Monthly Archives: April 2012

Summing up undergrad

I remember writing about my four years in high school. That was easy—everything was negative; I hated this, that sucked and to hell with this person. The only saving grace about high school was ROTC and my very small group of friends. College was anything but.

I don’t think I had more than a handful of bad days at FSU or FAMU. Before I get started breaking down my time there, I want to say that, to me, FAMU and FSU are one school. I know they will never be “one school” in name or in administration, but to me they are my alma mater. I’m as much a Rattler as I am a Seminole. I started at FSU, and my degree may be from FSU, but I love FAMU just as much. As a J-School student there, I experienced everything a typical FAMU J-School student might experience. I put my heart and soul into my work there, and it shows on my FAMU transcript. I have a 3.69 GPA at FAMU, enough to be on Dean’s list every semester.

Now that I’ve explained that, I’ll try my best to go in chronological order.

Summer 2008:

In November 2007, I was accepted to Florida State University. I had applied to seven schools, five of them in Florida. In June 2008 my dad and I flew up to FSU to move me into my first dorm room. I lived in a triple room in Gilchrist Hall—we had our own bathroom. I was the first one to move in—lucky for me because I got first choice of beds, and my bed was practically in a room of its own. That was the lucky part. Dad and I flew up on the American Eagle from Fort Myers (through Miami) to Tallahassee. That was my first experience with Tally’s podunk, ten-gate, two-terminal airport. It’s here that I’ll take you on a mental tangent—the Tallahassee Airport is a joke; there are five or so gates in Terminals A and B. That’s not enough to even have two terminals! Anyway, Daddy and I landed and got a rental PT Cruiser. We drove into town, and got to my dorm. I was bright-eyed and bushy-tailed, ready to take a stab at this thing called college. We got all my stuff moved in—there wasn’t very much because it was only a six-week summer semester. Once we were finished, dad had several hours to kill before his return flight that evening to Fort Myers. We went and got food; I couldn’t even begin to tell you where. I know I teared up when he left, but I didn’t cry. I bet he did though. My roommates moved in a few days later, and we started mingling. We never really “clicked,” but we didn’t fight either. We were roommates—nothing more or less.

A few weeks went by, and I got really homesick. I didn’t really have any friends yet; I had people I hung out with, but no one who I was comfortable talking about anything deep with. It was harder than I thought it would be to make “true friends.” Everyone said college is a way to remake yourself into someone new. I wanted to do that. I told myself I’d be much “cooler” than I was in high school. In my own way, that really worked out, but I’ll explain that later. In my homesickness, I walked around campus, exploring my new world, and I found myself alone, crying on the steps of Moore Auditorium in the union. I didn’t know anyone up here. It was already late June, so three or four weeks had passed. What was I doing wrong? I turned to a fellow I met during orientation earlier that spring. Something told me not to, but I did anyway. I sat there, crying on the steps, and I called him. I told him I was homesick. He helped me through it, but by the following morning he told me he hated me. I don’t really know what exactly happened… I lost the one person I felt connected to, which was exactly what I needed. The following day I told my other friend Mike what I was feeling. He told me he was feeling the same way too, and we immediately became better and closer friends. Mike, his friend Nicole, our friend Zach and a few others formed a group, and we were all sad to see the summer come to an end. Inside I was still extremely excited to get to go home.

Break between Summer and Fall, 2008:

I went home to Naples for two and a half weeks between late July and August, when the fall semester would start. I was so excited to get there; I missed my parents, sisters, friends and dogs. Hell, I even missed my job at Five Guys. I spent a lot of time with my friends, and |retracted| ——– ——– ——– ——– ——– ——– ——– ——– ——– ——– ——– ——– ——– ——– ——– ——– ——– ——– ——– ——– ——– ——– ——– ——– ——– ——– ——– ——– ——– ——– ——– ——– ——– ——– ——– ——– ——– ——– ——– ——– ——– ——– ——– ——– ——– ——– ——– ——– . |end retraction|

