Friday, February 16, 2007
Life of a Mentee, Part 3
As if this wasn’t enough, Joel e-mailed me later that day and gave me the contact number of a friend of his who works for Comcast SportsNet here in Washington. This contact would be able to spend more time talking to me about the business of television journalism. Thanks to the Mentoring program, I’m really able to expand my knowledge and learn more about the media world. This will allow me to apply for more jobs in diverse fields in the coming weeks.
Next week Josh is going to help me put my tape together and he has already given me lots of advice on how to shoot it and what it needs. With all the help, and criticism, I receive from Josh and Joel, I hope to have a great tape to send out to potential employers.
Thursday, February 1, 2007
Life of a Mentee Part 2
Welcome back, I’ve got exciting news. After a few days of playing e-mail tag, I spoke to my mentor, Joel for the first time. It was very exciting to finally make contact with the person who I had worked so hard to be able to talk to. We weren’t able to talk for long, I had to go to class, but it was a basic getting to know you talk. He actually vacations near where I live in upstate
He told me about going to AU and from there working at the NBC station down the road, working for the George Michael Sports Machine and produced it a few years out of college. He has covered four Olympics, sumo wrestling in
Now while he is more involved in the day-to-day operations of WCBS in
Thanks to my internship at the Redskins and seeing television works, I’ve decided not to just solely focus on radio, and instead expand my options to include TV. Josh and I have talked about putting together a tape of my work to send out to stations across the country, and with Josh’s on-air experience combined with Joel’s knowledge of the industry, I should have a big advantage when it comes to getting a job when I graduate in May.
Well that’s it for this blog entry, I’ll be talking to Joel on Tuesday when he gets back from the Super Bowl. Joel hass gone to 14 but this will be the first one he’s just watch, not working like he usually does. I’ll talk to you then.
Life of a Mentee Part 1
Since 2002, the
My name is Jordan Beane, I’m a senior here in the
Luckily I was accepted along with 75 other people. I was extremely excited to find out who my mentor is. My mentor is Joel Goldberg, Senior Vice President of Station Operations at WCBS, CBS’
I plan on going into the field of sports broadcasting, the field that Joel came out of earlier in his career. In his past he produced the nationally syndicated George Michael’s Sports Machine, as well as covering four Olympics for NBC before he moved on to CBS.
As someone who’s graduating in a matter of months, the ability to talk to someone who’s done what I want to do will be an invaluable resource. Joel is going to be a big help, looking at the media package I’ll be sending out to potential employers, advice on the sports communication industry, and just someone out there who I know in the field.
Besides having Joel in my corner, I also have “unofficial” mentor at my current internship with the Washington Redskins. Josh Chernikoff, one of the anchors on Washington Redskins.com TV, who’s a member of the Alumni-Student Mentoring Committee plus a mentor himself, got me my internship with the ‘Skins. He’s been a great help to me at
The main reason I started this blog is so that people out there know what the SOC Alumni-Student Mentoring Program is all about. While I’ve been hearing about it for over three years now, I was shocked at the meeting at which we received our mentors to see so few undergrads there. It seems to me that this program has such value for SOC undergrads that someone should write about it so that people everywhere will see how it works. I hope this blog will be interesting and informative, and that both potential mentors and mentees will see what a difference it can make.