gross •Mr. and Mrs. J. Gregory Harr •Mrs. Suzanne M. Hornor •Mr. J. Ford Huffman •Mr. and Mrs. R. Douglas Huff •Johnson & Johnson Family of Companies •Mr. Noah C. Kady •Mrs. Virginia G. Kavage •Mr. and Mrs. James D. Kelly •Mr. and Mrs. Timothy J. Kelly •Mr. and Mrs. A. Nicholas Komanecky •Ms. Diana H. D. Kuai •Dr. Verda L. Little •Mr. and Mrs. James L. Littlepage •Dr. Brenda J. Logue •Mrs. Dorothy H. MacQueen •Mr. and Mrs. Victor W. Mason III •Ms. Mary M. McDaniel •Mrs. Robin L. Mease •Mr. and Mrs. Harry J. Mitchell •Ms. Christina L. Myer •Mr. Henry C. Nagel II •Mr. and Mrs. William J. Nevin •Mr. Phillip D. Page •Mr. Lance A. Parry •Mr. Kenneth P. Pennington •Mrs. Charlotte R. Perham •Mr. Thomas D. Perry •Mr. Paul J. Pysh •Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Richards •Mr. Robert M. Rine •Mrs. Karen P. Robbins •SAIC, Inc. •Mrs. Mary L. Scott •Mr. and Mrs. Craig L. Selby •Mr. and Mrs. Preston L. Shimer •Mrs. Linda Spencer •Mr. and Mrs. Timothy J. Tewalt •Ms. Susan W. Tice •Mr. and Mrs. William Tiernan •Dr. Sandra H. Utt •Verizon Foundation •Mrs. Kathleen S. Vincent •Ms. Dawn E. Warfield •Ms. Deborah Harmison White •Mr. Seth Winter •Mr. Bill Yahner ABOUT OUR SCHOLARSHIPS Four New Scholarships 2010-2011 Established at SOJ SOJ Scholarship During the 2010-2011 academic year, SOJ Recipients alumni and friends contributed to the School’s MERIDETH ROBB MEMORIAL SCHOLARSHIP •Kelsey Amsdell scholarship funds by establishing five new PAUL A. ATKINS SCHOLARSHIP •Evan Moore endowed student scholarships. Thanks to their generosity, future generations of journalism students will continue to succeed with the support of private giving. THE ARNOLD AGENCY SCHOLARSHIP •Linda Arnold (BSJ, 1976) •Steve Morrison (BSJ, 1973) •Mark Polen (MPA, 1982; BA, 1980) COL. THOMAS J. BOYD SCHOLARSHIP •Col. Thomas J. Boyd (BSJ, 1971) RAYMOND AND SUSAN GILLETTE MINORITY SCHOLARSHIP •Raymond (BSJ, 1971) and Susan Gillette WILLIAM AND JEAN REED SCHOLARSHIP •Maryanne Reed, Dean Scholarship donations are the School’s top priority. More students than ever are in need due to the economic climate. Private contributions for student academic support have helped ease the financial burden many students face. CUMMINGS SCHOLARSHIP •Christina Kersul DON S. MARSH SCHOLARSHIP •Kayla Grogg •Evan Moore EDITH WATSON SASSER SCHOLARSHIP •Rachel Nieman GEORGE GIANODIS JOURNALISM SCHOLARSHIP •Rachel Borowski •Krista Froess •Paige Lavender •Shay Maunz •Sarah O’Rourke •Elizabeth Pietranton •Ashleigh Pollart •Kelsey Shingleton •Lauren Sobon •Victoria Stambaugh •Rachel Taylor GILBERT AND MARGARET LOVE JOURNALISM SCHOLARSHIP •Rachel Borowski Why I Give . . . “Establishing the William and Jean Reed Scholarship is a way to honor my late parents, who gave me strong values, a loving home and self-confidence. In turn, it’s a joy to share my success with the next generation, helping our students build a strong foundation for their future.” – Maryanne Reed, Dean How Do I Give? To learn more about providing scholarship funding, visit our website at http://journalism.wvu.edu/about_us/contribute or contact: GOLINHARRIS MOUNTAINEER IN DC •Emma Draper •Chelsey Hathaway •Alex McPherson •Elyse Petroni IRENE CAPLAN MOKSAY SCHOLARSHIP •Jacqueline Riggleman LINDA E. YOST SCHOLARSHIP •Stacey Herron LINDA JEANNE LECKIE SCHULTE SCHOLARSHIP •Blair Dowler MARK S. AND FRANCES S. GROVE ENDOWED SCHOLARSHIP •Brittany Furbee MARTHA E. SHOTT ENDOWED SCHOLARSHIP •Alex McPherson •Samantha Redd •Katlin Stinespring •Logan Venderlic OGDEN NEWSPAPERS AND NUTTING FAMILY JOURNALISM SCHOLARSHIP •Candace Nelson •Logan Venderlic PAUL S. AND THEO S. DEEM BOOK SCHOLARSHIP •Blair Dowler PEGGY PRESTON TIERNEY SCHOLARSHIP •Stacey Aliff PERLEY ISAAC REED SCHOLARSHIP •Whitney Godwin •Ben Hancock SCHOOL OF JOURNALISM SCHOLARSHIP •Brian Aluise •Kelsey Amsdell •Rachel Borowski •Samantha Cossick •Paul Espinosa •Joshua Ewers •Kayla Grogg •Chelsea Hathaway •Stacey Herron •Casey Hoffman •Christina Kersul •Corinna Locotch •Shay Maunz •Amanda Moreau •Alissa Murphy •Sarah O’Rourke •Matthew Peaslee •Samantha Redd •Daniel Sweeney •Whitney Wetzel •James Yaria SCOTT