Showing posts with label Media. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Media. Show all posts

Monday, October 26, 2009

Interview with Lindsey Ward

Both working and going to school helped prepare Lindsey Ward for the tough media industry. Now Ward is a reputable reporter and anchor for WSLS 10 thanks to her hard work and determination.

Wards biggest piece of advice for aspiring anchors is to become a one-man band because it is “ the future of this industry.”

Below is a selection of question and answers from my recent interview with Lindsey Ward.

Ashley: What inspired you to want to go into the media industry?

Ward: Around my junior year, it all of a sudden hit me that I wanted to be a TV reporter, and until that point I didn’t give any thought to it. I went to journalism school after senior year to pursue that route and wanted to find a school that had a great journalism and communication program. One of the big things that drew me to this industry was that you are “in the know” within the community, etc.

Ashley: What activities do you like to do outside of working at WSLS?

Ward: I love shopping. Whenever I leave work I go home and sit on the couch and watch mindless TV. All day long you just work, work, work and it’s such a stressful job. You are always on your toes, so when I go home I watch a ton of reality TV.

Ashley: How did college prepare you for the media industry?

Ward: I was a little different. I worked a full time job while I was in college so I used both of those (college and a job) to bounce off each other which really helped me. Something I was doing at school I would be doing at work so it really helped me to have both of those. For me, it just worked out because it was a better situation that just going to school.

Ashley: What job you have during school?

Ward: Started at channel 12 in Richmond as a teleprompter. By the time I left, I moved up to working assignment desk on weekends. It gave me much more a hand in assignments and stories and being apart of a newsroom. I started editing for shows and that helped me because I had to read every single script so that helped me learn how to write. Then I asked if I could help write scripts and they said yes.

Ashley: What did college not prepare you for in industry?

Ward: The biggest thing it didn’t prepare me for was delivery and appearance. I didn’t have a class where they went over your voice, what you wear, how to look, and your hair/makeup. That was one thing that I gathered from my job. I see so many times where students coming out of college who don’t look professional. Just stuff like the appropriateness for the job. And that’s the news director’s first impression so it’s something to be aware of.

Ashley: What was your first job right out of college?

Ward: My first reporting job in Charlottesville at WCAV, which worked for four stations in one. I was a one-man band and it was tough, really really tough, because you don’t always get the training you need, and you get thrown into the pond. I remember sitting there on Saturday morning and I only had one weekend of training and I had no direction of how to get around Charlottesville. I had a package due at six and I had no idea where I was going. It's sink or swim and so many people get out of the business in their first job because they can’t do it. If you can make it to your second job, I consider it an accomplishment.

Ashley: While you worked in Charlottesville you had many roles such as producer, anchor, photographer, and reporter. What was it like doing so many things for one company and which role did you enjoy the most?

Anchor. I really like reporting but there you do reporting and photography and I was the worst at photography. I would come back with blue, green and orange video (laughs). I could hear my news director in his office saying, “ WHO DID THIS!?”

Ashley: Why you like anchoring the most?

Ward: I think because you connect with the viewers either they love you or they don’t. You really have an opportunity to show them your personality. Whenever you are on the desk you can really connect with your viewers.

Ashley: What was it like being arena host for women’s basketball at UVA? How did you get this job?

Ward: I LOVED that job. It was awesome. In Charlottesville my station was a station for UVA. We had a contract to do certain things like shows on their sports for spring and fall. We basically had certain obligations to them. When they needed a host they asked me and it was great. I REALLY enjoyed it and it was a lot of fun. It was nice because you get to see your viewers outside, and get to meet them and be one-on-one with them. It really shows your personality.

Ashley: What do you believe is a common misconception that people have about working in the media industry?

That you make a lot of money, hands down. They think you make so much money and are wealthy. They look at you like you are ridiculous if you don’t donate to charities, but you don’t have a lot to give.

