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News Literacy Students Visit CUNY TV

Students in Professor Sissel McCarthy’s Media 211 News Literacy in a Digital Age class went behind the scenes at CUNY TV to learn how stories make it from an editorial meeting to an on-air broadcast.

Emmy-award winning journalist Carol Anne Riddell, who is the host of the CUNY TV shows, Arts in the City and Book It, explained to students how she comes up with stories ideas, finds sources, conducts interviews and then turns the story into a video news piece.

“A lot of people think writing is not important in broadcast news, but it’s all about the writing,” said Riddell.

Students took turns trying out different jobs on and off camera with some in the control room directing the newscast or running the teleprompter while others operated cameras or anchored the show.

Patrick Ging, a computer science major, said the visit gave him a new perspective on TV news. “How TV news is made is kind of a black box for most people, and this was an enlightening experience,” said Ging, who also directed the show from the control room. “Directing was a lot harder than I thought because you have to process everything that’s going on at once.”

Our Journalism Concentration & Minor

The Hunter College journalism program is offered as a concentration or a minor within the Department of Film & Media Studies. Its curriculum is built around production courses in journalism and analytical courses in media studies. Learn more about our course requirements.

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