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    Danke Schoen

    November 25th, 2009

    I know it’s cliché, but I’m doing a “What I’m Thankful For” post. Tis the season, right?

    My Family.  Without the the support of my mom, Cindy, dad, Paul, and little sister, Casey, I have no idea where I would be in life (probably hungry, lost, and broke). Also big ups to Grandma and Grandpa Salyer for having a sixth sense of when I need a little extra, and Grandma Gergen for always being concerned with what I’m doing. Thanks to my cousins in Columbia, Korrin and Cannon, for always welcoming me into their home and trusting me to watch their four rugrats: Laura, Zach, Paige, and Brennan (and the free cake/ice cream/pizza/brats/etc).

    Caffeine. see title of this site for explanation.

    My roommates. I’m so thankful for the last year at the Dustin house. Thanks to Lauren for being my mid-Missouri mother, Kevin for always pushing me further (as a person or towards the edge of insanity, love ya brah), and Graham Cracker for always listening to my morning-after rants.

    Clif Bars. Thanks for providing a solid lunch on-the-go every day. I couldn’t make it through Natural Resources without your chewy goodness.

    My super-awesome-fantastic friends that still manage to put up with me. Travis, Jeff, Megan, Guy, Carrier, Nick, Pat, Tay, Kristin, Childs, Marino, Fiddes, Koch, and so many more that deal with my consistent stupidity and ridiculous stunts. Major props to Alyssa for not strangling me (and I still owe you HuHot!). Also thankful for all of my new ‘business’ friends this year from AKPsi like Blake, Kelly, Laura, Kellie, Tom, Cleeton, and so on.

    Minnesota. I’ve missed you so much, Minnesota. I’m so sorry I left you for another state. I hope you can forgive me.

    Laptop. Duh.

    The Tweeple. I’m not thankful for Twitter, specifically, but the opportunities it has presented me and the impact it has made on me. I’ve grown so much over the past year or so as a person. I’ve met great people and learned more than I could ever imagine. Thank you Arik Hanson for pushing me to further myself and always lending advice or an ear. Thanks to Lauren Fernandez, David Spinks, Kasey SkalaSonny Gill, Chuck Hemann, Katie Wall, Tom O’KeefeStuart Foster, Dave FolkensMandy Vavrinak, Jason Falls, Paul DeBettignies, George Fiddler, Lisa Grimm, Ryan Maus, Justin Ware, Ryan MathreKristin Gast, Dave Erickson, Natalie Wires, Richie ExcovedoMike Schaffer, Amanda Oleson, #TFFL, #JournChat, #U30Pro (hopefully I’ll attend soon, instead of reading summaries), #PRStudChat (likewise), Andrew Weaver, Jackie AdkinsMatt Cheuvront, Sydney Owen, Scott Hale, Kris Colvin, Geno Church, Spike Jones, and SO MANY MORE. One way or another, you have all made an impact on me and helped me grow. I thank you for that. Also major thanks to the entire #MIZZOU Twitter community. We’ve got one helluva college community on Twitter and I love it.

    The Mazda. It was hard to see you go, little Protege. You weighed less than a crotch-rocket, but you battled as long as you could. We had so many great times together. I hope you’re having fun in the big junkyard in the sky.

    The Av. Well, after The Mazda bit the dust, I’d be screwed without you, Av. I never wanted an automatic transmission, but if I have to have one, I’m glad it’s you.

    iTunes Genius. Genius brings so much joy into my life.

    The Preschool and my students. I absolutely loved working there over the past year and a half. Time spent there has never been short of awesome. I can’t wait to come back.

    Sandwiches and cereal. The two staples of my diet, in addition to Clif Bars.

    A bed and a roof over my head. This is something I need to be thankful for more often. Not everyone is as blessed as I am.

    Finally, thank you all. Thanks for taking the time to read this blog. It means more than I could ever put into words.


    Charlie sans Chocolate

    November 25th, 2009

    I felt like I found the golden ticket!

    While back in Minnesota, I was able to spend an afternoon at Fast Horse Inc., a boutique marketing agency in Minneapolis. This place is fantastic. Workspace: open. Comfy chairs, recliners, tables, bowls of candy, cupcakes, large windows (formerly garage doors). Everything tailored for open communication. People: awesome. Hard-working and hilarious, dedicated and laid-back. They got their work done, but had a great time doing it.

    They even let me write a blog post for them. Naturally, I wrote about Lady GaGa. Head over to the Idea Peepshow and check it out!