Ashley: What is the hardest part about the industry in your opinion?

Ward: Just keeping up. It takes a lot out of you… so much out of you. It’s really easy to get burnt out quickly. A lot of people don’t make it past the first job. It takes so much out of you. You realize that you are making very little money and you are working holidays, weekends, giving up a lot of things that may be important to some people. A lot of women don’t make it because if you are anchoring, you are going in at 2:30 p.m and get off at 11:30 p.m. And if you work a morning show, you are going to bed super early. It is just not family friendly.

Ashley: What’s your favorite part about your job?

Ward: I really enjoy anchoring and reporting. Being able to do both. On Friday nights, I have to do sports feature pieces and I really enjoy that because it’s not all serious like sitting in a city council meeting. You're going out and putting together a creative piece. What I enjoy the most is being creative with the job, like writing the video. At our station, we have great photographers who really help you put together some really good stories.

Ashley: Do you have any major goals or future plans?

Ward: Honestly, I have been somebody who has been so goal orientated. Literally there hasn’t been a moment in my life where I haven’t had a goal. Since I have been anchoring here, I haven’t had a goal yet. I have no idea what I want to do beyond this. I just want to get better at anchoring and hopefully our viewers will like it.

Ashley: What advise do you have for aspiring anchors/ reporters?

Ward: One-man band. It makes you better and we made bigger jumps than a lot of the other people at other stations. You are doing so many jobs at one time and if you can still put together a decent tape, they will know you can do multiple tasks. It is the future of this business and it would be silly for graduates who leave college and find a job where they already have photographers because this media is so big into mutli-media journalism.

Monday, October 5, 2009

Interview with Travis Wells

I recently had the opportunity to interview and talk with WDBJ sports anchor and director, Travis Wells. He opened up to me about the media industry and the opportunities and obstacles that he has to face everyday along with some great stories! Travis gets to do it all… write, anchor, produce a sports show, report at sporting events in the community and much, much more! Read my interview below to find out what it is like to work in the sports/media industry!

Perrin: You originally attended JMU and then transferred to Radford in 1986, why did you transfer?

Travis: The biggest reason was for basketball. I was playing basketball at JMU and I was having a blast and enjoying it, but I just wasn’t playing as much as I would have liked. It was just an opportunity to go somewhere and play a little more.

Perrin: Who inspired you to play basketball when you were a kid?

Travis: My dad was and still is a high school basketball coach. I grew up in the gym and was a gym rat – I always had the keys to the gym. We would go in there, I am one of four boys, and we all played for my dad. He was the assistant coach when I was there but by the time I graduated he was the head coach and coached my three younger brothers.

Perrin: Did you like having your dad as a coach?

Travis: Yes and no. It had its advantages and disadvantages. One thing we always tried to do was if there were something going on, if we were going at it a little, we would always try to leave it at the gym. When we went home, it was dinner and family stuff.

Perrin:What life lessons did you learn from playing a college level sport?

Travis: I think just being apart of a team was the biggest thing. I see this a lot everyday, especially in a work place like this. So many people have never been apart of a team. They don’t know what it’s like for everyone to do their part and pull for each other and care for each other to work towards a common goal. I think that was probably the biggest thing, just being apart of a team and rallying around guys who were working just as hard as you for the same goal.

I wrote something on my blog the other day about college football and just how the fans are so passionate. Like at the Alabama/Tech game in Atlanta a few weeks ago, oh my gosh! And to see the Tech people last week in the pouring rain and they stayed until the end. And the Nebraska game a few weeks ago, all the people that they brought 2,000 miles from Nebraska. Just passion that people have. I’ve always said if you are passionate about something in your life, no matter what it is, just be passionate about it.

Perrin: And how hard was it to manage academics and play ball?

Travis: It wasn’t that tough, I was always pretty conscience about schoolwork and the books. They go out of their way to help you as far as having academic advisors. Some guys needed them and some guys didn’t. We would have study halls on the road and things like that. To me, it wasn’t that difficult.