I visited my old boss at Five Guys, and I went to my old high school. I only ever go back to visit with my ROTC instructors, but they weren’t there. I sat on our grassy patch outside the ROTC building reminiscing. Before I knew it it was time to go back to Tallahassee. My parents and I made a deal—if I could keep the 100% bright futures scholarship, I could take my car up with me. It started this semester, so I packed up my little black Volkswagen Jetta with what little stuff I had and hit the road. I cried for the first 40 or 50 miles. This started a trend of driving that six-hour drive solo each year. I made it back to FSU with no hickups, but I noticed something…

While moving into Broward Hall—right next door to my summer stomping grounds—I saw 10 times more people. I didn’t know at the time, but over summer FSU becomes a ghost town. Now that August had rolled around, moving into my dorm was like squeezing twice as many sardines in a can as suggested. Moms and Dads and students were everywhere.

Fall 2008:

I don’t remember much from the majority of my freshman year. A few very important things happened this semester though. Mom convinced me to go to the V89—our campus’s radio station—cattle call. Cattle call is where people interested in getting involved with the radio station go to learn about how they can. I went, but I wasn’t happy about it—oh, how wrong  I could be. I didn’t know then, but V89 became the diving board for the rest of my life. Something attracted me to the news department; I couldn’t begin to tell you why I was drawn to news, but I was. I put in an application to join, and they called me to audition for an on air spot. Suddenly I wasn’t unhappy about V89 anymore. They told me I’d need to look up a story online and summarize it into five or six sentences. I picked a story from Al Jazeera and summarized it. I walked in just as nervous as could be. I sat down and they told me not to be nervous. I read it flawlessly, and they hired me. I knew I’d only get an on-air spot once a week for less than five minutes, but I was still excited.

The next week I started. I had a 3:50 shift on Tuesdays. I got there at 1:45—before the last newser had even gone on air. I was too excited to start, but I knew I had to. V89 newsers write one international story, one national, one state and one local story. I got done in less than 30 minutes. I spent the next hour and a half practicing and calling my parents to tell them I was about to go on. The time came—I went into the tank. I was about to go on air. After some weird music, the news music came on, and I started to get a little nervous. The deejay then pointed at me, cuing my start. In that instant, all of my nerves disappeared. I fell in love with broadcasting in that moment.

Spring 2009:

Another big event happened this semester. After getting involved with V89 the previous fall, I started something I never thought I’d do. I started writing. It’s here that I must tell you in middle school I had a teacher named Annette Kocal. For sixth, seventh and eighth grade I had her for “language arts,” and she constantly told me how I’d never amount to anything with writing. She once took me into the hallway to tell me my writing was illegible, and she stopped a teacher walking through the hall and asked if they could find the space between my words. She could, and I could, but Ms. Kocal couldn’t. Another time she gave me a detention for failing to have my homework finished the day before it was due. That was the weirdest reason to discipline a student I’d ever heard. Anyway… one of my friends from the V89 news department, Felicite Fallon, was the news section editor for the FSView & Florida Flambeau, FSU’s student newspaper. I told her I wanted to start writing, and she gave me an application. I learned that position was a paid one; how excited was I?! It was crap pay—$7 per article—but I didn’t care. I was barely involved in news media, but I knew the more published and more recognition I could get with my name, the better off I’d be in the future.

I still have all my articles from the FSView in my portfolio, and that first one was horrendous. I learned something about myself that I never would have guessed before. I loved writing. As you can probably tell from this entry, from then on writing became a huge part of me. I even bought a physical journal I could write in, but not until about a year after this semester ends.

Summer 2009:

I came home for the summer, but this time it was a whole summer I spent at home. I worked at Five Guys while I was there, and I took classes at the local community college, Edison State College, during the second half of the summer. That was interesting. I took Chemistry and its lab and Econ 2. The econ class was pretty simple, but my chemistry class was a disaster. I still remember it—I had a former meth-addict for my teacher, who was more than 50 percent blind. She was going to be teaching me how to put two chemicals together to make something else? How did this college find her? She ended up being a pretty great professor, and I got a good grade in that class. The only problem I had is that it was two days a week, and I was there from 9am to 4pm. It was practically a job, and on top of that I had that econ class for three hours every Monday evening. That cut my hours down at Five Guys a lot, but it’s ok. I needed that summer to recuperate from FSU.

