mic_check said:
RadioGirl89 said:
Hello! Thanks both of you for your honesty and insiteful posts!

Hmmm, all that is interesting stuff. Mic_check I am not getting my degree in communications, I'm getting my degree in broadcast journalism.

As far as radio/small markets go, that's all interesting stuff. Honestly though, I've tried other fields- from Psychology to Socialwork, and I've found that they aren't what I want to do, that said, radio has always been a passion of mine- right now I don't care where I go, as long as I'm working somewhere-toi know? I'm hoping that by the time I get out of school, this economy will inproove- making jobs in radio inproove. (cause I honestly can't see myself on TV) but if I have to- I'll do it. I was thinking about actually attending grad school for communications- just to have something to fall back on in case radio does not work out. Thanks for your posts, I do appreciate them.
Amber.
Broadcast journalism and communications is the same thing just a different name for the professor. Amber, chase your passion. Just take our comments as what we see in the industry everyday. Im still in radio. I've left and came back. I love what I do, but "it is what it is." I came into the industry with the same zeal you have and learned VERY QUICKLY it isnt what I saw on the outside lookin in. I work in the talk radio side of the industry and when I first got in the industry I was ALL about bein a jock. Never got that chance and dont miss it. You'll find your spot if you stay vigilent. You just have to eat in the meantime. It's kinda odd, I get offended when someone assumes i'm a dj. Guess that's the talk host in me.
mic_check, you are mistaken about BJ and Comms being the same thing. Communications is about the art (and yes, they consider it an "art") of crafting a message designed to benefit a client/product/service. Broadcast journalism is the "who, what, where, when, why and how" of a story - the facts. Communications cherry-picks facts in order to push an image. (Of course, that's what most so-called "journalists" do today, but that's a topic for another board, and I digress.)
My first major was journalism, and I learned all facets of reporting (print, radio, and TV), while also being cautioned against putting out copy that sounded like a press release. Granted, many journalists have gone into communications, but it's not truly the same thing. If you truly believe in facts and the truth, journalism is as different from comms as night is from day.