Perrin: What was your motivation to become a sports anchor? And when did you realize it?

Travis: I always knew I wanted to do something sports related. In high school, I wrote for the school paper doing sports articles and things like that. I played college sports but I wasn’t under any grand allusions about playing professional sports because I knew I didn’t have that kind of talent. So I sort of knew after college was the end of the road and I had to find a real job. This was a way for me to stay close to the game and stay close to sports and that was appealing to me.

Perrin: What was your first media job/internship out of college?

Travis: The summers between my junior and senior years at Radford I did an internship here (WDBJ) for about three months. I started in the middle of June and was done by the end of August when school started. That was good to get my feet wet and see if this was something I wanted to do and was cut out for. The guys that I worked with here were great, none of them are here anymore but they are all still in town and I call them from time to time. But we’ve got a great group of guys in here now.

My first TV job after college was here. There was a part-time photographer position open and that really wasn’t what I wanted to do. I wanted to obviously do sports but these guys back here convinced me that this was a way for me to get my foot in the door. To be honest, it wasn’t a lot of fun just covering news, but for some people, that is their thing. I mean I had to cover a fatal car wreck, school board meetings, city council meetings and fires and I was like, where is the fun stuff? So I was part-time for a year and then there was an opening in our Lynchburg office for a full-time photographer with benefits, so I went down and worked there for a year. That was even tougher because it was just you and that one other person working in that office. My first on-air job was in Charlottesville at WVIR and I went there as the third sports person, reporter/photographer. I went there for three years and then left and went to Bristol to work for WCYB. Then I came back here (WDBJ) when Roy passed away.

Perrin: Describe how you felt when you heard you were getting promoted to Sports Director at WDBJ.

Travis: It was pretty overwhelming at first because, I think the biggest thing was, I didn’t think Mike would ever leave. Mike had been here for so long and having worked with him for almost seven years, I knew what kind of responsibility came with the job. I knew all the work that went into it, especially in the fall when you are trying to produce stuff for your daily news cast and get ready for a half-hour show every Friday night. The TV stuff I’m fine with but it’s all the extra stuff like scheduling these guys (other employees in the studio) and figuring out who gets off when and stuff like that. It’s been just over a year and I’m finally getting the hang of it and starting to feel more comfortable.

Perrin: What is a common misconception that you think people have about working in the media industry?

Travis: That you make a lot of money (laughs). Like I said, I was a naïve kid in college and thought TV people made a lot of money. I mean there are some anchors that have been here for 20-30 years and they do make a lot of money but it doesn’t really start out like that. I think another misconception is that when people see us on the news at six and eleven, they think that is the only time we are at work.

Perrin: What are some tough obstacles that you have to face in the media industry?

Travis: I think one thing, and I found out this in the last year, you are not going to please everyone 100 percent of the time. We catch a lot of flack around here for covering Tech and not UVA, just things like that. Even with the high school stuff. Everyone wants more coverage for their team. Sometimes I will come in here on Mondays and I will have 30 emails from unhappy people. So just trying to manage that. Also, I think the economy has been a tough obstacle. We used to be able to travel as much as we wanted but everything is sort of looked at a little closer now. We ask if this is something that we really need to do, is it in a ratings period and what do we get out of it. So that’s been sort of a challenge the past three to four years.

Perrin: What else do you do in the studio besides anchor? Write stories/recaps?

Travis: We do everything which is one thing that is unique about the sports office and not always true about the newsroom. All three of us can shoot, report, anchor, write and produce the show. And I like that because if I screw up, I don’t have anyone to blame but myself.

Perrin: Describe what an average day is like for you.

