By Christine Blain
Buy bactrim without prescription, I had the pleasure of sitting down with COM professors Chris Cakebread, Ed Downes, and Mina Tsay to chat about what their industries were like when they first transitioned into them upon graduation. Here’s what they had to say…
Assistant Professor Mina Tsay, Mass Communication
Entering the Industry
Assistant Professor Mina Tsay began her career in 1999 with an interest in broadcasting. After completing internships at Michigan’s National Public Radio station and the creative department at UPN38 in Boston, Tsay moved on to intern at ABC’s The View.
“Star Jones was around at the time, so I’m really dating myself,” Tsay joked. “In the early 2000s, reality shows were just coming about…and it was the beginning of this hype of all these new shows and how we could best appeal and market them to audiences, and it was much more of a newer concept.”
In wanting to delve deeper into the psychological aspect of this new form of television and entertainment, Tsay decided to go back to school and graduated with her Doctorate in Mass Communications with a specialization in media effects.
Modes of Communication
At the start of the new millennium, a lot of the news came from the AP, Tsay said.
In planning top stories of the day during editorial meetings at local television stations, Tsay and her team would have to send reporters out on-the-spot to gather information and opinions from people in the community.
Now, Tsay explained, members of the broadcast media can go on Twitter and collect information from citizen journalists.
Starstruck Tsay
As we all know, young professionals are often thrown into projects without knowing all the details or being fully briefed. Luckily, Tsay’s never had a “catastrophic experience,” but she did find herself working her way up to more interesting tasks at The View by delivering snacks to guests on the show…have to keep the stars satisfied, after all. One interaction, though, stands out to Tsay as particularly memorable.
“I’m very much starstruck when I meet celebrities…Tom Hanks was one of them that I was just like ‘ahh’.” She saw Hanks after she had been moving props around backstage.
”He still shook my dirty hand…it was one of those experiences where I realized people who are celebrities are just like ordinary people…you really see how the world operates.”
School vs. Workforce: the Biggest Difference
In reflecting on the biggest change she faced in the transition from student life to the real world, discount bactrim, Bactrim in australia, Tsay said that the level of responsibility definitely increases.
“If you’re late [to class]…you’re not fired from college,” Tsay said.
Tsay also said she missed the sense of freedom to take ownership of your time in college.
”When you’re in the industry, bactrim free delivery, Pharmacy bactrim, so much of it is dictated to you…what the rules are, what the expectations are…there are greater things at stake.”
A Bit of Advice
“Whatever is your first job is never your last job, bactrim non prescription, Order bactrim without prescription, ” Tsay said.
She also added that we all need to “be more open” because of the competition and expectations that now exist as a result of how many more people are graduating from college. In typical “Research Methods” fashion, Tsay ended our conversation by making it clear that she has “no empirical evidence to back [herself] up…this is just a perception that [she] has.”
While we all certainty love a well-executed survey, bactrim malaysia, Purchase bactrim overnight delivery, I think it’s safe to say we’ll be taking her advice anyway.
1999 at a glance…
- Most popular songs: “Genie in a Bottle” (Christina Aguilera), “Baby One More Time” (Britney Spears), buy bactrim in canada, Bactrim online review, “Livin’ La Vida Loca” (Ricky Martin), “Higher” (Creed) (Source: MTV Yearbook)
- TV Milestones: George Clooney left ER, buy bactrim canada, Cheap bactrim from uk, Monica Lewinsky sat down for her first interview, with Barbara Walters
- Biggest movies: The Blair Witch Project and Star Wars Episode 1
- Cost of a stamp: $0.33
- Cell Phones: Nokia 7110, bactrim online, Bactrim online pharmacy, Nokia 8210
(source: infoplease.com)
Assistant Professor Chris Cakbread, Advertising
Entering the Industry
Assistant Professor Chris Cakebread made his way into the advertising industry in 1982, order bactrim cheap online, Buy discount bactrim, after completing the first of his two master’s degrees from Boston University. Upon graduation, Cakebread relocated from Boston and accepted a job as an account executive at a small advertising agency in Providence, order bactrim overnight delivery, Bactrim us, R.I.
New Professionals: How They Fit In
“There was clearly a hierarchy and I think…hm…can I use the term ‘sh*t trickles down?’”
All joking aside, Cakebread recognizes that, buy bactrim online cheap, Find discount bactrim online, on this front, not much has changed from 1982 to 2012. The new employees are charged with the tasks that no one else wants to do, bactrim internet, Buy bactrim online without prescription, and the higher-ups “watch your reaction to see whether you’ll get all entitled and moany, and if you don’t and you do the job right and do it well and do it quickly without any mistakes, order bactrim in canada, Bactrim prices, they’ll give you better things to do.”
The Job Search: Then and Now
When I asked Professor Cakebread about the differences in finding a job in 1982 versus 2012, he noted that there are now so many additional platforms where people can search for jobs.
He has observed that our now-highly digitalized world has had a good news/bad news effect on young adults looking to start their careers.
