Issue 04.27.16

Page 1

S A C R E D

H E A R T

U N I V E R S I T Y

F A I R F I E L D ,

“SHEDDING LIGHT ON CAMPUS NEWS SINCE 1983”

WEDNESDAY, APRIL 27, 2016

C O N N E C T I C U T

VOLUME 36, ISSUE 11

INTHISissue Getting in the Game: Q&A with ESPN’s Jemele Hill

3 4 7 8 9 11

HE SAID/ SHE SAID

Melanie and Anthony reflect on the end of their reign as He and She

CONTROVERSY ON SNL

Students sound off on an SNL skit that satirizes drug use in America

SWIM ’N SURF

A Fairfield boutique offers trendy wardrobe options for the upcoming season

“STUDY ABROAD” IN FLA. One student shares her experiences as an intern for the Disney College Program

HEY YA

Choirs will join forces in their final concert to cover popular songs from the 90’s and 00’s

PIONEER RUNNING

Two track and field athletes set Sacred Heart records for fastest miles

JEMELE HILL (MIDDLE RIGHT) POSES WITH SACRED HEART ALUMNAE AFTER HER EVENT

TWEETS of the Week

BY EMILY ARCHACKI Editor in Chief

@callmekatiie

Sacred Heart University’s Sports Communication & Media Graduate Program hosted a symposium on women in sports media, “Getting in the Game,” on Saturday, April 23. The event featured rotating panels and workshops with women who work in the sports media industry for organizations and companies such as ESPN, NBC Sports, and Time Inc. The main feature of the @katelynnchill event was a discussion between Paul Pabst, Executive Producer of the “just got proposed to in reds with a Dan Patrick Show and media professor at Sacred Heart, and Jemele glass of pino...obviously I said yes.” Hill, from ESPN’s “His & Hers” talk show and podcast series. The event concluded with a small reception and opportunity for those in @gotjillybeans attendance to network with the women from the various panels. In her discussion with Pabst, Hill, a native of Detroit, Mich., shared “undergrad: registering is stressful upcoming graduate: not registering is her career experience as a sports journalist. From her early days as a stressful bc that means the real world reporter for her high school newspaper, then transitioning to various conclusion: life’s stressful” newspaper jobs such as working as a sports writer for six years at the Detroit Free Press. She then began working at ESPN in 2006 as “Tweets of the Week” are taken from a national columnist for their website ESPN.com, to her current role a public forum on Twitter. Tweets are opinions of the individual and do not on “His & Hers,” which airs daily on ESPN2 at 12 p.m., Monday represent the opinions of Sacred Heart through Friday with co-host Michael Smith. “Eating Krispy Kreme while walking up the stairs cancels each other out right?”

University or The Spectrum Newspaper. If you want to see your Tweet in the newspaper, use the hashtag #ShuSpectrum and you may be featured!

OFFICE 203.371.7963 ADVERTISING 203.371.7963

Q: You began your career as a sports writer and have transitioned now to on-air. Did any skills you learned as a sports writer help you in the transition from print to air? A: Pretty much everything. The one thing that gave me the authority and credibility was writing…writing and reporting. I covered college football and basketball for six years as a general assignment reporter. Then for two years as a columnist I got to cover everything from the NBA Finals to two Olympics, to the World Cup. Covering all those things and covering athletes and teams, that’s why I can speak as credibly, and hopefully intelligently, as I do about the topics we discuss on a day-to-day basis. Whatever I discuss in some respect is already familiar to me because I’ve probably covered it, or something like it. Making the transition when I did it wasn’t about lack of information about the subject. It was about mostly just learning the nuance of television; how to present better on-air and making sure that you’re making sense and all those kinds of things. But the strength in my opinion, I learned all of that over 10 years as a print journalist.

JULIA KENNEDY/ SACRED HEART UNIVERISTY SPORTS COMM ALUMNA

is more for Mike [Smith] and I that those are our conversations we have like on the phone or off camera or sitting at a bar, hanging out. When you’re on television, while we’re still having the core of that conversation, we obviously have to make it very Disney-friendly. Look if you gave us a podcast on TV we’d probably love that, you know without the restrictions and everything. But both are very tied together. We realized a long time ago that why people watched us, in addition to our relationship and our relationship show, is that people wanted a sense of authenticity. That was very easy for us to give people because we got to a point in our careers where we’re completely comfortable with who we are, we know what we’re doing. Hopefully it translates in both mediums. But for sure the TV show would not exist without the podcast. I think from that standpoint it’s a little bit unusual. I don’t know how many TV shows are made because of a podcast. Q: On Thursday, April 21, you were part of the first-ever all-female panel on “Around the Horn.” What was that panel discussion like, and do you think that occurrence shows continued growth for women in sports media? A: It definitely shows a lot of growth. The special thing about that is it wasn’t forced. It was organic in the sense that the “Around the Horn” roster is just that deep where you can have an all-female panel. The show’s been on I think for 10 plus years, and obviously wasn’t always that way. I think it speaks to the roster that we have at ESPN… for me it was a really special moment, especially considering the evolution of say someone like Sarah Spain or Kate Fagan. I’ve been reading Jackie MacMullan my whole life. She is one of the OG in this business, as we like to say. To be on that kind of platform with somebody who is as accomplished as she is, it was a special day for all of us. If anything, I think it just shows not only the growth of “Around the Horn” in particular but just the growth of where we are in this business in terms of the opportunities available for women.

Q: What led you to pursue a career specifically in sports journalism? A: I think it was just my early love of newspapers. We had hometown columnists that I loved to read and I was just fascinated by the stories they told. Mitch Albom was the biggest columnist in our city [Detroit]; he had some amazing stories, many of which he’s won awards for. I just loved the fact that after I saw this thing I’d never seen before, somebody like him could put it in perfect context and make it make even more sense than it made in my own head. In Q: You’re involved with the studio show and podcast for “His & addition to the fact that I was always a voracious reader, I loved the Hers.” What are the pros and cons of each and do you prefer one idea that you had these select groups of people who were chronicling format over the other? history. It just made me kind of fall in love with the medium and want A: The thing isorwe’re trying to make the us show Comments Concerns? EMAIL at more like the Visit Us At: SHUSpectrum to try to do exactly that. podcast, which is not easy because TV [has] built-in limitations. SPECTRUM@SACREDHEART.EDU www.shuspectrum.com Newspaper Continued on page 2 Commercials for one, we can’t swear for another and the podcast

@S


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.