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Hi Camilla! I’m a 19 year old Professional Communication student hoping to specialise in Journalism and PR. I’m highly impressed with the number of internships you’ve managed to secure under your belt, so I guess I’m just wondering if you’d be able to give me any advice to follow in your footsteps? I have a blog (it’s currently not working at the moment so I won’t link it to you just yet) which I use frequently. I’m really interested in politics, current affairs, arts and culture, foreign languages in general, I really love writing. Thanks for your time!
Nancy.

Thanks so much for your question Nancy!

I figured I’d answer this question in a post, as it’s a question I get a lot, and I know a lot of people who visit Girls Are Made From Pepsi are journalism/media students. I’m mainly going to focus on publications though, as that’s where I’ve completed the majority of my internships. You might find this method also works for broadcast media too though.

When you’re studying to work in media, there are two things for certain. Firstly, you will be exposed to Media Watch. You will tune in every Monday night and feel incredibly smug whilst doing so. You will then return to your daily life, and eye people with mocking scorn as they browse through certain low-brow publications, blissfully unaware of the ways they are being manipulated by media scum. You are oh so wise, oh blessed journalism student.

2. You HAVE to do internships. Yes, plural. Notice how I say internships and not internship. That’s because ideally, you should do more than one.

Now, a lot of media courses will make it mandatory to complete at least one internship, which is great! My first journalism course at Macleay College in Sydney (which I highly recommend for those wanting hands on experience) required us to complete two. I think I did 4 (nerdburger!). But I had a rollicking time whilst doing so and now my resume is pimpin’. Ya dig?

Spending just one week photocopying paper work or creating scrap books of inspiration or accompanying a journalist on their particular beat just isn’t going to cut the mustard, girlfriend. Sure, it gets you in the workplace and it certainly adds a little somethin’ somethin’ to your resume, but if you want to acquire some actual skills and really set yourself apart from the rest of the pack, you need to do several internships.

Now don’t freak out. I realise you just want ONE! And one may be hard enough to get as it is. The idea of working for free might not sound too appealing, but you need to keep in mind that as a student you need to acquire skills, and the only way to do this is through hands on experience. Luckily for you, I have the art of intern proposing down pat and I’m going to share my secrets with you.

  1. Find a publication you want to work for. Make sure it’s a publication you actually respect. This will make writing to the publication a lot more easier because you’ll appear more genuine, and should you win the editor over with your flourishing praise, it’ll make interning a lot more fun because you’ll actually want to be there. I’ve made the mistake of interning for publications I didn’t really love all that much, and trust me, it shows when you disappear to the bathroom every five minutes.
  2. The best thing to do is to start off small. You’ve probably got your sights set on joining the Park Street pack, or trawling the hipster dwellings of New York with your new Nylon buddies, or fetching unpublished manuscripts for Ms. Anna Wintour herself.  If you’re in your first year and haven’t done any internships, you might not get placed at the nation’s top publications to begin with. That is, unless you know someone. And if you have contacts, by Joe, make sure you’re lending out free iPods left, right and centre!  But if you don’t know anyone in the industry, that’s ok! There are honestly a lot of other cool publications out there that are relatively small, but looooooove taking on interns. This is usually because as a small publication they might not have the same resources as larger publications, so it’s a win-win situation for all. They get an extra person helping out, and you get to have a kick-ass time being a serious journalist! Can you say Extra! Extra!?
  3. Make up a list of milestones. Just grab a pen and paper. Or make up an excel spread sheet, and create goals for yourself. Mine usually go something like this:
    • 1st October : Email editor of [your magazine here]
    • 5th October: Follow up email
    •  10th October: Follow up with phone call
    •  30th October: Try another publication

4. Go for gold. Just do it. Email them. Find who it is that handles intern programs, and drop them a line. Depending on how large the publication is, it could be a number of a people: the editor, the PA, the editorial coordinator, HR department. Checking the website usually brings some good leads as to whom you should be contacting.