D. WIDMEYER AFRICAN AMERICAN SCHOLARSHIP •Morgan Young SCOTT D. WIDMEYER FIRST GENERATION SCHOLARSHIP •Blair Dowler THOMAS PICARSIC SCHOLARSHIP IN JOURNALISM •Ben Hancock WEST VIRGINIA PRESS ASSOCIATION FOUNDATION – CECIL B. HIGHLAND JR. MEMORIAL SCHOLARSHIP •Candace Nelson WEST VIRGINIA PRESS ASSOCIATION FOUNDATION – GUY H. STEWART SCHOLARSHIP •Samantha Redd Luella Gunter Director of Development WVU P.I. Reed School of Journalism Luella.Gunter@mail.wvu.edu 304.293.6775 31 FACULTY BRIEFS n JOEL BEESON During the fall 2010 semester, Associate Professor Joel Beeson was awarded a $19,000 West Virginia Humanities Council Major Grant and a $5,000 Campus-Community LINK grant through the West Virginia Campus Compact and WVU’s Center for Civic Engagement, for his World War I African American memorial project in McDowell County, W.Va. In April 2011, Beeson presented two papers at the Broadcast Education Association (BEA) national conference in Las Vegas, Nev.: “Oral History and New Media” during the “Using Oral History in the Classroom: Involving Students in Collecting Oral Histories” panel and “The iPad as Experiential Narrative” during “The Curated Journey: New Narrative Forms in iPad and Tablet Publishing” panel. WVU Photo Services April Johnston APRIL JOHNSTON Teaching Assistant Professor April Johnston joined the School of Journalism faculty in August 2010. She teaches both introductory and advanced writing classes. Before joining the SOJ faculty, Johnston worked for nearly 10 years writing in-depth narratives for newspapers and magazines in Pennsylvania, North Carolina and Ohio. She also spent a year in WVU’s office of News and Information Services. Johnston has won dozens of national, regional and state awards for her work, including the inaugural Jim Crawley Award for Regional Reporting from Military Writers and Editors. In 2003, she traveled to Dortmund, Germany, to serve as a John J. McCloy Journalism Fellow for the American Council on Germany. The resulting stories earned her a Distinguished Writing Award from the Pennsylvania Newspaper Association. Johnston also writes flash fiction and essays – complete tales typically told in 1,000 words or less. Her work has appeared in several literary publications, including the Newport Review, Monkey Puzzle #10 and The Mix Tape, a col- lection by Fast Forward Press. She received her bachelor’s degree in journalism from Duquesne University in 2001 and her M.F.A. in creative writing from Carlow University in 2008. 32 n DR. BOB BRITTEN Assistant Professor Bob Britten’s article, “Picturing Terror: Visual and Verbal Rhetoric in the 9/11 Report Graphic Adaptation,” was published in the spring 2010 issue of the International Journal of Comic Art. Britten had a second article published (co-authored by C. Zoe Smith), “Acquiring Taste: Graham Nash and the Evolution of the Photography Collection,” in the fall 2010 issue of Visual Communication Quarterly. In August 2010, he presented “Remembering 9/11 Through Photos in Anniversary Editions of Impact Site Newspapers” at the 2010 Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication (AEJMC) annual conference in Denver, Colo. Britten also gave a presentation entitled “The Blog Journalism Class: Teaching Students to Make Toys into Tools” as part of his original panel, “Bringing in the Audience: Social Media and New Connections in Magazines and the News Classroom.” In September, Britten presented on the same subject at PodCamp: The New Media unConference in Pittsburgh, Pa. n DANA COESTER In March 2011, Assistant Professor Dana Coester received a $200,000 grant from the Ford Foundation for her research in mobile media and to pilot new economic models for community-based mobile media in rural regions in West Virginia and nationwide. In October 2010, her paper, “Building Mobile Community,” was presented at the National Newspaper Association’s Annual Convention & Trade Show in Omaha, Neb., as one of the winning entries for the Huck Boyd CommunityBuilding Symposium. In December, her film, “Pretty,” screened at the International Conference on the Image at the University of