Fall 2009:

I knew what my passion was now, after two semesters of news reporting, so I started taking classes toward majoring in communications. One of my classes required me to start a twitter account, and I was NOT happy about it. I nearly refused, contemplating telling my professor I’d go to the dean because she couldn’t force me to sign up for a social medium for a grade. I caved and got one, but I still hated it for the majority of this semester. Funny—not long after this semester ended I fell in loved with twitter. This semester was dedicated to communication courses—that was what I’d decided I would major in. I took most of my intro classes, and went to advisers to learn about majoring in communications. They told me about the application process and the different course tracks in the communication department. I was worried because they told me about the GPA requirement to apply. I had screwed around the past year and let my GPA fall pretty low. I lost my car, and I was stuck driving dad’s little beetle. I just kept working to improve my grades

The one good thing that came out of seeing an adviser in the communication department was learning that I could minor in journalism at Florida A&M University.

Spring 2010:

I kept working toward a major in communications, and I started working heavily on my application—ready to submit it in February. I also started my coursework at FAMU in journalism. I met my first mentor—Dr. Bettye Grable. She taught my “Use of Information Resources” class. The title of the class is pretty self explanatory now, but at the time I had no idea what it meant. She taught us ways to look for information. She taught us how to use searching tools, she taught us how to get public records and she taught how important it is to question everything. She didn’t take any shenanigans from anyone, and that’s exactly what I needed. There was one assignment where I had to bring in a death certificate; it didn’t matter whose, but I had to use my resources to acquire one. I ended up having to pay for it from the health department, but she told us that sometimes things cost money. I didn’t realize it then, but she was the best thing to happen to me in the past year of school.

I had another application and interview process started this semester. I applied and interviewed to be a resident assistant in housing. I found out in March that I was hired as an RA in DeGraff Hall with one of my friends, Manda. I have to admit I was worried about working with her; I was afraid becoming coworkers would damage our friendship, but it never did—thankfully.

On the campus level, a major shift happened. In February, a new president, Eric J. Barron, started his tenure at FSU.

Summer 2010:

This summer I had my first internship. I worked in Estero, Fla. for Beasley Broadcasting Group. I worked for the morning show on B103.9 WXKB: Big Mama and the Wild Bunch. I hated it. Well, I didn’t hate the place; I hated Big Mama. I had never met a more hate-filled, spiteful or just plain mean person in my life. He could yell at someone at the drop of a hat like it didn’t mean anything. He once told a woman she was a horrible mother. How do you do that without feeling the smallest taste of remorse? One good thing came out of it—I got out of my V89 shell. I met some new radio folks like Babs and Adam Star, two of the other personalities on the show. Turtle, the other girl who answered phones with me, and I got along really well. She came up to visit me during my last semester at FSU.

Fall 2010:

Now I am a junior in college. This is surreal. How have I gotten this far? This semester was hell on earth. I took nothing but communication courses, but around September I learned I had not been accepted to the Communication major. They only looked at one thing—GPA. Single criterion. I was livid. No. I was beyond livid. I had a letter of recommendation from the former president of the university, TK Wetherell. I had a resume that could rival any of the graduates from the program. I had interviews and story clippings that were better written than some of the faculty could have written. I met with deans, assistant deans and teachers trying to get them to reverse their decision. I was accepted to the university under the premise I would never bejust a number, yet that’s exactly what I had become to the College of Communication—a number. The only thing they saw about me was my GPA—my number. At the time it was a 2.86; it wasn’t stellar, and I knew that. But there is so much more to a student than just their GPA.

This semester I also got started at the television station at FAMU. I started as the audio board operator for the show Reality Check. I took it seriously, and I showed up every week to record our show.

