Asteroid Probe to land in Australia

By REBECCA BAKER

After travelling almost 2 billion kilometres to reach its destination on asteroid Itokawa, the spacecraft Hayabusa is due to land at the Woomera Prohibited Area in South Australia on Sunday night, carrying what scientists hope to be the first ever sample from an asteroid.

http://www.australiangeographic.com.au/journal/asteroid-probe-to-land-in-australia.htm

Sydney Olympic Park

This is my second attempt at using Photoshop. The text in the layout is simply for show, so it doesn’t make a lot of sense, it comes from a research paper which i had to hand in prior to this assignment for Image Photomedia (a first year subject I’m taking as an elective, the idea of the final assignment (below) was to create an 8 page magazine spread).

Anyway, let me know what you think!

Realisations of a Journalism Student

It’s my first day. I’m nervous, but calm.

I park in the ‘editorial’ section, thinking to myself, i seriously hope i didn’t just take someone’s spot. The wall above my bonnet seems to be unlabeled, unlike the others, so i carry on, walking into the building and asking the receptionist to tell the editor that I’ve arrived. I was escorted in by, funnily enough a former student of my high school who’s now a photographer at the paper. They say your only twice removed from someone you know in Wagga, so I guess its not that surprising really.  My nerves settle a little. I meet the editor and some of the journalists and photographers, then sit down at my desk and twiddle my thumbs before realizing I’m meant to be reading today’s paper before some sort of meeting.

Realisation #1, university doesn’t prepare you for anything. You can know how to write, this doesn’t mean you will know what to expect.

As I sit there feeling a bit out of place and forcing myself to ‘think professional’ the editor comes storming into the room and hurls a piece of paper at a young photographer by my side.
“What’s this s&*t!?!” he says thrusting the paper towards the block of desks where we we’re both sitting.
“What?” the photographer replies looking puzzled at the photo now in his hand.
“What the hell is this?” the editor says pointing at the caption, “…. It’s ‘quirm’ is it then? How do you spell his name?
“That’s the spelling he gave me, that’s what he said,” the photographer defends himself.

“His names QUINN!!” He mumbles to himself….”bloody ‘quirm’” Then turns again and says…”it’s QUINN!!!!”
“Oh…opps”, the mistake is realised.
“Yeah well just get it right ok!” he yells as he leaves.

It’s my first day. I’m nervous….and no longer calm.

Realisations #2 firstly, don’t piss of the editor. Secondly, photographers are, undeservedly, at the bottom of the food chain.

I’m in the meeting with the journalists, photographers and the editors who are painfully disinterested in my presence, and it shows. I don’t want a big hug and a teddy, but a simple hello would suffice. The only one who seems interested in my being there is the group editor, who seems to like me. The photographers seem to be glad of someone who is genuinely appreciative of their work, or it could be my heels and tight pants. Whatever the reason, I’m glad I’m not alone.

Realisation #3 Every office is different, but a work experience person seems to be an inconvenience at first no matter how hard you try or how much you want to learn.

Throughout the meeting I’m handed clips of paper and delegated stories and media releases with events to attend. I’m freaking out. Asking myself if I’ve got what it takes.  The editor has faith in me…but based on what? A cover letter and a phone call? I pause in the moment, wondering if this is the path which will lead me to the point where I’ll have to ask distraught mother to ‘cry again for me’ into the camera because the batteries were low on the mic and we didn’t get the sound, all for the sake of ratings. Or will I have to burn someone’s business (hypothetically speaking) because of some silly rumour which had become ‘evident’ just to ‘up’ paper circulations?
I take the stories and do my best, skipping lunch just to make sure.

Realisation #4 writing is enjoyable, it really is. Writing what you don’t want to write, well….isn’t. (Obvious I know)

Day one is down. I return to work early the next day anxious to know if my writing was good enough to make it to the press.  I open the paper, and there on page 3 with a delicious bi-line a colour picture and all 300 words of my story slaps me in the face. I start celebrating in my head, I yell ‘YOU BLOODY BEAUTY’ and start break dancing, safely in my head. Ok, so it’s a local paper, so it’s only 300 words, but this little victory meant that not only was it good enough, but I’M good enough, AND university did teach me something which means my HECS debt has been put to good use, there is hope for me yet!
Over the next week, and to my amazement I was able to get almost 20 pieces of work published.
I did a lot of dancing in my head that week.

Realisation #5 be grateful… writing something is better than writing nothing at all.

The next day, the meeting was full of profanity, racist comments, political incorrectness and cancer jokes. These are nice people, but just….well journalists. They think differently, but in the end they’re just people. I don’t really want to be like them, but it’s the career I’ve chosen, I’m in my final year of uni so what do I do? Well, after reading the articles they’ve joked about I guess they get it all out of their system so when they write something which will be published it’s nice and clean and relatively neutral, this is generally the result anyway.

Realisation #6 if you have strong ethical values, learn to look at journalism as the ‘business of information sharing’.

So does it even matter what journalists write? I think just as long as it’s useful to someone somewhere, it’s worth it. Is this useful to you, or simply enjoyable? Is that why you’re reading on? By now I assume that this far down the article you’re either interested, waiting for the dentist or my mum. All in all, you will have to write about things you don’t want to write about to get where you want to go.

Realisation #7 learn to love writing the B grade stories till you can make the A grades.

Although I enjoyed my weeks work experience I’ve realised my passion does not lie in local news, and that’s ok. Which is good, I achieved what I set out to do, that is, find out what I like. I’ve discovered making something out of nothing isn’t all it’s cracked up to be, I don’t want to write about Mrs Miggins cat stuck up a tree which is promptly turned into a police investigation because of the local paper’s embellishments. I want truth; I want science, history and knowledge…certainly not fibs and rumors. Most of all, I want adventure, I want to be challenged. But not the, ‘go and do a vox pop and talk to delusional people who want to tell you their life story in the hope that it will get on the front page’ kind of challenge. I want real adventure. I want rough, below zero, one hundred miles an hour, dirty, scary, real life journalism.

Lucky for me I’m now one of Australian Geographic’s interns for June/July.
In saying all this I do realise that they won’t send me to the Antarctic on my first day, but I will certainly be glad to be part of something a bit bigger and better than the local newspapers and my wordpress site (no offense Mr WordPress-you are truly wonderful for insomniacs!)

Realisation #8 Make the coffee’s till you can write about where the beans come from. (Or maybe even go there one day)

UWS Funding

Print is not dead

By REBECCA BAKER

THE Australian Press Council has revealed that tabloids are in decline, but broadsheet circulations have risen.

A press conference was held earlier this morning* for the University of Western Sydney’s journalism students, where they were able to discuss issues within the print media.

Jack R Herman, a former school teacher and executive secretary for the Australian Press Council expressed optimism to students regarding tabloids, broadsheets and the future of their careers.

Mr Herman recalls people confronting him, “They said, ‘Don’t you realise print is dead…you’re going to be there for five years and there aren’t going to be newspapers anymore.’ ”

The State of the News Print Media publication looks at long term trends in Australia.

“There will be the need for journalists for some time. [They’re] asking journalists to produce more with fewer staff” Herman explains.

It was also revealed that people’s interests in niche markets and internet newspapers have risen.

“Readers are very content conscious; newspapers that have a reliable content are more likely to retain readers” He explains,  quality is now the priority.

*Wednesday 2nd September 2009 (this story was written for Investigative Journalism last semester- i have rewritten it for online- thought it was ironic that the story is basically saying ‘print is not dead’ and yet i’m uploading this to the web! hmm)

Previous Older Entries

Find me on…

Find me on…

Sydney House Sitters

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.