California, Los Angeles. At the BEA Festival of Media Arts in April 2011, Coester received a Best of Competition award for WVU’s online alumni magazine. In addition, she has been elected to serve as national vice chair for the Interactive Media and Emerging Technology division of BEA. n DR. RITA COLISTRA Assistant Professor Dr. Rita Colistra’s article, “No Bark and No Bite: When Addressing High-profile Ethical Code Violators, Is the Society of Professional Journalists Mute and Toothless?” was published in the International Journal of Interdisciplinary Social Sciences, Vol. 5, no. 4. A second article, “Rumble and the Dark: Regional Newspaper Framing of the Buffalo Creek Mine Disaster of 1972,” was published in Volume 16 of the Journal of Appalachian Studies. Colistra also was awarded a $5,000 Campus-Community LINK grant through the West Virginia Campus Compact and WVU’s Center for Civic Engagement to help bring extensive service learning to the classroom through the Buy Local Initiative with Ritchie County. In May 2011, Colistra led a public relations workshop for the Community Development Institute-East conference in Bridgeport, W.Va. Colistra also served as the faculty adviser for the award-winning student organization, Public Relations Student Society of America. n GINA MARTINO DAHLIA In January 2011, Dahlia developed a workshop, “Advance Your Job Search Online and Off,” which she presented at the West Virginia State Capitol in Charleston, W.Va., for Women’s Day at the Legislature. Dahlia serves as the newscast professor and executive producer of the student-produced newscast, “WVU News,” which has won multiple awards, including BEA’s Best of Festival King Foundation Award and top student newscast in the country. During the April 2011 BEA conference in Las Vegas, Nev., Dahlia served on two panels to share her work with “WVU News”: “Election 2010 – How Schools Covered the Election and Used Different Technologies” and “Aircheck: Student Newscasts – How to Maximize Experience and Value.” n DR. SANG LEE Associate Professor Sang Lee’s paper, “Do Web Users Care About Banner Ads Anymore? The Effects of Frequency and Clutter in Web Advertising,” was published in the Journal of Promotion Management, Volume 16, Issue 3, in 2010. Lee co-authored and published a second paper, “Culture and Understanding of Pictorial Implicature Advertisements,” in the Korean Journal of Advertising and Public Relations, Volume 11, Issue 4, 2009. n DR. DIANA MARTINELLI Associate Professor and Widmeyer Professor in Public Relations Dr. Diana Martinelli’s article, “Lessons on the Big Idea and Public Relations,” was published in the winter 2010 issue of the Public Relations Journal. Martinelli also authored two book chapters: “Political Public Relations: Remembering its Roots and Classics” FACULTY BRIEFS in Political Public Relations: Principles and Applications, published by Routledge in spring 2011, and “Considering Community Journalism from the Perspective of Public Relations and Advertising” in Foundations of Community Journalism, which will be published by Sage and is currently in press. In March, Martinelli presented her co-authored paper, with Assistant Professor Bonnie Stewart (the lead author), “Industry Crises and External Communications During a U.S. Coal Mine Disaster: Theoretical and Practical Implications,” at the International Public Relations Research Conference in Miami, Fla. She also attended the International Public Relations History Conference at Bournemouth University in the UK, where she presented her paper, “A Practical and Theoretical Look at Women’s Use of Public Relations to Spur Early to Mid-20th Century U.S Social Change.” Both papers were published in conference proceedings. n MARY KAY MCFARLAND Lecturer and West Virginia Uncovered project coordinator Mary Kay McFarland expanded the West Virginia Uncovered project in 2010 and 2011 to include 17 community newspapers. In September 2010, the School received a $105,000 grant from the Claude Worthington Benedum Foundation to be used during a two-year period to continue the work of strengthening the state’s community