Spring 2011:

No matter what I said, CCI would not accept me to the mass communication major, so I was stuck finding an alternative major. That was extremely difficult; they told me about a new English major called Editing, Writing & Media. They said it was the closest thing FSU offered to journalism. I signed up for it, just wanting to study something so I could finish this year. All of my courses up to this point were completely useless. I wasn’t majoring in Communications, and I wasn’t minoring in it either, so I’d wasted almost a year’s worth of courses.

My senior year will come with another blog post entirely.

Rainbows in the Clouds

An old African song says “When it looks like the sun wasn’t going to shine anymore, God put a rainbow in the clouds.”

Tonight was the “An Evening with Maya Angelou” event—the headlining event for FSU’s 50 year anniversary after the racial integration of our student body. I had a very rare student opportunity; I was backstage for the event and had a conversation with Dr. Angelou in her “meet and greet” room. Only nine students were there, and we were allowed to take photos with Dr. Angelou.

Maya Angelou talks about FSU’s Integration

I knew she speaks six languages, but I never thought I’d have a conversation with her IN SPANISH!

I can’t emphasize enough how much her writing, her speaking and my interactions with this extremely knowledgeable and awe-inspiring poet have changed me as an individual. There was a time I was modest. “Be careful of modesty,” she says. “Don’t be modest; be humble. Humility is saying ‘yes, I’ve done these things, but somebody else has already paid for me.”

Maya Angelou is my Mrs. Flowers. She has harassed me before, but only in a way that would make me a better person and a better reporter. Tonight, being backstage, I was asked several times “are you going to interview her?” I couldn’t bring myself to do that. I respect her too much. Yes, I’m a reporter, but I’m also a human being. I recognize that “backstage” is a safe space for her, and it would be horrible of me to bring a camera there and stick a microphone in her face. I’d have to just enjoy being able to meet her and talk to her again. She knows what she’s done for people, and she’s proud of it—she has every right to be.

“Know that you are already paid for,” she said. That means someone has already come along and paved the way for you to do the things you can do. Someone has already made sacrifices for your life, and you have to appreciate that.
I admit that I talk about Maya a lot, and I have so many more rainbows in my life than just her. I could not have gotten to where I am today without the help, support and love from my parents. They have been the brightest and longest-lasting rainbows in my clouds. Through thick and thin, black and white—they’ve been there. It didn’t matter what struggle or what circumstance occurred—whenever life made me break and call it uncle, I can call my parents and they will talk me through it.

The same goes for my sister, Rachel. “I smile because you’re my sister; I laugh because there’s nothing you can do about it.” There is so much truth in that phrase. Rachel and I grew up together, and we have been there for each other through it all. I don’t say we liked each other all that much from time to time, but we loved each other, and I knew she would always be there.

While I am admittedly much closer to my younger sister (probably because of how close we are in age), I still am thankful for my older sister Auburn.

At Florida State University, since June of 2008, I have made and lost several friends and close friends. I don’t even know if I could pick one “best” friend at FSU. I’ve had so many who have meant so much to me at different times in our relationships. All I can say is the past four years would not have been nearly as memorable or as amazing without the group of Seminoles I’ve gotten to know and love.

At Florida A&M University since 2010, I have also made several friends. There were twists and curves, and “white boy this,” and “white boy, that,” and it taught me there is still a serious problem with racism in our country—including racism against “white folks.” Now, I don’t identify as “white,” although my skin appears to be of Caucasian origin. I don’t identify as “black” either. I identify as “human” because that is all that really keeps us holding on as a society—the fact we’re all truly the same, just with slightly differences that make us unique. Don’t ever be modest about your uniqueness or your quirks. Be humble about that—acknowledge them and let them shine. It’s that kind of humility that will take you far in life.

Inspiration

“You can only become great at that which you are willing to sacrifice for.” Truer words could never be spoken. I have had the pleasure—no; the honor of being shaped (at least in part) by Marguerite “Maya” Angelou.

