by Beth Johnson | Feb 13, 2014 | App Articles, Getting Along With Peers, Political Hotbed
It’s a fact of life, in news, that your work will be criticized a lot. It can be hard to take, but you must if you want to succeed in the business. However, there is one criticism you never want to be told: That you blame others for your mistakes. If you do, you...
by Beth Johnson | May 21, 2013 | App Articles, Getting Along With Peers, Political Hotbed
When I started out in the biz, I was one of the youngest producers ever hired at the station where I worked. I was so young, my anchors were close to my parents age. So were many of the reporters and photojournalists, not to mention much of the production crew....
by Beth Johnson | Feb 6, 2013 | Anchoring, App Articles, Getting Along With Peers, Political Hotbed
When a producer sent me an email about this issue, I had to shake my head a little. Been there a couple of times. I could just see the anchor that used to count the number of stories lecturing me again. I also could see the anchor that used to count how much time...
by Beth Johnson | Jan 9, 2013 | App Articles, Getting Along With Peers, Political Hotbed, Producing
So now we know that anchors often resort to onset rants, when they are super frustrated and feel there is no other outlet. Anchors, we get it. Other journalists understand some of these issues are hard to take, but it’s time for you to see what impact that moment of...
by Beth Johnson | Jan 7, 2013 | Anchoring, Getting Along With Peers, Political Hotbed
This makes many producers blood boil. You toil over a newscast for hours, then during the show, the anchors start complaining about and/or making fun of the copy you worked so hard on. Complaining on set during the newscasts about the show, is the number one way to...
by Beth Johnson | May 7, 2012 | App Articles, Getting Along With Peers, Political Hotbed
Take a moment and think about the most colorful characters in the newsroom. For me there are two groups, photographers and assignment editors. We’ve decoded some photographer behaviors in “You exist to hold my tripod.” Bottom line, photojournalists are incredible...