information infrastructure by empowering community newspapers through the West Virginia Uncovered project. In spring 2010, McFarland developed immersion weekend workshops during which students traveled to a rural community and, over the course of 72 hours, found and produced stories for the community’s newspaper using multiple mediums for the paper’s website. The first workshop took place in Davis, W.Va., for The Parsons Advocate, and in the spring of 2011, students traveled to Elkins, W.Va., to work with The InterMountain. McFarland also worked with students and a VISTA member to engage community members in contributing content to the Upper Big Branch Mine disaster memorial website. n DR. JENSEN MOORE Assistant Professor Dr. Jensen Moore tied for 29th out of the 35 individuals ranked highest in AEJMC convention paper productivity in the spring 2010 issue of Journalism & Mass Communication Educator. In September 2010, she co-authored an article in the Journal of Broadcasting and Electronic Media titled, “When a Fear Appeal Isn’t a Fear Appeal: The Effects of Graphic Anti-tobacco Messages.” In February 2011, Moore was selected to attend the Scripps Howard Leadership Academy hosted by the Manship School of Mass Communication at Louisiana State University this summer. In April 2011, Moore was awarded the 2010-2011 Golden Quill Award for Outstanding Teaching at the School of Journalism. n LOIS RAIMONDO In September 2010, Visiting Shott Chair of Journalism Lois Raimondo served on the faculty of The Missouri Photojournalism Workshop in Macon, Mo. In January 2011, she participated in the National Geographic Photography Seminar in Washington, D.C. Raimondo, who lived and worked full-time in Asia for 12 years, traveled to China last summer to research opportunities for School of Journalism students to study journalism abroad. The result of that trip is a newly established official exchange program between WVU and the renowned School of Journalism at China’s Guandong University of Foreign Studies. This summer, as part of the International Media course, Raimondo led a group of students on a three-week trip through China where they visited cities, villages and media outlets. n MARYANNE REED Dean and Associate Professor Maryanne Reed’s article, “Fighting to Hear and be Heard: The Founding of West Virginia Mountain Radio,” was published in the spring 2011 edition of the journal, West Virginia History. Her essay, “Leading in ‘Beta Mode,’” was published in the Center for Creative Leadership’s “Leading Effectively” April 2011 e-Newsletter, reaching 70,000 business leaders across the country. In April, she served on the West Virginia Leadership Conference’s “Leadership Ethics” panel, representing the field of journalism. She also participated in the Women’s Leadership Forum at Harvard University’s School of Business in May 2011. Reed organized and moderated the panel, “Journalism Education Online: How to Develop and Deliver Quality Online Curricula,” at the 2010 AEJMC convention in Denver, Colo. n DR. STEVE URBANSKI Director of Graduate Studies and Assistant Professor Steve Urbanski presented the paper, “Online Communities’ Impact on the Profession of Newspaper Design,” co-authored by Amanda Miller, at the AEJMC convention in Denver, Colo., in August 2010. That same paper was published in the peer-reviewed Journal of Electronic Publishing, Volume 13, Issue 3, in December 2010. In April 2011, Urbanski served on a panel, “New Horizons in Study Abroad: Using Philosophy of Communication to Prepare Undergraduates for Encounters with the Other,” at the Eastern Communication Association convention in Baltimore, Md. Faculty Awards THE SCHOOL OF JOURNALISM CONGRATULATES ITS AWARDWINNING FACULTY DR. DIANA MARTINELLI Widmeyer Professor in Public Relations West Virginia University Foundation Award for Outstanding Teaching AEJMC Mass Communication and Society Division’s Distinguished Educator Award JOHN TEMPLE Associate Professor, Associate Dean West Virginia University Caperton Award for Excellence in the Teaching of Writing GINA DAHLIA Teaching Assistant Professor Project: “The Monongah