Sentences with phrase «years as a newspaper reporter»

After a few years as a newspaper reporter following college I learned to fly in Seattle (paid for the whole thing) then followed my helicopter dreams to the East Bay area if California, the Sacramento Valley, Â the flashy lights of Vegas, and into the trenches of Los Angeles.
Dane Stickney, Alternative Licensure Instructor Dane transitioned into the classroom after 10 years as a newspaper reporter.
Norman Draper spent 35 years as a newspaper reporter in Minneapolis; Denver and Colorado Springs, Colorado; and Jackson, Mississippi before leaving journalism in 2011.

Not exact matches

Newspaper reporter was ranked as the worst job for the third year running, and broadcaster also managed to take a top spot on this year's list.
Science and technology reporter and Pulitzer Prize winner Robert S. Boyd has worked in the Washington Bureau of McClatchy Newspapers — and its predecessor, Knight Ridder Newspapers, for more than 40 years, 20 of them as bureau chief.
Theresa is the kind of Yoga Therapist who clearly does not come from a long Yoga background but, instead, from 26 years as a crime reporter at a sassy big - city newspaper.
So that may be why Fryer — as a 25 - year - old newly minted Ph.D. who had just come to Harvard to be part of the Society of Fellows — reacted so viscerally when a reporter from a major newspaper threatened to out exactly how exceptional he was: a man whose family members were in prison for dealing crack, who had grown up in a profoundly unstable home but had made it to the pinnacle of academia anyway.
Prothero started working at the newspaper in 2014 after a four - year stint as a radio reporter, anchor and producer at WLRN, the NPR affiliate in Miami.
She received a master's from Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism and worked as an award - winning print and online reporter at several New England newspapers for 15 years.
Publishing has been my life for over 25 years, and I've worked as a newspaper reporter and editor, a medical and trade magazine writer and editor, a journal editor, a newsletter designer and writer, and a blogger and social media manager.
He was born in 1953, left school when he was seventeen to work as a cub reporter on a local newspaper and, eight years later was a staff reporter on the The Times in London covering news, business and latterly working as arts correspondent.
She received her BA in journalism and minor in creative writing through the honors program at Western Washington University, studied creative nonfiction at the University of Alaska Anchorage graduate program, and worked for nearly 10 years as an award - winning reporter at the Frontiersman newspaper.
Stephanie joined PCMag in May 2012, moving to New York City from Frederick, Md., where she worked for four years as a multimedia reporter at the second - largest daily newspaper in Maryland.
I am also a trained journalist and worked as a newspaper and later radio reporter for almost 10 years before entering the International Banking field.
After years of working as a newspaper reporter in the Dallas area, I became a freelance writer.
He has worked as a newspaper reporter and was a writer and photographer for the New York City Parks Department for 13 years before leaving in 2001 to pursue photography full - time.
Before joining the Farm Bureau in February 2008, Mr. Krist worked for 24 years as a reporter, editor and Opinion - page columnist at the Ventura County Star, a daily newspaper in Southern California.
She has been a business magazine journalist for the past seven years, covering healthcare, construction and now law, after starting her career as a newspaper reporter in London, U.K..
Some of our notable entertainment and media attorneys are: John Quinn, General Counsel of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, who has also represented entertainment and media clients in a number of high profile cases; Kathleen Sullivan, the former Dean of Stanford Law School, First Amendment scholar, and nationally renowned appellate advocate, who heads the firm's appellate practice group; Bob Raskopf, an expert in the sports, entertainment and media bars in New York, who is perhaps best known for his work on behalf of professional sports leagues and teams, newspapers and publishers; Claude Stern, who has represented a broad array of leading software developers, videogame manufacturers, online publishers and other media clients in all forms of intellectual property litigation, including copyright, patent, trade secret, trademark, and licensing disputes; Bruce Van Dalsem, who has tried and resolved disputes for studios, producers and performing artists in the film, television, music and finance businesses, securing a top five verdict in California based on the misappropriation of a film library; Gary Gans, an expert litigator in motion picture financing, production and distribution disputes, as well as copyright and idea theft cases, who has been named in 2012 by The Hollywood Reporter as one of America's «Top Entertainment Attorneys;» Jeff McFarland, who has litigated entertainment related cases for more than 20 years, including cases involving motion picture and television series profits, video game licenses, idea theft and the «seven year rule;» and Michael Williams, who represents a satellite exhibitor and other media clients in trademark, copyright, patent, antitrust and other commercial litigation.
As I suggested a year ago newspapers need to hire specialists who actually understand these issues to advise its political reporters / pundits.
From major national U.S. newspapers like the Washington Post to websites for Patch and local ABC stations, for years, reporters around the country appear to have been unknowingly including tweets from Russian trolls in their news stories, as Recode first reported this week, with help from Meltwater, a media intelligence firm.
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