Travis: I’ll get in the studio around two in the afternoon and start producing the show for five and six o’clock, which is about three to four hours before we actually air. I mean these guys are great, who ever is anchoring, we kind of take care of each other. We will edit and write stuff for each other so it is not such a burden on one person. I’ll get out of here around 6:30 for a couple hours for dinner and to see my kids before they go to bed and then come back in here around 8:30. After the show ends around 11:30, I’d love to go home right then but there is stuff to do after the show ends. We tape two segments for the morning show every night so by the time I’m finished that it’s about midnight. Then I’ll come back here and update the Internet and stuff like that so the earliest I am ever out of here is 12:30.

Perrin: What is advice that you would give to someone looking to become a sports anchor?

Travis: That’s a tough one. I think just network as much as you can and make as many connections as you can. Be yourself and be passionate about it. If you really want to do it, it’s not going to be easy, but just stick with it.

Perrin: Do you think it is more challenging for a female to become a sports anchor/director? Why/Why not?

Travis: Not now, no. Twenty years ago I would have said yes but not anymore. There are more and more female sportscasters and I think the main reason for that is people want to target that demographic. They want women to watch sports. I don’t want to say it’s easier or women don’t have to work as hard as guys but there are more opportunities now.

Perrin: Who do you consider are the standouts in the industry and why?

Travis: Wow, that’s a tough question. Mike Tirico is really good. You can tell the guys and girls that are really prepared because they just know their stuff. I was watching something on ESPN the other day and John Clayton was talking about the NFL and I was thinking that guy knew his stuff backwards and forwards. I had a guy tell me one time, “sell it don’t tell it”. You can tell when people have done their research just by their delivery and confidence.

Perrin: What is your favorite part of your job?

Travis: I think probably the people and just the relationships that are you able to build and maintain. That’s one thing I learned from Mike because he was really big on relationships. In this small community people don’t want to hear about the Yankees who play over 100 games. They want to hear what’s going on in their community so I think just building relationships and credibility with people. It’s cool to go up to Tech on a Saturday and your interviewing guys after the game, you see the mob around Tyrod Taylor. But it’s cool to sit back and let it fade out a little bit and get in there and talk to him. All the guys get used to seeing us and it’s hard when they leave! Like last year when Macho graduated it was like man, we were buddies! But I guarantee if I went to go shoot an Eagles game and walked into the locker room, Macho would say, “Hey what’s up man?”

Perrin: Is it harder to get a job doing sports rather than just the regular news?

Travis: It’s all pretty competitive. Sports are probably tougher now in this day and age because of the de-emphasis in the economy. People are cutting back and sports are usually the first thing to go because a lot of people don’t see it as a necessity.

Perrin: What would make me stand out from the thousands of other aspiring sports anchors?

Travis: Just be yourself and be conversational. Go in and have fun and let it all hang out. That’s one thing I have been trying to work on too. When I’m out in the field doing live shots, I’m pretty relaxed but it was not always like that. I mean you better know what you are going to say because there is no teleprompter. I try to have more fun with my anchoring because it is hard when you are just sitting there to show personality, which is something that I need to work on.

Perrin: What are some cool opportunities that you have had because of your job?

Travis: I’ve had a lot of opportunities. One was covering the national championship that Tech played in – the Sugar Bowl in 1999-2000. I get to go to the bowl games and races and stuff like that. They usually set tickets aside for the media’s family, which is nice, but they are not free.

Perrin: How do you decide what to wear for each show / event?

Travis: They expect you to wear a suit and tie when you are on the set anchoring but it is much more laid back when you are out.

Perrin: What do you like about your profession and what don't you like about your profession?

Travis: I think the biggest thing I like is developing the relationships and meeting the people and telling their stories. Even if they don’t know you, I want them to come away saying, wow he is a nice guy. As far as the things I don’t like, I’ve worked with a lot of people who have been in the business for the wrong reasons. So many people in this business have their egos get in the way and they just want to be on TV. So that’s probably what I dislike the most.

Perrin: Are you able to spend a decent amount of time with your family?