Heroine” Communicator Award of Distinction for “The Monongah Heroine” MarCom Gold Award for Best Documentary Ava Gold Award JOEL BEESON Associate Professor Project: “Soldiers of the Coalfields” AEJMC Visual Communication Division’s Top Entry in Creative Projects WVU NAACP Chapter Professor of the Year 33 CLASS NOTES FURFARI INDUCTED INTO WRITERS HALL OF FAME In April 2011, Domenick “Mickey” Furfari (BSJ, 1948), referred to as West Virginia’s dean of sportswriting, was inducted into the U.S. Basketball Writers Hall of Fame, an honor bestowed on only 56 individuals since its inception in 1988. The first West Virginian to receive the honor, Furfari has covered the state’s athletics for more than six decades since graduating from WVU. Although he retired from the Morgantown, W.Va., Dominion Post at age 87, Furfari still writes columns for a syndicate of several state newspapers. He began his writing career at WVU’s student newspaper, The Daily Athenaeum, and worked for The Associated Press in Huntington, W.Va. He “Mickey” Furfari later worked as the sports editor for Pacific Stars and Stripes while serving in the U.S. Army. Before returning to Morgantown, Furfari worked as assistant sports editor for the Charleson Gazette. In 2009, the five-time West Virginia Sports Writer of the Year was named a Distinguished West Virginian in a ceremony with then-Gov. Joe Manchin III. In 2008, Furfari published his book, Mickey’s Mountaineer Memories, which details his observations of modern day WVU athletic history. 1960s n NORMAN JULIAN (BSJ, 1968) published his book, Trillium Acres, with Trillium Publishing in 2010. The publication is a sequel to his 1993 book, Snake Hill. Both collections of essays chronicle the author’s 35 years living in the north central West Virginia area. The forward for Trillium Acres was written by School of Journalism Professor Emeritus Paul Atkins. 1970s n ANNE BARTH (BSJ, 1979) was named executive director of the economic development group TechConnect West Virginia in December 2010. Prior to this position, Barth served as state director for U.S. Senator Robert C. Byrd. n MICHAEL BENNETT (BSJ, 1974) is the CEO of Iwanna USA, Inc., which offers weekly publication classified ads. Iwanna has offices in Asheville, N.C.; Hickory, N.C.; and Greenville, S.C. n DARRELL COCHRAN (BSJ, 1976) received the State Department’s Meritorious Honor Award for his assistance to the U.S. Embassy in Cairo in maintaining the embassy’s website during the political unrest in January and February 2011. Cochran is a web technology specialist for the U.S. Department of State. n RON CUTRIGHT (BSJ, 1974) recently retired with 34 years of service in the Departments of Defense and Energy with domestic assignments in New York, Texas, Pennsylvania, West Virginia and Washington, D.C., as well as foreign assignments in the Far East, Middle East and Europe. n GIL MEYER (BSJ, 1975) serves as the director of global issues and crisis management at Dupont. He currently lives in Bear, Del. 34 n VALERIE NIEMAN (BSJ, 1978) published her third novel, Blood Clay, in March 2011. Nieman is also the author of a collection of short stories, Fidelities, from WVU Press, and two earlier novels. She has received an NEA creative writing fellowship, two Elizabeth Simpson Smith prizes Valerie Nieman in fiction and the Greg Grummer Prize in poetry. She teaches writing at North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University in Greensboro, N.C., and serves as the poetry editor for Prime Number magazine. n DAVID SHAW (BSJ, 1979) is a sportswriter and columnist for The Salisbury Post in Salisbury, N.C. n SANDRA ENGLEBRIGHT UTT (MSJ, 1972; BSJ, 1968) is a professor of journalism at the University of Memphis. 1980s n CHUCK ANZIULEWICZ (BSJ, 1981) is an HIV prevention specialist for the West Virginia Bureau for Public Radio. He also is the Saturday morning announcer at West Virginia Public Radio. n MICHAEL TOMASKY (BSJ, 1982) joined Newsweek/The Daily Beast in May 2011 as a special correspondent. He also is editor of Democracy: A Journal of Ideas. Before joining Newsweek, Tomasky was the editor-at-large with The Guardian News & Media’s U.S. editorial operation. n BARBARA WESTERN (BSJ, 1989) is the director of operations at OMB Watch in Washington, D.C., a nonprofit government watchdog organization. 