5. When you’re crafting up your letter to intern success, be sweet. Be honest. And most of all, focus on how YOU can help THEM.  If you send someone an email saying what you want, they will probably forward your email around the office and everyone will make fun of you. Just kidding! However, it won’t pack as much as a punch if you tell them how much you love their magazine. So go on, don your digital eyelashes and get a-fluttering, girlfriend. Tell them your favourite issue so far, tell them what regular columns you love, tell them you wish they’d update their blog more and that you’re just DYING for the next issue. But also make sure you mean these things.

6. Be relentless. Do not give up so easily. Editors (or whomever handles work experience) get a shit load of emails, and sometimes they might see your email, intend to get back to you, but forget because fashion week is on or something. So what’s an undergrad to do? You email them again. Just a gentle reminder saying something along the lines of “Hi, Just wondering if you received my email regarding internships. I’m super keen to come in and help you guys out in any way I can. Looking forward to hearing back from you!” Sometimes, this might involve even (ugh!) calling them. I’ve done this in the past, and it’s landed me internships. Here’s what you do:

  • Find their number (who do you want to talk to? The editor? The deputy editor?). This will usually be on the website.
  • Write up a little script of what you intend to say should they (gulp) actually be in the office or, should they be in a meeting.
  • If they’re unable to talk, politely inform them you’ll call back. YOU call THEM. Sometimes, they might ask for you to leave a message. 9 times out of 10, they will not return your call.
  • If they can talk, mention your email, then restate what you’re written in said email. Calling shows persistence, guts and dedication. You’re setting yourself apart from the pack. You go Glen Coco!

And lastly, just a few pointers for when you actually score the gig:

  1. Should you be asked to perform menial tasks such as fetching lunch, photocopying, banking, decorating the bathroom (oh yes, I’ve been there), it’s best to grin and bare it. You will inevitably have to do jobs you don’t like, but you’ll be rewarded with more fun, fulfilling tasks as well. For example, I’ve had to pack 100s of gift bags for book launches, but I also got to attend said book launches. Think Hugo’s Lounge in Kings Cross, with dozens of talented, super important people, free cosmopolitans, a photo in the Sun Herald, and a goody bag to boot. Own horn = tooted!
  2. If possible, arrange to come in 1 or 2 days a week for a few months, rather than doing 1 week straight. You’ll be more exposed to the up-and-down publications process. Sometimes, some weeks are very quiet, and it’s not fun to land work experience on those weeks. You’ll also build up more of a relationships with those you’re working with.
  3. Remember to keep in contact with those you work for. They can prove to be invaluable references and mentors.

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Source: laurenoutloud.com

Ambitious? Check. Multi-talented? Check. Super cute yet kick-ass to boot? Double check. Allow me to introduce you to Lauren O’Neil, a move and a shaker of the multi-media variety. She clearly loves her life and what she does, and it’s no wonder! She blogs for Cananda’s Cosmo TV, she makes videos, is the resident social media guru for Vitamin Water MuchMusic, teaches online journalism, and gets to interview loads of cool people for a living. I recently approached her to be my Lady of the Week, and despite her cuh-razy schedule, she was super thrilled to take time out to answer some questions for me. Here is le interview. Enjoy!

Yo Lau! Where you from gurl? What’s your story?

Bonjeezy, doll! I’m living in Toronto right now, but was born in a small city called Chatham in Ontario. It’s an aight town, but very very boring if you’re not into playing hockey or… well, that’s about it.
I had to make my own fun until I escaped for University at 17. Often, that involved writing or reading or dressing up in weird costumes and messing with people. Sometimes, it involved Barbie dolls and Ninja Turtles and my parents’ ginormous old video camera. Rarely did it involve acting cool. I wasn’t cool.

When you were just a little blonde-bot, what did you want to be when you grew up?