Very few people have the ability to say they’ve been shaped by such a powerful person as Maya Angelou, but I have. She has taught me more than I think even she knows. After reading I know why the caged bird sings , I couldn’t help but feel connected to her. Then I heard the audiobook version. Do you know anyone with a voice as powerful as that? I don’t. Inspiration can come in very small things, like the stanza of a poem. I’m not big in poetry, but I’ll be damned if “I Rise” hasn’t become the motto of my life. I once wrote in my private journal that Maya Angelou has a “glowing, deep and serious voice [which] has a way of making words seem infinitely more powerful than their creators ever dreamed them to be.” I have never written anything I more firmly believe.

“You can shoot me with your words,
you can cut me with your lies,
you can kill me with your hatefulness,
but just like life—I’ll rise.”

I’ll admit—I’m absolutely terrified to begin graduate school. What if it’s not for me? How will I pay back that debt? What if I’m no good? But you know what? None of that matters. What matters is my drive, determination and passion. I once “checked in” at the Manhattan Bridge, and someone asked how I got to go to all of these cool places; the only thing I could think to reply with was “with drive and determination, mostly.” There is absolute truth in that. As Doc Emmett Brown once said, “if you put your mind to it, you can accomplish anything.” So, Columbia University in the City of New York, bring it on! Hit me with your best shot because there’s nothing you can throw at me that I won’t take in stride. New York City—bring it on! I’ve never felt more comfortable in a big city than I do in the big apple.

I have all of these emotions coursing through my body right now. I’m 7 days away from graduation—I’m already done with my undergrad classes; all that is left is packing my room and waiting for Friday, April 27. At 7:p.m. But who’s counting? I’m amazed that I made it this far; I’m ecstatic that I’ve accomplished this; I’m proud—very proud of what all I’ve done; I’m excited to see what the future holds; I’m sad to see all of my friends and connections here fade into my past; I’m afraid of all of my future success; I’m angry it’s come this quickly; I’m astounded at the statistic that I’ve become a part of. Emotions galore, and they all rotate through my brain at (what seems like) a million miles per minute. I have to say that without my friends and my family, I’d be nowhere near where I am today. I have the greatest support system in the world. I may have been single for the past four years, but someone once told me “Turner, you just haven’t found someone who can keep up with you yet.” Oh, the truth behind that statement. I may have missed out on the “college promiscuity,” but I more than made up for it in making a name for myself. I guarantee you walk anywhere on Florida State’s campus OR Florida A&M’s campus and mention my name, someone around you will know who I am. I don’t promise you they have the best of things to say, but they know who I am and they know what I’m good at.

To come back to what I intended to write about—inspiration—I have to say that there is no inspiration like lyric-less music. There is a song I’ve known since I was very young, and it has no words. Banana Wind by Jimmy Buffett—on the album of the same name—has no words, but its meaning is limitless. Every time I have listened to it I have learned a new meaning to the song. It’s songs like this one that can let you escape into the creases in your own mind and just think. Get away from it all; escape into your own head. That brain—it has creases and folds that form a maze that you can never know what all it truly contains. Take a moment, turn the lights and music down low and just drift away. Drift into a stream of transient though, careening through creative alternatives and amaze in all your mind has to offer you.

One day I will come back to Florida State University, and I will give a commencement speech; I am sure of this. I don’t know how soon or how far away, but I know it will happen. I believe I have really made the most of my education here, and even though there were some serious downfalls, I wouldn’t trade a moment of it. I think my inspiration has been my previous success. No. That’s just a bonus. My inspiration has been everyone around me. I know it seems like I write and report “for me,” and it can seem like a selfish job that I’m doing—trust me when I say it’s not. I truly am just that engrossed and in love with what I do that I push myself to do even better. I know that my reporting can help people. I know that there are just some stories that need to be told and no one else will do the telling—that leaves it up to me to tell these stories. I must. It’s what I do. It’s what I live for. So, to come full circle—you can only become great at that which you are willing to sacrifice for. Would I sacrifice for journalism? It and family are the only two things I can ever see myself sacrificing for.