1990s n RHETT LINDSAY (BSJ, 1999) was honored as one of Chicago’s most influential philanthropic leaders and received the “Who IS Chicago” award in September 2010. The awards were presented by Chicago Social Magazine with Raymi Productions Dynamic Events to recognize 10 philanthropists who have made major contributions within the Chicago community. n SETH MULLER (BSJ, 1997) is a professional journalist and published author. His book, Canyon Crossing: Experiencing the Grand Canyon from Rim to Rim, was published by the Grand Canyon Association in February 2011. Muller also had his young-reader fiction series, Keepers of the Windclaw Chronicles, published by Salina Bookshelf. He currently lives in Flagstaff, Ariz. n MATTHEW TABEEK (BSJ, 1994) is the editor at CBSSports.com in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. Prior to joining CBS, Tabeek worked in newspapers for more than a decade, including The Fayetteville Observer, The Winchester Star and The Journal in Martinsburg, W.Va. Matthew Tabeek 2000s n STEPHANIE ACKERMAN (BSJ, 2005) is the senior coordinator of public relations and communications at H.J. Heinz Company/Heinz North America in Pittsburgh, Pa. Chuck Anziulewicz n DONNA ELLIOTT (BSJ, 1986 is the marketing director at Martin & Jones, PLLC. She currently lives in Garner, N.C. n COLIN DAVID KELLY (BSJ, 1982) is a senior communications specialist at the Air Line Pilots Association, United Chapter. He currently resides in Chicago, Ill. n KELLY MCNEIL ANDREYCAK (BSJ, 2007) is an account executive with the Knot Inc. and currently lives in Richmond, Va. n NATALIE (VOITHOFER) BUBB (BSJ, 2003) is currently enrolled in the Integrated Marketing Communications (IMC) graduate program at the School of Journalism. She also is a television news producer at KDKA-TV in Pittsburgh, Pa. n JESSICA WEHRLE CARTER (BSJ, 2003) is a selfemployed speechwriter living in Charleston, W.Va. CLASS NOTES n SCOTT CASTLEMAN (BSJ, 2005) is the director of communications at the University of Charleston in Charleston, W.Va. n JOEL DANOY (BSJ, 2009) is a reporter for The Winchester Star in Winchester, Va. n MARK DONOHUE (BSJ, 2010) is an account executive with Young and Rubicam in New York, N.Y. Scott Castleman n ANDREW EPPERLEY (BSJ, 2007) and his wife Becca were married last year and reside in Richardson, Texas. Epperley is the assistant editorial manager at Wieck Media. He also has a successful soccer blog, WVHooligan.com, which covers Major League Soccer in the U.S. n NICOLE FERNANDES (MSJ, 2010; BSJ, 2008) is a communications program coordinator at the American Society of Clinical Oncology in Alexandria, Va. n LUKE FRANKLIN (BSJ, 2002) is a sales and marketing associate at Upslope Brewing Company in Boulder, Colo. WIDMEYER HONORED BY PR NEWS Chairman and CEO of Widmeyer Communications Scott Widmeyer (BSJ, 1975) was honored in November 2010 by PR News and inducted into its 2010 Hall of Fame. Presented at the PR News’ PR People Awards Luncheon at the National Press Club in Washington, D.C., the lifetime achievement award lauds Widmeyer as a pioneer and innovator in the public relations field. Widmeyer has a 30-year record of providing strategic thinking to scores of decision-makers, from presidents to governors to CEOs to union leaders. From working as a newspaper reporter in the 1970s to running major media operations for national campaigns, Widmeyer successfully Scott Widmeyer garners press coverage for his clients. Widmeyer founded the independent public relations firm in 1988 after holding major communications positions with five national leaders. Widmeyer was named a 2008 David Rockefeller Fellow and has served on the boards of the March of Dimes, GLAAD, the Victory Fund and the School of Journalism Advisory Committee. In 2005, he was awarded the Distinguished West Virginian award by then Gov. Bob Wise. In 2009, Widmeyer was named to the WVU Academy of Distinguished