EVERYTHING. I still want to be everything. It used to change week by week: a veterinarian, a dance teacher, a scientist, a garbage man, an undercover cop (the kind that gets to wear fake skin like Mrs. Doubtfire), an actresssss… I wanted the spotlight, always. This much was certain.

You have a few pimpin’ jobs in the media industry. How did you get your foot in the door?

I get asked this a lot… I so wish I had a definitive answer! I think it was a combination of hard work, education, networking, passion and, for lack of a better word, “pizazz”. Actually, wait – I do have a better word: “Moxie”. I like that word, moxie.

I started down this path long before I realized what I was doing. I was constantly performing as a kid – acting in every play I could, dancing, entering public speaking competitions. I wrote like crazy all the while, and started building websites when I was 12. Fast forward 10 years later, I’m finishing my undergraduate degree in Communication Studies / Computer Science, hosting my university’s video news program, bartending at a high-volume nightclub and interning at a small ad agency.

I  decided to get a Master’s degree in Journalism after that and while at J-School I began blogging harder, got really into Twitter, built up my digital portfolio and worked my butt off on assignments. This lead to a great internship at a TV news station and a freelance blogging gig with a major television station in Toronto. I covered concerts for them and for my own blog, meeting tons of people and making friends with everybody I could along the way. I freelanced for other publications too.

My first job out of school was with Canada’s largest newspaper. I got that through school connections and through being knowledgeable about new media technology.

All subsequent jobs just sort of happened. I still get approached by producers and editors looking for people with my skill set. It would appear as though journalists with strong multimedia skills are in short supply… or rather, if they’re out there, they’re not easy to find. I think this may be the key – I understood the importance of making myself easy to find from the very beginning. Personal branding is important in any industry, but especially this one.

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You seem like a crazy busy person! Do you bathe in red bull?

Too sticky! I prefer coffee. I bathe the inside of my body with black coffee like, 8 times a day. I don’t care if it’s 11:00 pm – if I’ve still got work to do, more coffee. I’m going to be dead by the time I’m 30, aren’t I?

Who’s the coolest person you’ve ever interviewed?

Ooooh that’s tough! Talking to Dustin Diamond (Screech from Saved by the Bell) was pretty cool. He was kind of creepy, but like… he’s Samuel Powers! In a similar vein, Alicia Silverstone was awesome to talk to. Cher Horowitz was one of my idols growing up. Johnny Knoxville, also cool. I love him pretty hard :)

Do you ever get star struck and spontaneously propose to people?

Hahahaha, yesssss :)
I almost puked on Ryan Gosling in Cannes. I’ve never felt like that before.
The Adrian Grenier proposal was actually planned in advance. I didn’t think he’d say yes, but sheeeeeet – looks like I’ve got a wedding to plan now! Want to come?

Describe yourself in haiku form plz.

Lauren likes to Tweet
She can’t put down her iPhone
Look out for that wall

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Follow Lauren on Twitter here, or check out her blog!

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I found Scarlett’s blog via one of my favourite Australian writers, Rachel Hills. And hey, if it’s good enough for that kick-ass wordsworth/academic/sparkly human being, then I’m sure it’ll add some extra oomph to my blog feeds! Indeed it did. If you’re after something informative and your spirit animal is a fan girl fox, The Early Bird Catches the Worm is for you.

I’ve been reading and spamming Scarlett ever since I found her blog, so naturally I felt the need to stick her face on my blog and ask her how she stays sizzlin’ in the blogosphere. Here’s our short yet sweet convo.

Hey Scarlett! How would you describe your blog to someone who’s never read it?
Pop culture and social commentary with a feminist edge.

What’s with the name Early Bird Catches the Worm? I sense a mild allusion to journalistic prowess!
Ideally, I would be the earliest bird with the worm, but my day job gets in the way of that. It’s more like Second Mouse Catches the Worm! One day…

You blog explores feminist issues in relation to pop culture. Who are some of you favourite women on television, in music or literature?
Where do I start?! As the blog will attest, I’m a huge fan of Mia Freedman, Rachel Hills and Erica Bartle. Still with writing, I have just delved into Joyce Carol Oates and I’m loving her work.
I have recently written about Cristina Yang of Grey’s Anatomy, the women of Scream and Charmed, and Grace Kelly as Lisa Fremont in Hitchcock’s Rear Window, all of whom I find interesting characters.
I also have a soft spot for Marilyn Monroe, who is ripe with feminist fodder.