    I’d like to thank George Fiddler for allowing me to shadow him, taking me out to lunch, and showing me the ropes. I’d also like thank Fast Horse President, Jorg Pierach, for taking some time to sit down and talk with me about his agency and the industry as a whole. Finally, I’d like to thank the entire Fast Horse crew for a memorable experience. I truly did feel like I was Charlie touring the Charlie Factory. Minus oompa-loompas.

    *photo credit Flickr user Hot Rod Homepage under CC license


    Letters From A Young Journalist

    November 18th, 2009

    For my followers that aren’t associated or interested in Mizzou’s J-School, allow me to explain the outpouring of #lfyj tweets on Wednesday evening. I’m not apologizing though, because it was one of the coolest things that I have ever been a part of.

    If you were a part of it, here’s a recap from my perspective. And, thank you so much.

    #lfyj was a completely impromptu discussion about innovation in curriculum at Mizzou’s J-School. It started with a simple tweet from Erica Zucco and retweet from Jessica Mustain about a group of Mizzou Journalism students’ capstone project- Letters From A Young Journalist.

    Suddenly, what is known as the “snowball effect” happened. It was epic.

    Mizzou Journalism professor Karen Mitchell, senior convergence major Kelsey Proud (who came up with the #lfyj hashtag), myself, and a few other students started to discuss what the website suggests. Before we knew it, there were plenty of students, faculty, alumni, and other interested outsiders joining the conversation.

    Something great happened. There was no bashing. There was no insulting. There were no “what I say doesn’t matter” attitudes.

    It was an intellectual outburst of ideas to improve education. It was awesome.

    Completely unintentionally, I found myself in a conversation about how to improve my school through innovation. And it wasn’t just ranting by the students. We were being listened to. We were being talked to. We felt like we had a voice in our education and our future. This awesomeness lasted for two hours.

    I was so excited that this was happening. I had questioned Mizzou’s J-School in the past for resting on it’s laurels and not striving to be on the leading edge of journalism. But this chat sealed the deal. The school cares. The students care. We are striving to be the best.

    So what were the take-aways from this awesomesauce? Here is my summary, from a student’s perspective:

    1. Break down the silos

    Mizzou’s J-School has six undergraduate sequences, or programs: Convergence Journalism, Photojournalism, Print and Digital News, Magazine Journalism, Radio-Television Journalism, and Strategic Communication. For the most part, they exist in a silo, with the students, courses, and professors rarely overlapping.

    This needs to change.

    Some students proposed a complete dismembering of sequences. Others simply proposed opening up the sequences so that there is more flexibility in the courses that students can take. I’m a fan of the latter; there still needs to be structure.

    But there also needs to be autonomy. The profession of Journalism is fluid. The students (and their education) needs to be as well. I am majoring in Strategic Communication, but I would also like to master the basics of shooting and editing video, copy editing, photography, and more.

    2. Improve the flow of communication

    At it’s core, journalism is communication. As an elite journalism school, communication among students, faculty, and administration should be quite excellent.

    It isn’t. And there is no excuse for it not to be.

    Discussions like #lfyj, in which professors and students were involved, is the first step to this. But students yearn for more. Having Associate Dean Brian Brooks grilling hot dogs on the quad isn’t enough. We want interaction on an intellectual level, not an intestinal one.

    This falls on the shoulders of students, faculty, and administration. Faculty and administration need to reach out to student and student organizations and encourage them to voice their opinions. Students and student organizations need to set up events in which issues critical to our education are discussed. Not ice cream socials, not pizza parties (although those aren’t bad, especially when free).

    3. Make some changes to required courses

    There was a lot of debate during #lfyj on what classes should be dropped, added, and changed. Here are the top three discussed, and what needs to happen:

    Cross Culture Journalism (JOURN 2000)- This class is very important. We get that, and agree that it should be required by all sequences. But by the fifth week, 95% of the class loses interest. From that point until the final project, nothing is learned, just recited.

    Proposal- There seems to be two different ways to approach this. One suggestion was to make it a two-hour course. Cover the material and get to the application of it (the project).

    Another option, which was discussed and seemingly endorsed by many students, is to absorb the material into another course- such as Principles of American Journalism, or even History of American Journalism. By focusing an entire course on this subject (and beating said subject like Mangino beats KU football players), kills any emphasis in further classes. But the subject needs to be an emphasis throughout journalism. All the time. The integration of it, from freshman courses to capstones, would provide many chances practical application of the subject.

    News (JOURN 2100)- This course, required for all sequences, is just too much. Not in workload, but in content. I enjoyed the course, but a few months later, I don’t feel like I learned much from it.

    Proposal- This course needs to be broke into two courses: Principles of Writing and Principles of Reporting. I believe that the former should be required for all sequences, but the latter be optional for Photojournalism and Strategic Communication (fyi, as a StratComm student, I would still take it).

