SPJ Guest Lecture: RonNell Andersen Jones

Come one, come all to the SPJ-BYU guest lecture this Thursday!

Thursday, February 18 @ 11:00 a.m.
Brimhall Building atrium

RonNell Andersen Jones will lend her epxertise to the fierce national debate over whether reporters should have to hand over their confidential sources to the government. Ask your communications professors about receiving extra credit for attendance! Refreshments will be served.

Jones is an associate professor of law at Brigham Young University’s J. Reuben Clark Law School, where she teaches constitutional law, First Amendment, and media law.
After graduating first in her law school class, Professor Jones clerked for the Honorable William A. Fletcher on the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals and for Justice Sandra Day O’Connor on the United States Supreme Court. Before entering academia, she was an attorney in the appellate division of Jones Day, where her work focused on Supreme Court litigation and included major constitutional and First Amendment cases.

A former newspaper reporter and editor, Professor Jones researches and writes on legal issues affecting the press and on the intersection between media and the courts. She is a regular presenter at media law conferences and served as the director of the 2007 Media Subpoena Study, a nationwide study of the frequency and impact of subpoenas served upon newspapers and television newsrooms. Her work on the project has been featured in the New York Times, the Washington Post and USA Today, as well as on MSNBC, Fox News and National Public Radio.

Professor Jones team-teaches with Justice O’Connor an annual course about the United States Supreme Court at the University of Arizona, where Professor Jones was a Distinguished Faculty Fellow from 2004 to 2008.

Wii Love Journalism Semester Kickoff

Wii Love Journalism

SPJ semester kickoff

Thursday Feb. 4 @ 6:30 PM in BRMB Atrium

Play Wii. Eat pizza. Decorate cookies.
Learn why you should journalism too.

Also, I found this nifty infographic portraying the biggest news stories of 2009. Check it out!

Q & A with John Hughes

BYU Society of Professional Journalists presents...

Q & A with
John Hughes


Former editor, The Christian Science Monitor
Former assistant secretary-general, United Nations

Thursday Nov. 19
11 a.m. • 107 JSB

Refreshments will be provided by
Flour Girls & Dough Boys Bakery

Please come with questions!

John Hughes
was editor of the Deseret Morning News in Salt Lake City from 1997 to 2006, and returned to BYU as a professor of communications in 2007. He is a Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist and former editor of The Christian Science Monitor.

Hughes has also served as U.S. assistant secretary of state and as assistant secretary-general of the United Nations, and he has chaired presidential and congressional commissions on international broadcasting.

Born in Wales and educated in England, Hughes served for six years as the Monitor’s Africa correspondent and six years as Far East correspondent before serving for nine years as the paper’s editor. For three of those years he was both editor and publisher.

He was a Nieman Fellow at Harvard, and he won the Pulitzer Prize for his coverage of Indonesia and the Overseas Press Club award for an investigation into the international narcotics traffic. He is a former president of the American Society of Newspaper Editors. Hughes has written two books and writes a nationally-syndicated column for The Christian Science Monitor.

Internship show-and-tell & chili extravaganza!

Thanks all who came, presented, and brought food for our activity last night. Here are some highlights from our awesome presenters:

Sara interned with the Deseret News over the summer, and she is now working there—way to go! She had a lot of great advice to offer. For example, if you’re not understanding what your interviewee is talking about, she suggests asking something like, “Can you explain a little more so I can explain this to the average reader?” And want to impress your editors with great story ideas? Check out Poynter’s Al’s Morning Meeting blog, which has a roundup of story ideas that you could localize.

Steve, who is double majoring in journalism and political science, started an online magazine, Rhombus, this summer. Since then, they’ve been getting about 6,000 hits a month. The objective, Steve said, is to fill a need for more meaningful content to young people in Utah Valley. Definitely, check out Rhombus. As the About page says, “it may not cure cancer, but it will at least make life more interesting.” Also, Steve and his team are always looking for good contributors—contact them at rhombusmag@gmail.com.

Heather told us about her internship with the Church magazines, where she worked on articles for the Liahona and news of the Church. She emphasized that it’s helpful to name drop. But how do you name drop properly? She recommends doing it in your cover letter; you can write something like “I am eager to learn more about this internship, since I have already heard many wonderful things from your previous intern, [name].” Heather also suggested learning as much as you can about the organization you’re applying for. She talked to friends who had already had the internship, and got tips about what interview questions to prepare for. Her preparation definitely paid off, since she got the internship that had more than 300 students apply.

Adam told us about some of his experiences working for BYU Broadcasting. (Remember, SPJ is for broadcasters, too!) He emphasized the value of networking—it’s who you know that counts. He also said that being willing to take on projects that others don’t want shows employers that you’re a hard worker. For Adam, that meant several promotions!

Emily did an internship in New York and while she was there, she took a food writing class at NYU. She recommends taking any opportunity to experience journalism outside of BYU. “Anything you can do to expand your horizons is great,” she said. Also, the uniqueness of the food writing class has already helped Emily. She says that it’s been great to include it on her résumé, because it’s always a great conversation starter during job interviews!

Also, McKay provided a handout with information on a variety of internship opportunities throughout the U.S. Comment on this post if you’d like to get that info!

ALSO also, we are going to have a letter-writing activity for fundraising soon ... be excited!

November Activity: Internships!

Hi friends and members!

SPJ is holding a November acitivty and all out invited to attend! There will be dinner and presentations by communications students who have completed various interships throughout the world! This is a great opportunity to learn about the internship requirement for many communications majors. We hope all can come; it is going to be a great night!

Details:
What: SPJ Internship Show and Tell + Chili Dinner
When: November 11th, 7:30 PM
Where: 2nd floor atrium of the Brimhall Building, BYU Campus


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This week's conversation: Rising from the ashes

Today's New York Times has a story on a journalist from the late Rocky Mountain News who has risen from the ashes, pulled himself up by the bootstraps, and possibly conquered other hackneyed metaphors. He bought a newspaper.

After losing his job with the closing of the Rocky Mountain News in February 2009, former Washington correspondent M. E. Sprengelmeyer moved to New Mexico and is now the "owner, publisher, editor, primary writer and sometime ad salesman, photographer and deliverer of the weekly Guadalupe County Communicator, circulation about 2,000."

Apparently Sprengelmeyer has several part-time employees, and he has some of his former colleagues do freelance for the paper.

"It’s the Tom Sawyer business plan: I’m trying to convince all my friends how much fun it would be to help me," Mr. Sprengelmeyer told the Times.

For those about to stick with journalism even though your former paper folded (pun intended), we salute you.