Archive for January, 2008

Pretty cool

Posted in Uncategorized on January 16, 2008 by mollymullen
After getting my new fancy camera from Fr. Doll for the semester, this is one photo that I though was pretty sweet. An action shot of someone breaking a lightbulb on a  street light.
 
bob-smashing-lightbulb.jpg
 
Here are some other cool photos I took of the SOA trip.
 
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1968

Posted in Uncategorized on January 16, 2008 by mollymullen

blackpantherspic1.jpg  If there can be books written on the year 1968, if Tom Brokaw can do an entire special on it, then surely I can find something interesting to do a story about.The world as we know it seemed to be crumbling and it all came to a climax that fall.Well, it’s been 40 years since then. The rabble rousers of the time are the ones in charge. Tom Hayden is now a senator. Neil Young is a millionaire. Bob Dylan is doing commercials for Victoria Secret.Knowing what little bit I know about Omaha’s history, it seems relevant to take this 40-year anniversary to look at how things have changed, and hear about people’s personal accounts about what they were doing around town, and what was going on on campus.Some important points I want to hit are: Bobby Kennedy coming to Creighton, the  Omaha Black Panthers working around town, Gov. Wallace speaking at the Civic Center, and the general atmosphere on campus. I want to find people on campus who were students at the time, and use their old yearbook photo next to their current photo, and have then talk about what they learned. If I can find anyone really interesting, I’d like to do a Q and A with them.

What is it about reporting?

Posted in Uncategorized on January 16, 2008 by mollymullen

wpwatergate.jpg  This summer I was about to get a ticket  for running a stop sign until the cop recognized me as being a reporter and let me go. That’s probably the best part about journalism. Just kidding.I can’t begin to say what I love about reporting. I love the job itself, I love the idea of journalism, I love considering myself a member of the media. Each individual angle of it is special. For instance,in the day to day of reporting, I can get myself excited about and interested in three or four different topics, and i always go home learning something new. One top of that, I get paid (or hopefully will get paid someday) for talking with people all day. Then there is the idealistic part of journalism: the idea that I could change the world with a story. I could have an effect on policy or school board decisions. Even on a smaller scale, doing a story on a 6-year old and her dog is important, because it makes that individual feel special for a day or two.I love it. I love it.That’s all I can say. From copy editing to deigning to photographing to writing, I love it all, and I want to be good at all of it.That’s not to say that it doesn’t come without a price. When I tell people I want to be a reporter, they ask me why I couldn’t find an honest job. People assume all reporters are part of this evil secret society called ‘the media.’  They assume that I am dishonest or without morals, when the opposite is true.Unfortunately, it is easy enough for people to  call me dishonest. If I print something that someone is embarrassed about saying, all they have to do it lie, and say I made it up. It is too easy to get you character questioned in this business, and for me, that is the worst part. 

Best experiences

Posted in Uncategorized on January 16, 2008 by mollymullen

This summer I looked into the eyes of a killer and knew if I could be on assignments like that for a career, I would be happy. While interning in Mississippi this summer, I got to cover the trial of reputed Ku Klux Klansman James Ford Seale. Sitting with the family of the victims (who died in 1964), Seale would turn around and look at different people in the courtroom. One day, before the rest of the press got back from the press room, there were only a handful of people in the courtroom, and he looked right at me for a few seconds before I looked away. Right then, I was connected to the story, and with history in the making. I know that wasn’t a typical assignment, but it’s the type that make every bad day at work worth it.

http://www.vicksburgpost.com/articles/2007/06/15/news/news02.txt

Although That experience taught me about the courtroom, and reporting on cases, there was another experience I have much pride in. The last story was someting I was assigned; I would wake up every mornign for two weeks and make the our-long drive to Jackson to cover the trial. But after the trial was over, and I still had civil rights pumping through my veins, I found this next story. I appreciate the story because it was something I found and pitched to my editor. She was really reluctant about letting me do  it because she said it wasn’t newsworthy. It ended up being on the front page and  I wrote two follow-up on the same subject.

http://www.vicksburgpost.com/articles/2007/06/22/news/news04.txt  

I found out through a press release that the Senate was passing a bill to reopen civil rights-era cold cases, and i found out that one of the murder cases being reopened was in my town. I got the initial story, the went on to find the people who were involved with the case and family members of the victim from 40 years ago. It was fun to dig, especially when i was trying to prove to my editor it was a worth-while story. 

My worst experience

Posted in Uncategorized on January 16, 2008 by mollymullen

Visiting the principal’s office in high school was no big thing for me. I interviewed on a weekly basis, so I got used to sitting in those cold purple chairs outside is door, getting looks form parents and studnts who thought I was in trouble. It never bothered me until the last week of my senior year. I sat in one of those chairs, knowing I was in trouble. Instead of wandering up to his office of my own accord, I was sent a pass through my English teacher to go see him.My high school newspaper hit the stands by 5 p.m. Thursday night. Friday morning, by 8, my principal already wanted to see me.I walked into his office, and he had a coy on his desk, with a red ink marks and a yellow hilighter inhis hand, circling different bits of my story.  I had written a story about students bringing guns to school. I figured it wasn’t a very controversial story, seeing as how the World Herald scooped me on it, but apparently I was wrong.I had interviewed gang members who brought guns to school on a daily basis, and I promised to protect their  identities once the paper was published, and I told my principal the same thing.That wasn’t a good enough answer for him.He demanded to know the names my sources and said he’d have the right to expell me for jeopardizing the safety of our school. I stuck to my guns (no pun intended) and eventually the situation blew over.Now that wasn’t the only run-in I had with my high school’s administration, but it was the worst experience I ever had. Never before had someone called into question my ethics, or my integrity as a reporter or a student. I was fighting this battle alone, instead of alongside the rest of the department.

Hello world!

Posted in Uncategorized on January 14, 2008 by mollymullen

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