    The first, Principles of Writing, would focus on learning AP Style, grammar, usage, sentence structure, and so on. In talking with people in the “real world”, like employers and alumni, this is an area that Mizzou J-School graduates are weak in. Personally, I know that I need to improve my technical writing skill. I enrolled in J2100 knowing that. I left with the same feeling.

    The second, Principles of Reporting, would focus on the reporting (*duh). The convergence project, the profile, the interview assignments, and other participatory applications. There needs to be more training on interviewing techniques and how to report different types of stories. By making Principles of Reporting it’s own class, this would be allowed.

    History of American Journalism (J3000)- Full disclosure: I haven’t taken this course yet. But I’ve heard stories. Oh, have I heard stories (it’s a journalism school- it’s what people do).

    Proposal- Integrate this course into another course, like Principles of American Journalism, or improve how the curriculum is taught. I’ve heard the words “data dump”, “dry”, “memorization”, and “I’m not learning anything” in reference to this course numerous times.

    Students understand the importance of history. We get this. Many of us actually enjoy it (because history is full of stories, and, well, see above). But a non-participatory, force-feed of facts is not how we learn. When I said that journalism students yearn engagement, it wasn’t just for extra-curriculars. It’s in the classroom, too. Maybe assign group projects to “report” on something historically important to journalism. Or give us some facts about the history of journalism- then allow us to come up with (and possibly present) why it’s important to the history of journalism.

    4. Some changes for Strategic Communication

    In a discussion about Strategic Communication courses, Professor Mitchell tweeted that “We HAVE to find a way to free up these classes for you students.” Even as a Strategic Communication student, I agree. I would love for students from other sequences to be in my classes.

    Also, Mizzou needs to improve it’s options for public relations courses. Many of the Strategic Communication courses are very advertising- and creative-heavy. But in the communications industry, the walls are breaking down. Advertising, public relations, and marketing are becoming integrated, and students need to be prepared for this.

    Proposal- Develop more courses in public relations and integrated communications. Mizzou doesn’t even meet the requirements for a PRSSA (Public Relations Student Society of America), something that would be a huge asset to the University as a whole.

    Alright. I’m done for now. Those four suggestions are a mix of what I heard (read, whatever) from students participating in #lfyj Tuesday night, what I’ve heard around campus, and my own opinions. Please comment with any opinions, improvements, ideas, or criticisms (whether you’re at Mizzou, from Mizzou, or just interested in pushing education further).

    Thank you all. Everyone who is reading this post, everyone who participated in #lfyj, everyone who is working towards innovation in our education. Thank you for caring.

    Now, it’s time for action.

    Take note: The Journalism Students for Curriculum Innovation will be meeting at 5 p.m., Tuesday, December 1 in the conference room of the Journalism Library. The #lfyj discussion will surely provide a fantastic starting point. If you can’t make the meeting, follow the hashtag #jsci and tweet in with your thoughts.

    Photo credit to Flickr user Adam Proctor under Creative Commons license.


    This is for Real

    November 17th, 2009

    Somebody want to tell me what this is? What is this blog? What is Twitter? What is Facebook, Ning, Friendfeed, etc.?

    Are all these things fake? Non-existent?

    No, they’re real. Real things. Real people. Real ideas. Real interaction. Real friends. Real relationships.

    It’s real life.

    Allow me to break a golden rule of blogging as I write an obituary…

    R.I.P. “IRL”

    You were there for us when we needed you. You were a crutch that we leaned on you when we weren’t sure what the hell was going on. The whole “social Internet” thing was new, and we didn’t know how to tell other people we had these all great friends and met all these smart people… online.

    Alas, it was your time. You see, IRL, this, -this blog, Twitter, Facebook, Ning- is real life. We can no longer pretend like what we’re doing online is some sort of “second life” or “surreality”.

    I’ve made real friends, learned real things, got real ideas- all from real interaction and real people on the Internet.

    I’m glad you passed away when you did. This needn’t draw on any longer. I will not have to say “Oh, I know this marketing genius in Timbuktu, but I’ve never met him IRL”, anymore.

    I hope you understand, IRL, that it has to be this way in order for the social Internet to continue to thrive. How are people I talk with, who don’t know the social web, supposed to believe what I’m doing is legitimate, or real, if I continue to infer that it isn’t real life?

    It’s going to be tough to bury you. I know that there are going to be moments when I want you by my side. But I know that I just need to let you go. I need to move on with everything in my life being real.

    We’ve had a good run buddy, but it’s time to let you go.

    For real.