Travis: Yeah, I think so. You do what you have to. There are sacrifices obviously. I worked weekends for 8 years and that was tough because my wife was off weekends. Now, I have more weekends off but I usually don’t get to be at home at night so there are tradeoffs. You do what you have to.

Perrin: What do you enjoy to do in your free time?

Travis: I like to read, play golf, and work out.

Perrin: Where do you like to vacation?

Travis: We have gone to Myrtle Beach since I was knee high. But twice in the last four years we have been able to go to Hawaii because my wife won these incentive based sales trips. So this last year was the third time we went because we went to Hawaii on our honeymoon and we stayed three doors down from the place we stayed during our honeymoon, so that was kind of neat. Hawaii is my dream vacation and it will never get old.

Saturday, October 3, 2009

Interview with Reporter Candice Nelson

Although I never even thought about going into reporting before this interview, after talking with WSLS 10 Reporter Candice Nelson I am truly thinking of another career path. Her inspiring interview helped me understand all the aspects of the news-reporting field. Read on to find out about Candice’s life and some tips she gave on the news broadcasting industry.

Ashley: What inspired you to want to go into reporting?

Candice: I think it probably started when I was in fourth grade when I participated in 4H public speaking competitions, which ultimately led to my interest in reporting. In high school I took a TV production class, where they would have us go out and do packages. I expanded my experience in college by working for the Colligate Times newspaper and then became interested in VTTV. It was my Electronic News Gathering class, where we did newscasts weekly, that kept me going toward reporting as a career.

Ashley: Did you have any reporters/anchors you looked up to as a kid?

Candice: I really just looked up to the local anchors that were in my area because you could watch them every night and see them reporting on things relative to my community. People like John Carlin and Karen McNew were two in particular that I looked up to, and now I am working with them. Even though John has since retired, I had the privilege to learn from him prior to his leaving the air.

Nationally I have always looked up to Katie Couric. I was aware she went to UVA, where I also wanted to attend...but they didn't have a Communications program, which prompted me to apply to VT in my senior year of high school. Accepted at both UVA and VT – I decided that I just loved the campus at VT and the fact that they had a program in place that interested me that I chose to attend VT.

-What about them did you admire?

I think their integrity is what I admire most about all the reporters looked up to over the years.

Ashley: I read on your website you like baton twirling. What made you get into that and are you still doing that today?

Candice: I started out as a dancer when I was three years old. It just happened that they had baton twirling so I tried it and liked it. I competed starting when I was 12 and did it up until my freshman year of high school. I also twirled for the Marching Virginians here at Tech. But no I don’t do it anymore; there really is no other place to do it even though I wish I could. I still have the baton in my living room and will walk around and twirl in the privacy of my own home.

-What other activities do you like to do?

I love to read. I am one of those people that can go into Barnes and Noble and stay there for hours just reading. I also love movies. I will admit I am not much of an exerciser and, in fact, I hate exercising. However, I am trying to get intro running and I just started it last week, so we will see how that goes.

Ashley: So you were in VTTV and Colligate Times, how involved were you in them and what did you do?

Candice: I worked with Colligate Times either my sophomore or junior year and I believe I wrote about five or six stories. I was trying to get an internship at a local newspaper in Martinsville, Virginia so I used that experience to get my foot in the door and happily I got that internship. I was involved with VTTV from freshman to junior year. During that time I did Tech Tonight, the newscast, and I did some anchoring and reporting. Senior year I stopped doing VTTV and did the ENG class at Virginia Tech, which was very time consuming.

Ashley: What did college not prepare you for in your industry?

Candice: The number one thing that college did not prepare me for was how to make contacts in the industry. Being connected is a huge deal and probably the hardest thing I had to face when I got into the business. You really rely on your contacts, like maybe your one contact in the police department or fire department to let you know what is going on. That’s something I wished they pushed more in classes.

-How did you overcome that obstacle?