How do you stay motivated?
As someone who writes about the current happenings in pop culture and social trends, it really depends on what’s happening in that sphere at the time and whether I have something of value to add to the discussion or can relay someone else’s opinion. It ebbs and flows. But I find that if the other aspects of my life (work, social life, downtime) are in order, my motivation to write is, too.

What advice would you have for other media graduates who are finding the media industry hard to crack?
I’m finding the media industry hard to crack myself, so I’m not sure what advice I might have that could be of use! It’s important to find your writing voice and have an online presence, especially if you have no other published works to show potential employers. Try to get a mentor of sorts, as well. I wouldn’t say that I have an official mentor, per se, but I am in contact with several other successful bloggers who offer a wealth of advice and support. Rachel Hills has some wonderful stuff on her blog in relation to mentorship.
And all you need is a foot in the door!

Check out Scarlett’s blog here.

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Elsewhere in the blogosphere…

I love a good visualised pun! Photo via AllTop

Purple Power delivers an almighty blow to inequality as NY State legalises gay marriage!  Yesterday was a day to mark history (and herstory!). However, the state law is buried under a messy heap of federal legislation, which might mean that all the young and hot things in love out there might not be getting a break on their taxes.

I Am Not My Uterus – This is the blog post that had the Twitter kids slinging mud pies at each other all week. Clem Bastow’s article in defense of deliberately barren women polarised the blogosphere into two groups – those already on a vitally important errand to Babyco, and those who’d rather toss the baby out with the bath water (kidding! Kind of). Women who’ve remained childless rallied in defense of Clem (myself included), whilst mothers and fathers alike saw it as an attack on their choices, an immoral decision, or clearly in breach of what mother nature intended.

Miss Bastow, you would be best to simply stay silent rather than use your words to spread your own negativity, weirdness and confusion. Too many young women (and men) have been encouraged to supress their natural inclinations by the likes of you to their regret latter.

The reality of nature can not be altered by newspapers articles: reliable female fertillity is only between the ages of about 18-35 and once the opportunity is gone, it is gone forever. Young men and women waste enough time building a carear without you demoralising them.

Coming from a family of women who have all decided to marry and have children late (or sometimes, not at all), any plans for me personally getting up the duff are yet to be conceived. However, but the government focuses on working families, and even Barbie gets pregnant, I can’t help but feel that it’s expected of me. However, doesn’t everyone feel as though something is expected of them? Women with children feel pressured to raise perfect children and somehow climb the corporate ladder simultaneously, whilst women without children feel like they’re being vilified for putting themselves first. Whether you’re a mother or not, women are defined by their (lack of) children.
Unravelling Blake Lively – Is it a bubbly facade? What is this amazonian beauty like when the camera isn’t rolling? Just who is this blonde icon with enough charm to get the Queen of England naked? Can she stand on her own two feet or does she need to lean on the likes of Leo and teeter on her Loubotins to get ahead? Blake Lively represents a sort of obsession with celebrity. She’s seemingly perfect – a bangin’ body fit for a swimsuit campaign, she’s tight with the emperor and empress of fashion themselves, Karl Lagerfield and Anna Wintour, and also has claim to the lead role in the hottest teen drama since we were welcomed to the OC, bitch. And she has really, really pretty hair. But is she as credible as she seems? Can she act? Can she do the splits? How much wood would a Blake Lively chuck if a Blake lively could chuck wood?