Alumni. n SUSAN KIMMEL-LINES (MS-IMC, 2011) is the senior manager of Outbound Marketing at AMD, Inc. in Austin, Texas. n KEVIN KINKEAD (BSJ, 2007) is a writer, producer and sports producer at CBS 3 Eyewitness News in Philadelphia, Pa. He also writes for Philadephiaunion.com. Andrew Epperley n JESSICA HAMMOND (BSJ, 2011) is currently working as an administrative assistant at the National Alliance for Mental Illness. n JANET IRWIN (BSJ, 2008) is an associate producer at WTAE Channel 4 Action News in Pittsburgh, Pa. n BRIAN KELLEY (BSJ, 2001) is a senior account supervisor with Hill & Knowlton in Washington, D.C. n PAIGE LAVENDER (BSJ, 2011) is an associates politics editor with The Huffington Post in Washington, D.C. n ANTHONY MARTIN (MSJ, 2005; BSJ, 2003) is a public relations manager at Martek Biosciences Corporation, headquartered in Columbia, Md. Paige Lavender n MATT MASACHI (BSJ, 2003) is a U.S. Coast Guard Reserve Petty Officer 3rd Class. In summer WARD NAMED “GAME CHANGER” BY HUFFINGTON POST Charleston (W.Va.) Gazette reporter Ken Ward Jr. (BSJ, 1990) was named to The Huffington Post’s “Game Changers” in the Green category in September 2010. Recognized for his coverage of the impacts of West Virginia’s coal industry, Ward shares the honor with U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Lisa P. Jackson, actors Kevin Costner and Robert Redford, comedian Stephen Colbert, and several local activists from around the country. The Huffington Post noted the Gazette’s coverage of the Upper Big Branch Mine disaster and Ward’s continuing reporting on the coal industry through the newspaper’s “Coal Tattoo” blog. A native of Ken Ward Jr. Piedmont in Mineral County, W.Va., Ward has covered the Appalachian coal industry for nearly 20 years. He is a three-time winner of the Scripps Howard Foundation’s Edward J. Meeman Award for Environmental Reporting and has received the Livingston Award for Young Journalists, an Investigative Reporters and Editors medal and an Alicia Patterson Foundation Fellowship. 2010, he was deployed to the Gulf of Mexico for two months in response to the Deepwater Horizon oil spill. While assigned to the Unified Area Command in New Orleans, he served as a media liaison and photographer. n ELAINE MCMILLION (BSJ, 2009) finished post-production on the feature-length documentary film, “The Lower 9.” She was co-director on the project, which was shot in 2010 in the lower ninth ward of New Orleans. Elaine McMillion n ALEX MCPHERSON (BSJ, 2011) is a consumer marketing intern at GolinHarris in Washington, D.C. n ANGELA MOSCARITOLO (BSJ, 2007) was promoted to senior reporter at SC Magazine, a business-to-business magazine for I.T. security professionals, where she has worked for more than two years covering stories from federal government cybersecurity issues to the takedown of massive Angela Moscaritolo cybercriminal operations. n HEALY NARDONE (BSJ, 2002) married Dr. Emil Nardone II and is currently living in Wheeling, W.Va. Nardone is a former Bush White House Senior Press Representative and Energy Press Secretary. She is currently the owner/president of Launch Global Media. n RYAN PALATINI (BSJ, 2006) is a senior account executive at pharmaceutical advertising agency Cline, Davis & Mann in New York, N.Y. 35 CLASS NOTES Share your updates and contact information with the School of Journalism. Visit the website and click the “Stay Connected” icon to complete the online form. n BREANNE PEARL (BSJ, 2007) married fellow alumnus MATTHEW PEARL (BSJ, 2007). They met in the Martin Hall “reading room” during their work-study shifts. Breanne is a teacher for Baltimore City Public Schools. n HEATHER RICHARDSON (BSJ, 2004) is the owner of Heather Ink Freelance Writing in Morgantown, W.Va. Transitions Breanne & Matthew Pearl The School of Journalism wishes to acknowledge our alumni who have passed away during the year. In memory of Robert “Bob” Kelly and Richard Grimes PHYLLIS B. BOWERS (BSJ, 1977) ROBERT “BOB” KELLY (BSJ, 1971) most ROY L. BURTON II (BSJ, 1951) n ANNE SARACCO-THALMAN (BSJ, 2006) is an account executive at the Washington Speakers Bureau