Maya Angelou interview

Here is the unedited version of today’s interview. I began the recording right after the first question, which was ‘Tell me about FSU’s celebrating of their 50 years of racial integration.”


Columbia Essay A

I figure now that I have been accepted, there’s no harm in publishing my essay about what I experienced when I visited Tuscaloosa. Here it is:

Driving into Tuscaloosa, AL on US-82 is usually a pretty smooth ride, but after the record-setting tornado that ripped through the town earlier this year our trip there was anything but.

My younger sister was studying for her finals at the University of Alabama when the April 27 tornado swept through Tuscaloosa. I got a text message from my mom saying, “Bad tornado hit Rachel’s school and stadium.”

I immediately called Rachel to make sure she was safe. She told me she was in her dorm where they heard the storm. She got out of her room and went into the hallway. Luckily, she had no idea how bad things really were outside. I turned on the news and stared in horror.

I did not tell her all I was seeing. All I told her was how glad I was because she was safe, and I told her she needed to stay inside.

The storm passed, and the campus made it through with only minor damages. The same could not be said for the rest of Tuscaloosa. In just two days after the tornado struck, it was confirmed at least 87 people—four of them students at the university—died. The university canceled finals, and everyone began realizing the extent of the damage. I had no prior intention of going to Tuscaloosa after my semester ended.

When that “supercell” thunderstorm hit and I learned all that happened, I had to go up there. I needed to see it firsthand.

Once my semester ended, I met my parents in Fairhope, AL. The three of us drove up to Tuscaloosa in their Chevy Suburban. They had purchased a pallet of water and loaded it into a U-Haul trailer. I collected food, blankets and anything else people at Florida State University could donate.

I took my camera and laptop, and I documented everything I saw. The pictures told a much more powerful story than any words could capture.

The drive to Tuscaloosa was like any other long-distance drive in my family. Dad was in the driver’s seat while mom was in the passenger seat. It all changed once we got onto US-82. We started seeing downed trees and power lines. One house was completely unscathed, but their next-door neighbors were left with nothing more than a foundation. The closer we got to Tuscaloosa, the fewer unscathed homes we saw.

Just south of Tuscaloosa, US-82 becomes McFarland Boulevard. Almost immediately at the start of McFarland began the total destruction. I started snapping photos, even as the car was going 50 miles per hour down the highway. My mouth hung open in awe of all the destruction I was seeing. Tears filled my mother’s eyes, realizing her baby was only two blocks from this when the tornado went through and my father just shook his head—this was his alma mater.

We got to the intersection of McFarland and 15th Street—the major intersection—none of us could believe what we saw. Rubble and debris were strewn all over. Business signs, houses and building materials were thrown like toothpicks. Travel was not allowed westbound on 15th Street, but the damage could be seen from McFarland.

I saw it all: national guardsmen, looting, pain and suffering. What was once a strip mall was reduced to a pile of scrap. My camera had never been so taxed with back-to-back photos.

While uploading the photos to my computer I was able to recapture all of the emotion I felt while I snapped each photo: sadness. With photos staring back at me, I began writing.

My article became more than just a story. It became a plea for help. I knew the people in Tuscaloosa needed it. It fell on me and other journalists reporting the story to see they got the help they needed. Other journalists documented the “let’s get there and get this done” attitude that hundreds of alumni and parents brought to lend a hand.

This tragedy helped me expand my view of reporting from fairly simple local and university news to large-scale, national stories. In the face of such devastation, it was rewarding to know I was able to help a community as tightly knit as Tuscaloosa.

FAMU Journalism, graphic design and photo students earn 10 regional awards

Reblogged from News 20 at 5:

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Special to News 20 at Five

By Prof. Dorothy Bland, FAMU Journalism Division Director

TALLAHASSEE, Fla.  –  Journalism, graphic design and photography students at Florida Agricultural and Mechanical University are in the winners circle again as they have won 10 awards between the Best of the South Contest and the Society of Professional Journalists Mark of Excellence Contest  this semester.

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