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WORK HISTORY
Or "How did a philosophy and music
major end up as a sports journalist?"
The answer isn't simple, which I why
I've prepared this narrative as a companion to the simple work history
presented in my resume. If you're not interested in the whole story,
the short answer is that my versatility has allowed me to hop between
several career tracks in journalism. I'm an experienced editor and
writer, a former page designer and an early adopter on the Web. I'm one
of the few people to make the jump from print to Web, then back to
print, then back to the Web. My experience is nothing if not diverse:
covering high school basketball in rural North Carolina, designing the
syndicated "That's Racin'" NASCAR page, doing live election coverage in
the early days of the Web, coordinating coverage of the Winter Olympics
from Salt Lake City, researching a graduate thesis on new media and
writing a soccer column that ensures an entertaining stream of e-mail
to my inbox.
Here's the long version:
As I went through
my undergraduate years at Duke, I wound up spending more and more
time working for The Chronicle, the independent student
newspaper. As arts editor my junior year, I re-organized the paper's
sporadic coverage into a twice-weekly section with a full calendar. By
my senior year, I virtually lived at the office. I spent a semester as
managing editor, guided newcomers through their first assignments,
edited the monthly magazine supplement Currents and wrote for
every section.
A rational mentor would have talked
me into going to law school or graduate school, most likely in music.
Fortunately, no such mentor existed. Though I had no professional
experience and no journalism professors to recommend me for top jobs, I
chased every newspaper lead I could find in the shaky economy of 1991.
I landed on the copy desk of the Morning Star
in Wilmington, North Carolina, where I did all the basic desk tasks:
editing stories, writing headlines, designing pages and picking wire
stories. Thanks to a hiring freeze, I wound up as a stopgap assistant
city editor at the tender age of 22. After 18 months, I moved to the
sports section. Desk work was still my main responsibility, but in a
department of five, I had ample opportunity to write a column and the
occasional game story.
After three years in Wilmington, I
was ready to move on to a newspaper I'd long admired, the News & Record
in Greensboro. Here, I learned much more about page design, which gave
me a chance to work in both the news and sports sections. Once again, I
took on management duties, scheduling shifts for my co-workers and
supervising the editorial assistants.
By 1995, I had joined the ad hoc
team that ran the newspaper's first foray into the Internet. The next
year, the paper put together a full-fledged Web site, and I was hired
as coordinating producer.
We were one of the fortunate
newspaper site staffs given the freedom to do more than a simple
rehashing of the print version. We took turns writing a column about
the Internet for the paper, and we helped local groups and
businesses develop their sites within our virtual community. I did live
scene coverage under primitive circumstances, wandering around during
an election or a golf tournament while making frequent trips back to
the office or media tent. Best of all, I put together original material
to cover local sports teams with "Carolina" in their names: Panthers
(NFL), Hurricanes (NHL), Dynamo (A-League soccer).
Being in Greensboro also gave me the
chance to commute each week to my alma mater, Duke, to work on a
master's degree in liberal studies. I broadened my education in a
series of interdisciplinary courses in environmental studies,
education, political science, history and sociology. I constantly
sought to relate my classes to journalism and often wrote term papers
combining my work interests and academic pursuits.
In 1998, I was ready to move on.
More importantly, I was engaged, and we were ready to move
somewhere near Washington. My fiancee landed a job first, and I moved
up with her to find a job. To my surprise, I ended up back in print,
designing and editing a daily page of national and world news for Knight Ridder Tribune
News Service. The page was canceled after six weeks, and I moved on
to the weekly "That's Racin'" page of auto racing news, along with
other design projects and regular shifts on the news desk. Here, I
started a weekly column on Major League Soccer and wrote a few pieces
on the Women's World Cup in 1999. I also continued my graduate studies,
doing an independent study on the history of objectivity in American
journalism. All this, of course, was balanced with my wedding plans.
A year later, I was back on the Web
at USATODAY.com,
where I helped to develop the site's interactive features. We started
with message boards and moved on to chats. I continued to write a
soccer column and filled in for the paper's soccer writer when the MLS
playoffs overlapped with the 2000 Summer Olympics. I also helped the
Web site with its coverage of the Sydney Games, creating a tough
two-month stretch in which I was doing three very different jobs.
Meanwhile, I finished my graduate studies with a thesis on the changing
role of journalists in new media. (The thesis is available online.)
When it was over, the sports
department needed me more than the interactive department. I was asked
to take over coverage of Olympic sports and soccer while also taking
supervisory shifts and continuing to write my column.
The exciting job of planning
Olympic coverage, a crucial task for USA TODAY, grew more
difficult as the economy went sour. The staff was reorganized one month
before the Games, and golf was added to my plate.
My immediate task was to keep our
Salt Lake City coverage on track despite all the changes at the site. A
couple of months later, I was responsible for our coverage of the World
Cup, though I did not travel with the newspaper staff to Korea.
More changes came in August 2002. I
took
over our hockey coverage and gave up golf.
In 2004, I cut my hours to spend
more time with my baby. My job for the first eight months was to build
our coverage of the Athens
Olympics. I worked with designers and programmers to get our site
and the results feed in order. I also developed original content such
as the Olympic Athlete of the Week awards, the 10.0
series of athlete interviews, brief bios on U.S. athletes and
introductions to each sport.
After the Olympics, I moved into a
role developing projects and original content for all sports.
With my reduced hours, I have time
and flexibility to do free-lance work in soccer and Olympic sports. I
think international sports fill
such an important role in the world, and I have the experience and
expertise to cover them with a sense of perspective. They unify us in
ways that mere diplomacy cannot. Besides, they're an awful lot of fun.
I hope to spend the rest of my working life working with these sports
in some fashion.
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