It’s a business where every single day you have to turn a story in and you have to make a deadline. It’s a challenge every single day and some days are better than others but when things go bad, you have to keep making those calls and forget what happened the day before. It’s completely different from any other business.

Ashley: While you were an intern for WSLS did you have any memorable or exciting stories to cover?

Candice: Oh yes! When I was an intern I got to go to on this really big forest fire down in Patrick County located on Bull Mountain. That was one of the biggest experiences I had as an intern. Typically when you’re an intern you just follow someone out to an interview but on weekends, when I worked, there was only one reporter to follow so wherever they went I went too. The fire ended up burning thousands of acres and was a really big story to cover especially since it happened on Easter Sunday. The most exciting part was that we got to put all the firefighting gear on and see them fighting the fires first hand.

Ashley: You were here for the April 16, 2007 tragedy. What was that experience like being a reporter at the time and did you cover any part of it?

Candice: I was a senior intern at the time. I covered a little bit of it. It was the same time of year as all these bomb threats were going on, so someone called into the studio and said there had been a shooting and at first we were like ehh we will put in a few calls and see what happens, but no one was taking it seriously because nothing was confirmed. The biggest story that day, if April 16th had not happened, was the wind because the wind was really really bad that day. So I was sent on wind patrol and I had to go find down trees and go to the schools because school was being let out since there was no power they could not make lunches and such. So that was my morning, and while I was doing that, I called my boyfriend who was here as an engineering student in the building connected to Norris Hall to see what was going on. He was talking about how they heard gunshots but maybe it was just constructed and said that everyone was just staying low that day because they were unsure. After I finished my story about the wind, I called my assignment director to let him know and he was like, “ Candice I don’t care just get back to the station right now.” And I was like, “ Oh so it has been confirmed.” And he said, “ Yeah just get here now.” So I went back to the station, and they just had me making phone calls to people I knew to see if they would talk to us. We tried to get them to call in, because we were on the whole time, we did not do just a 6 o’clock news, we just stayed live all day, and wanted to see if they would talk about what happened.

Ashley: Do you come up with your own story ideas to report on or do you have someone to help you?

Candice: Yeah, that’s another hard part about it because they expect you to come in every morning and you have to have a story to pitch. Some days you will come in and they will be like,” Candice I want you to go cover this.” Its probably 50/50 as far as them wanting you to go on your own or giving you stories.

-How do you find the stories to do?

It’s a mixture of contacts. Sometimes when we go out on assigned stories someone will come up us and say “hey, you're with channel 10 - I have another story idea for you.” So sometimes it’s about being in the public eye, but mainly the stories we do require a follow up. Its different every single day and you have to come up with something concrete every single day.

Ashley: Describe an average day working at WSLS 10.

Candice: I have a really weird schedule. I work nights on Mondays and Tuesdays, which are 2:30 pm to 11:30 pm; Friday, Saturday, Sunday 9 a.m to 6 p.m. If I work days I come in at 9:00 am attend a 9:30 am meeting for story pitch. You have to pitch your story hard because you want to do that story for the day. So when they give you the go ahead, you get moving. What’s so great about this business is you do your story and you don’t have someone looking over your shoulder the entire time. It’s pretty nice having free reign.

If I am on the 5 o’clock show, we want to get back in time so I can log through the sound bites, and what they means is looking through the tape and finding the quotes I want and choosing the time is on the tape. Editors usually have a about an hour to fix it up and get it ready to air. It can be hectic, but fun to see your story aired.

Ashley: How time consuming is your job?

Candice: Really time consuming. I work 9:00 am to 6:00 pm on days and 2:30 pm to 11:30 pm when I work nights. I don’t really get a time set aside for lunch or dinner since we have competition of channel 7 there is always that pressure of them getting the story we didn’t. I’m lucky I am not a teacher, because I don’t have homework each night when I get home, but I’m really busy during the day and it goes by really fast.