“What the digital world doesn’t allow you to do is follow up…you have to kind of figure out how to do that. One way is through your digital sources, bactrim online cheap, Real bactrim without prescription, and there’s another thing called a telephone, which students are absolutely petrified of.”
Well, online bactrim, Order bactrim, guess we better start practicing.
“The main difference is that you have more opportunities to express yourself, both internally as an organization and outwardly as a communication device…the problem is you have more things [publics, buy bactrim us, Buy bactrim online australia, messages] to control…and that’s harder to do.”
I Wish I Had…
“…done an internship.” As the now-coordinator of the advertising internship program at BU, Cakebread uses this insight to advise undergraduates and show them the importance of learning through the unique experience of being an intern. This certainly makes sense because he also expressed that he wishes he had more professional guidance as a student.
“I also wish I had somebody who would’ve clued me into the realities of working in a small agency versus a big agency, find bactrim without prescription, Bactrim in malaysia, and someone who would’ve said to me, ‘Look, bactrim australia, Order bactrim in us, idiot, ask these questions before you take that job.’” He now tries to give his students as much information as he can and to teach them not just which questions to ask but how to ask them in the nicest and most effective way possible.
Some Final Tips
“It all comes under the umbrella of being informed…being politely persistent, bactrim online without prescription, Generic bactrim, ” Cakebread said. “To sit back and do nothing is the kiss of death.”
1982 at a glance…
- Most popular songs: “I’m So Excited” (The Pointer Sisters), cheapest bactrim prices, Buy bactrim without prescription, “I Love Rock N’ Roll” (Joan Jett), “We Got the Beat” (The Go-Go’s) (source: MTV Yearbook)
- President: Ronald Reagan
- Cost of a stamp: $0.20
- Most popular movies: E.T., where to buy bactrim, Order discount bactrim online, Tootsie
- Notable death: Princess Grace Kelly of Monaco
(source: infoplease.com)
Associate Professor Ed Downes, Public Relations
Entering the Industry
In his first year out of college at Saint Bonaventure University, Associate Professor Ed Downes relocated himself to Washington, D.C., to take part in the prestigious Lyndon Baines Johnson Internship Program on Capitol Hill. Around the same time in 1983, Downes also worked at a special events firm organizing “Taste of the Town” events, which highlight local restaurants and bakeries. He then moved on to work as a personnel specialist, interviewing other people who were looking for jobs in Congress. In terms of entry-level tasks, Downes spent a great deal of time being the “Xerox guy” at the beginning, but this was quite the step up from his job on the slop line in the cafeteria during college.
Transition from Academia to the Professional Arena
Looking back on the beginning of his career, Downes found both an upside and a downside to the transitioning process.
“The best part was that I was done with homework…the part that I didn’t enjoy was that I had to be in a location for a specific time each day.” And so was born the idea of becoming a professor.
And Then There Was the Broccoli…
Those of you who know Professor Downes, know that he has some of the best stories…and this is one for the books (but literally…it’s in a textbook).
“I got to deliver broccoli to the White House” Downes casually mentioned in our conversation. “That was a wacky situation.” First Lady Barbara Bush was at the time a broccoli enthusiast and needed a table full of the vegetable for an event on the lawn at 1600 Pennsylvania Ave.
Wacky, to say the least…a personal delivery of a mound of broccoli for Barbara Bush herself! Don’t believe me? Check out the photos here.
In retrospect
Having studied English as an undergrad, Downes “wished he had had something more tangible to offer” in the communications industry. While he was happy and enjoyed the work he was doing at the time, he didn’t feel that he had a sense of the direction his career would take. Looking back and comparing that feeling to how he sees his career now, Downes recognizes a clear difference. That being said, if he had had more direction, he may not have received his Ph.D. and started teaching.
Insightful Advice
Beyond conventional tips such as “do what makes you happy” and the usual clichés, Downes offered a bit of advice that struck me as particularly pertinent to those of us who are currently trying to push our way into our career fields.
“Find out what motivates you.” Whether this is altruism, excitement, luxury, or a number of other things, you must base your career path on your ultimate goals. Downes also suggests we ask ourselves whether we favor consistency and a safe, solid environment or uncertainty and a spontaneous, more risky environment.
“If you’re not finding the satisfaction you want, you need to learn about how to get it…that shows a healthy person.”
1983 at a glance…
- Most popular songs: “Thriller” (Michael Jackson), “Let’s Dance” (David Bowie), “Tell Her About It” (Billy Joel) (source: MTV Yearbook)
- Technological advances: noise-free CDs are introduced, causing vinyl records to decline
- Television: M*A*S*H airs its last episode, 125 million viewers tune in
- Most popular movies: Terms of Endearment, The Big Chill
- Cell phones: Motorola DynaTAC 8000X
(source: infoplease.com).
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1 comment
Laura Castro says:
Mar 29, 2012
I thought I recognized Prof. Downes! Love the photos, as #commadgirl I’m always analyzing design and these photos are super vintage! I love the sepia glow that tends to occur naturally with old photos.
Cool post!
@laura_castr