in Alexandria, Va. recently served as the managing editor for the Charleston (W.Va.) Daily Mail. Kelly began his EDGAR B. ELDER (AB, 1937) career at the Daily Mail in 1974 and worked as a DIANA L. EPLING (MSJ, 1977) in 1984 for a position at The Orlando Sentinel. In reporter, editor and managing editor before leaving n CARA SLIDER (MSJ, 2009; BSJ, 2006) is a public relations specialist for Atria Senior Living Group in Louisville, Ky. THELMA D. FRISCH (BSJ, 1943) WILLIAM M. FRYE (BSJ, 1971) Kelly became editor of The Parkersburg News. He n BRANDI BONKOWSKI SMITH (BSJ, 2003) is a senior account executive at Ketchum Public Relations in Pittsburgh, Pa. GREGORY S. GARNER (MSJ, 1994) political editor and began his second stint as n MATTHEW STANMYRE (BSJ, 2004) recently won an Associated Press Sports Editors first-place award for breaking news in the over 175,000-circulation category. Stanmyre is a sports enterprise reporter at The Star-Ledger in Newark, N.J. n STEPHEN STORRIE (BSJ, 2010) is a logistics consultant at U.S. Express Freight Systems in Landover, Md. n KIM VITALE (BSJ, 2005) is the media supervisor at Starcom Mediavest Group in Los Angeles, Calif. FLORENCE L. GODFREY (BA, 1939) MARJORIE G. GOLDSMITH (MSJ, 1967) DWIGHT A. JOHNSON (BSJ, 1979) ROBERTA L. LEE (MSJ, 1973; BSJ, 1971) 1988, he returned to West Virginia as editor of The Intelligencer in Wheeling. After 10 years there, rejoined the Daily Mail in 2001 as the newspaper’s managing editor in 2004. Former West Virginia Governor Arch Moore and host of Metro News “Talk Line,” Hoppy Kercheval, gave eulogies at Kelly’s service. Kelly passed at age 60 in June 2010. Before his retirement in 1999, former Daily Mail political editor RICHARD GRIMES (BSJ, 1961) ALICE P. MAY (AB, 1938) covered West Virginia politics for more than 30 VIRGINIA M. NEELY (BSJ, 1949) Mail staff in 1964, first as a reporter and then years. Grimes joined the Charleston (W.Va.) Daily n ANDREW WOROB (BSJ, 2005) was promoted from account supervisor to manager of digital communications at Ruder Finn, Inc. in New York, N.Y. In addition, his blog, “PR at Sunrise,” was ranked as a top-20 PR blog by eReleases. WILLIAM J. PRICE (BSJ, 1973) rising through the ranks to become its top political PAUL REDOSH (BSJ, 1951) congressional delegation. His longtime column, EDGAR E. THACKER III (BSJ, 1967) worked briefly as a reporter for the Wheeling n MORGAN YOUNG (BSJ, 2011) is a reporter for the Chambersburg Public Opinion in Chambersburg, Pa. WILBUR L. THAXTON (BSJ, 1982) Army and serving as a special agent in intelligence 36 Morgan Young BRITTON O. SHAFFER JR. (BSJ, 1950) RAYMOND WINTER (BSJ, 1950) writer, covering state politics for West Virginia’s “Capitol Letter,” was carried by newspapers across the state. Prior to his Charleston career, Grimes (W.Va.) Intelligencer before entering the U.S. assigned to the National Security Agency. Grimes died at age 71 in February 2011. INTEGRATE 2012 A CONFERENCE FOR IMC PROFESSIONALS BY THE IMC PROFESSIONALS AT WVU This summer, the IMC program hosted its first annual INTEGRATE conference, featuring networking opportunities, interactive workshops and 18 different breakout sessions led by industry experts on the hottest topics in marketing communications. Here is what a few people had to say: @jenlynn881 – Lawyers have CLE's; CPA's have CPE's, but as a marketer, what do YOU do to keep your edge? Here's a step towards my edge: “#integrate2011” @nicolehagy – New friends, new skills & new knowledge thanks to @wvuimc weekend! facebook.com/lauraphillipsgarner – Many thanks to everyone involved in making Integrate 2011 one of the best professional development experiences I have ever had. I look forward to next year! Presented by: June 1-2, 2012 Morgantown, W.Va. Save the date and join us next year for INTEGRATE 2012. Find your focus. Find yourself. Get INTEGRATED. Perley Isaac Reed SCHOOL OF JOURNALISM West Virginia University PO Box 6010 Morgantown, WV 26506-6010 (304) 293-3505 journalism.wvu.edu PIREED@mail.wvu.edu Address Service Requested 410013100001 Non-profit Org. U.S. Postage PAID Morgantown, WV Permit No. 34