Ashley: What is the hardest part about the industry?

Candice: Right now, the challenge is that the industry is currently changing. It used to be that people would sit down to watch their 6 o’clock news, but right now because of the Internet, people want access to news all the time instead. Can you blame them? The hardest part about that is we have the deadline for the newscast we are in but we also have to get it to the web asap. You’re trying to get all the information to the web guy and he is posting everything but it’s a tug-a-war because its like what do the viewers want? Do you want to get it to the newscast first or to the web and tip of the competition so they can get it to the 6 o’clock. So I think that is defiantly the hardest part right now.

Ashley: What if your favorite part about your job?

Candice: Meeting people. I am one of those people that can’t just sit in an office all day. I love getting out of the office. The bad part about it is if it’s snowing outside and they want you out there at 5 a.m, but its still about being out and about and meeting the public.

Ashley: What is your most memorable moment you have had since you have been working at WSLS 10.

Candice: I have several. I have been here 2 years and the favorite story happened a little over a year ago. It happened in February 2008, and while it was a beautiful Sunday the wind was really bad. People were riding on 4-wheelers whose engines were sparking as they rode the trails, which ignited some forest fires, but really there everything was contributing because the wind was so bad. Our crew went out to the forest and the wind was so bad that it blew a limb out in front of us and it gave us a flat tire. We were stuck because we didn’t have a spare. So we had to call another photographer to come get us, but when he came to us the forest fire jumped the road and he got held back. He eventually got to us and on our way back the fire jumped the road again and we had to find other ways home. When we got back to the station that night, it was almost like a weekday because everyone was called in to cover all the stories related to the fires. It was just one of those days you were just so excited that so much was going on.

My most memorable was the homestead shootings that happened back in March (WHAT YEAR?) A man named Beacher Hackney, whom they still have not found, shot and killed two of his co-workers at the Hot Springs Resort. We went around and followed the police looking for this guy through the woods with their weapons drawn. This type of experience sticks in your mind a little bit because you don’t know where he is and are exposing yourself to danger.

- Early we talked about the shootings of David Lee Letzler and Heidi Lynn Child, here is what Candice had to say in relation to this story…

I think with what happened with the two Virginia tech students, David and Heidi, touched me more then any other story I have done. Mainly because they were a Virginia tech couple innocently out at Caldwell Field, and I have been there myself with my boyfriend, since he is a hunter. And they still have not found who did it.

- Did you cover any part of this story?

I was not at the crime scene part but I covered the funerals. I also went out to the little ice cream shop they both used to work at and I talked to the manager there. She talked about how good they were and gave us a glimpse into their lives. Ultimately, it was one of the hardest stories I ever had to cover. I remember coming in that weekend and I just sat at my desk and cried – so very emotional.

-Is it hard, the stories where you have to cover deaths?

Yes. When you have to talk to the family because its expected as part of your job its one of the hardest responsibilities of the job. You never get used to covering these stories because you hate to be the one to go up and knock on the family's door. Sometimes you go to the door and the family wants to talk because they want you to know about the real person the deceased was, but other times they yell at you and ask you to leave.

Ashley:Do you have any major goals or future plans?

Candice: A lot of people ask me if I ever want to be an anchor and it is one of those questions that I am not really sure. There is something about going out and getting a story, meeting the people involved and putting the story together into a finished project, rather than just reporting the news.

Long-term plans, I would really like to teach journalism one day.

Ashley: What advice do you have for aspiring reporters?

Candice: Because the competition to get into this industry is so hard, especially with the way the economy is right now, you have more competition for jobs. I don't think I can stress enough to get as much experience as you can. Intern with a company for the field that interests you the most - because newspaper and broadcasting for example are so different. Also I would say, a lot of students try to intern at ABC, NBC and the big places and you don’t really get that much experience. So I would suggest go to a medium size market and they give you a whole lot more that you can do and add to resume tape and show off.