    Be Audacious

    November 12th, 2009

    The other day, a speaker came to talk to the pledges of the business fraternity I am in about interviewing, and to an extent, networking. To be honest, there wasn’t anything new about this presentation. Firm handshake. Eye contact. Get a haircut. Have a resumé. Etcetera.

    Groundbreaking advice we were getting, folks.

    Handshake

    There's more to interviews than the handshake.

    Then he said something that found a home in my mind. Something that stuck. Something that struck. A nerve, that is.

    He said, “Don’t be audacious”. Then he repeated it. And proceeded to explain why audacity isn’t welcome in those settings.

    Wait for it…

    What the h-e-double hockey sticks!

    Sorry. Not happening. I’m going to be myself, and I’ll be damned if I come off as a little too audacious for you. If you think what I do is audacious- defined as bold, daring, lively, unrestrained, uninhibited, well… great. I want to be audacious then. I want to be “extremely original” and “without restriction to prior ideas”. That sounds like something to strive for.

    I am going to be audacious. And I think that’s a good thing.

    Not too long after this was presented to us, I saw the post “Being Memorable Matters (Most)” by the venerable Matt Cheuvront. I felt justified. I felt inspired.

    Audacity is different. Audacity is new. Audacity is memorable.

    Tonight, I’m going to a networking dinner for the same business fraternity. Can you guess what I’ll be wearing? Yup. Can you guess what I’ll be doing?

    Being audacious. Being bold, daring, lively, and more.

    Sure, I’ll be keeping it professional. I’m not looking to be an audacious a**hole here. I’ll be bold in my statements. Daring in the way I approach things. Add lively thoughts to the discussion.

    And I might give Chevy’s business cards idea a try too (hint: this means you should really watch that post).

    What are you doing to be memorable, different, and new when you interview, network, or talk with recruiters? How are you making sure you stand out from the crowd of faces? Is it with non-traditional attire? A business card on a note card? Find your thing, whatever it is, and be audacious with it.

    *photo courtesy of Flickr user andyrob


    Obligatory "About Me" First Post

    November 9th, 2009

    As I sit here trying to write the obligatory “about me” blog post to kick this thing off right, I realized something.

    question mark

    question mark

    I can’t write about myself if I don’t know who I am.

    Seriously. I am a 20-year-old with an identity crisis. And I am fine with that.

    I had this discussion with a good friend the other day. He believed that I was full of shit, that I in fact do know who I am. To an extent, this is true. I know what I like (sports, beaches, vodka lemonades, nachos) and what I dislike (olives, Joe Buck, road construction). I know my name, where I am, where I am from, what I mostly like, and what I mostly dislike. These are things I know.

    But there is a lot I don’t know.

    Shocking, right?

    I don’t know what I am going to do in five years. I don’t know what I am going to do in five months. Hell, I don’t know what I am going to do in five days.

    I don’t know if I will ultimately enjoy the field of work I want to get into. I don’t know why I listen to the same 27 ridiculously catchy mashups every day. I don’t know why I can’t hold a relationship down for longer than two months. I have a general idea of important values to me, but those have changed so much in the past few years. I don’t know why, despite being ready to crawl into my mattress and go comatose, I am writing at 3 in the morning. If you know me well at all, you know that I don’t know why I do what I do.

    I just do.

    And I am fine with that.

    It’s the Gen-Y identity crisis. We have so much surrounding us- all of which is constantly changing. Every. Single. Second. It can get kind of scary. We aren’t sure how we fit in with the big picture, because we don’t know what the big picture looks like. We want to find out. We try to find out. But ultimately, we just have to find out when it happens. Whatever ‘it’ is for you.

    So how am I fine with feeling utterly confused as to wtf my life is?

    Because of the good people around me.

    I know that my friends, family, and people I generally enjoy associating with will keep me on the right track. Whether many of them realize it or not, I live everyday with the intent to become better in some way. It’s because of them. It’s the framework, the structure, and the support of my friends and family that cause this. You all bring out the best in me, and when I do screw it up, you forgive me and keep me on the right path.

    The Straight Path

    "The Straight Path"

    Thank you.

    What are you doing to make sure you’re staying on the right path? Even if you don’t know where that path is headed, it’s much better to walk it with good people, right? Who can you always go to, that after talking to them, you need to go out and kick life’s ass?

    Make a list. Seriously.

    And then thank them. Because it doesn’t matter whether or not we know where we will be in 5 years, 5 months, or 5 days. What matters is that you are going to be the best you can be, and you are going to do it with some damned good people around you.

    As a wise man once said, “we get by with a little help from our friends.”

    *”question mark” by db*photography; “The Straight Path” by kennymatic