Blake has effectively created a brand for herself. She’s a hustler, climbing up that A-List ladder towards shooting-stardom. She’s working it because she realises that it’s a long way to the top if you want to rock and roll, and you can’t get by without a little help from your Hollywood friends. And if her tabloid covers are anything to go by, it appears to be working. You know you love her.

Ms. Magazine interviews everyone’s favourite huggable green gargantuan, Feminist Hulk. Hulk talks about endless waves of loving smash, his effective abuse of the caps-lock, and the never ending fight to destroy bull-shit.
The sexually abusive tradie as a stereotype – Bitch magazine discusses the prescriptive stereotype of the objectifying construction worker. Is it a self-fulfilling prophecy? Is it a case of having the name so adopting the game?

It’s probably for this reason that working class men are complained about so frequently at talks on street harassment, depicted alongside news articles and blog posts about the issue, and featured in anti-street harassment videos – all of which reify the idea that working class men are harassers. This classist framework really bothers me. Maybe it’s because I grew up working class and my step-father is a truck driver — a profession that’s often perceived as being full of men who demonstrate lewd behavior (a stereotype that contributes to the erasure of the growing number (5%) of women in the industry, but I digress) — that I am resistant to such overarching characterizations. My familiarity with men in these fields makes me sympathetic to arguments of perception vs. intention. Social behaviors differ across class identification, and what may be deemed “crass” or “trashy” or “inappropriate” according to middle or upper class values might be entirely acceptable in my family’s neck of the woods. So, whose standards should get top billing?

Photo: AP/Tina Fineberg via Bitch Media

Another Bridesmaids review. I couldn’t not mention Kristin’s Wigg’s debut film. Most reviews are so quick to confirm that Bridesmaids is so cool! Because it’s like the Hangover! But for chicks! It has fart jokes AND Rose Bryne! Winning! This one’s for those who aren’t stuck in the body of a teenage boy and are a little apprehensive about seeing the female cinematic incarnation of a Judd Appatow film.

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Style Bloggers and the Form/Function debate (and no, I’m not being ironic) – Are they more than just a pretty face? Are style blogs narcissistic mediums for cashed up clothes horses? Are bloggers lives a precious commodity? Could they die in a freak gasoline accident?  Fashion blogs are another form of fashion escapism, except much more affordable, accessible and personable. They blur the line between consumer culture and personal gratification with their diary-like form. We want to know the chick in the knitted jumper (isn’t even Russh employing this personability into their magazine shoots now?), but we also love honest fashion advice. We imagine that the blogger is just like us, although it might not always be the case (many already have profiles within the fashion industry or connections of the monetary or human variety). “Fashion bloggers,” argues author Lauren Burvill, “are undeniably successful. But at what price to the industry?” I don’t think they’re costing the industry – they’re just a new guarde of stylists.

Photo: Gary Pepper Vintage

BFFs are like a good wine – they get better with age.

“Humans are hard-wired to attach in a non-romantic way. There are evolutionary advantages for women to bond: to take care of each other, to provide a community and share responsibilities that increase the likelihood of survival,” Saltz says. “But friendships also fend off loneliness and depression.” – Gail Saltz, clinical associate professor of psychiatry at New York-Presbyterian Hospital/Weill Cornell Medical Center.

S.E Smith from This ‘Aint Livin’ talks about sexism and the female journalist. It’s a must read for any investigative lass.

For women in journalism, the undercurrent of sexism is always there and they’re often told to ignore it. Just focus on the story. Or manipulate it to your advantage (because women, you know, they are always about the feminine wiles and exploiting situations whenever possible). Definitely don’t complain, because if you do, you might get taken off the story and reassigned to the gardening desk. If you’re bothered that stories about women end up in the ‘life and style’ section you would do well to keep it to yourself, because no one wants to hear about it. The sexism is just an occupational hazard, you see, it is part of the job.

Katie Holmes uses her almighty Kegel muscles to squeeze the scoop out of her interviewees in Thank You For Smoking.

Nubby Twiglet has compiled a list of the best eye candy of the glossy variety. LOOK AT THE PURRDDYY.

