Presidential election night is considered the Super Bowl of journalism. Journalists are expected to deliver at the highest-level while under intense pressure in a rapidly changing environment.
Sixteen students and 20 radio-television students recently experienced the election rite of passage through a partnership with the Orlando Sentinel on Nov. 3.
Orlando’s flagship newspaper has been operating without a newsroom since August and with a significantly reduced staff, genuinely in need of more reporters to properly cover this massive story. NSCM students came to the rescue and fanned out across Central Florida β filing dispatches at polling sites and election offices, monitoring social media, capturing photos and videos, and contributing to on-air reporting and broadcasts throughout the night.
βΒιΆΉΣ³»΄«Γ½βs student journalists played a critical role in the Orlando Sentinelβs 2020 Election Day coverage.β –Julie Anderson β84 β89MA, editor-in-chief for the βOrlando Sentinelβ
βΒιΆΉΣ³»΄«Γ½βs student journalists played a critical role in the Orlando Sentinelβs 2020 Election Day coverage,β says Julie Anderson β84 β89MA, Orlando Sentinelβs editor-in-chief. βT³σ±πir reporting from precincts all over our region about votersβ perspectives gave flavor to the results that were coming in on Election Day. They also applied their social media and broadcasting skills to help us inform readers about the results coming in.
In turn, students gained hands-on experience working with a major news organization; garnered feedback from Sentinel editors; earned the chance to land future internships and jobs; shared bylines, shirttail credits and broadcast credits; and β best of all β had the unique thrill and adrenaline rush of writing on deadline while covering one of the biggest stories of the year.
βI learned so much from simply being out on the field and watching how an election is covered. I think this type of learning skyrockets student journalistsβ abilities and education,β says Natalia Jaramillo, a journalism major who reported from the Orange County Supervisor of Elections Office.
Some of the highlights for journalism majors include:
- Edward Segarra wrote a breaking news story about the Osceola Supervisor of Election Office’s Internet outage that resulted from a severed fiber cable. He and Jessica Siles reported on voters throughout Osceola County, including a long-time Democrat who voted for Trump because the rest of the family was for Biden.
- Fritz Farrow wrote a story about a former postal worker who voted in person because he didn’t trust the U.S. Postal Service.
- Two reporters, Hector Garcia de Leon and Kai Rodriquez, contributed stories to the Sentinel‘s Hispanic publication, El Sentinel, and received shared bylines.
- Daniela Vivas Labrador and Jenna Erhlich covered Seminole County, including a story about two women, 87 and 70, who have voted in every election since they were 18.
βT³σ±π Orlando Sentinel staff did a wonderful job at preparing us and making us feel welcome and valued,β says Monica Sealey, who worked with four other students to cover ΒιΆΉΣ³»΄«Γ½βs voting precinct. βI really like that they didnβt βbabyβ us. Instead, they gave us the guidelines, set us free and trusted us to produce great content.β
βT³σ±π ‘Orlando Sentinel’ staff did a wonderful job at preparing us and making us feel welcome and valued.β – Monica Sealey, ΒιΆΉΣ³»΄«Γ½ student
As the night went on, students got better at recognizing a story, finding a different angle, interviewing voters, remembering to get the essential details and cutting down on sloppy copy. We witnessed them excel at something they had never done before and become more confident as the night went on.
βI remember in my first semester at ΒιΆΉΣ³»΄«Γ½, I was in the Electronic News Gathering class with [R/TV Program Coordinator and Associate] Professor Tim Brown and something he told me that I have held close to me and tried to apply each and every day in my journalism career was, βYou grow most where youβre uncomfortable,β β says Matison Little, who covered voting in Lake County with another student.
Behind the scenes, the 20 radio television students earned praise from faculty and Sentinel editors for their steady and calm composure during live broadcasts.
βT³σ±πy rose to the challenge. They took it seriously. They wanted to be part of it. They wanted a piece of it,β Senior Instructor Rick Brunson says. βT³σ±πy treated it like it was show time.β
Together, students and faculty may have built the foundation for more cooperative efforts between the Orlando Sentinel and the ΒιΆΉΣ³»΄«Γ½ journalism program.
βIt was a great experience for the Sentinel, and a partnership we hope to extend,β Anderson says.