Girl With a Satchel gives Cleo a high five for 10-page happiness special, but brandishes her digital wooden spoon for contradicting their soft-feminism with cover girl Beyonce’s bandaged body suit.

My new favourite website Autostraddle does the most hilariously accurate recap of the latest gay-centric episode of Pretty Little Liars. PLL is cat-nip for sapphic sisters – this show is FUCKING LADEN with lesbian undertones.

Spencer, you're looking very Shane today.

And to finish off your week with a ball-bashing to wet weather blues, here’s some wise words from all time bodacious babe Marilyn Monroe over at Yes and Yes.

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Having a bit of a rummage through my old blog and my drafts folder. This is something I wrote in response to a backlash against snark. How could I not? I’m Generation Y! I LOVE snark! I take daily showers in sarcasm and I’m young enough to know everything.

Once upon a time, quality journalism was measured by rigorous fact checking and objective reporting. Welcome to the 21st Century; welcome to the land of snark. We bring you explicit judgements and scathing criticisms ¾ a dish best served cold.

Bitchy journalism is hardly a new development. Mad Magazine mastered the art of comedian commentary back in the ‘90s, and SNL’s been satirizing everything from boy bands to prominent politicians for equally as long. Whilst the content of Mad Magazine and SNL are entertainment-based, I feel as though the lines between entertainment and reporting are increasingly becoming blurred. In a day and age where we ask “why not?” instead of “why?” or “how come?”, we constantly seek to mold and warp to fit our objectives; we’ll eagerly jam things where they don’t traditionally fit or we’ll find new ways to make our tools or technology adapt. As humans we reinvent, revolutionise and recreate. Journalists frequently concoct a mish-mash of genres and leave us pondering whether we’re reading an opinion piece, a news article, or leave us hanging for a punch-line.

Traditionally, journalism or news reporting is typified as an unbiased, objective presentation of facts. A revelation of events from a third party perspective whereby the journalist becomes a fly on the wall – observe, report, and never let your underlying emotions or judgements filter through onto the page.

But journalism is hardly “traditional” nowadays, is it? Nor is a rebirth of reporting a revelatory idea in 2009. Hunter S. Thompson fluidly rolls of the tongues of first year communications students. This blog is hardly a pioneer amongst a sea of corporate subscription-based content; there are plenty of blogs dedicated to The Death of the Newspaper, and there’s plenty more to come.

However, snark isn’t merely confined to the digital arena. Annabelle Crabb’s honing her craft in the Sydney Morning Herald as she uses her comical wit to create her very own political caricatures. But not everyone appreciates a running social commentary, and whilst we’ve all needed a bit of cheering up this past year (yes, I pulled the recession card), the media market’s become saturated with sarcasm.

New Yorker film critic David Denby despises snark and the modern disdain for journalistic etiquette so much, he’s penned a book on the lost art of literary manners. Described as a “strain of nasty, knowing abuse”, snarky attacks are deemed the lowest form of news reporting. Whilst I do agree with Denby’s “neo-Victorian” views on objective commentary and the prescribed passive role of the journalist, I’m primarily a fan of blogs. I subscribe to numerous feeds and enjoy the ambient intimacy that blogs generate, however I believe there’s definitely still a place for objective reporting. I feel this is because knowledge and information serves a different social function these days – formerly used to educate and inform, knowledge and information is now a means to connect and socialise. It’s a democratic tool, a sort of digital voice box for when we feel major news organisations are merely the puppets of certain ideologies. I partially disagree with the snark label – perhaps as bloggers we’re just telling it like it is, rather than conforming to the traditional style of embedding discourses within our words. We’re just being explicit, and in this day and age, we realize that people increasingly have the attention span of goldfish, or of a 140 word micro blog. We can’t afford to be subtle.

So whilst I’m not cancelling my newspaper subscription anytime soon, I believe that blogs serve the same sort of function as magazines – they go further in depth and offer a range of perspectives.

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