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鈥淭he Cut鈥 is a weekly reporters notebook-type essay by an 海角破解版 content creator, reflecting on the news and on life in Northeast Ohio. What exactly does 鈥淭he Cut鈥 mean? It's a throwback to the old days of using a razor blade to cut analog tape. In radio lingo, we refer to sound bites as 鈥渃uts.鈥 So think of these behind-the-scene essays as 鈥渃uts鈥 from Ideastream's producers.

The past, present and future of an unlikely journalist

Ygal Kaufman
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海角破解版
海角破解版 reporter Richard Cunningham interviews NASA librarian Robin Pertz for a feature story.

A few weeks back, 海角破解版 invited some Lakewood High School students to the newsroom to speak with a few of our reporters, including me.

They mostly asked questions about the business, but one directed a question specifically at me, one that I wasn't prepared for. He asked: 鈥淗ow has working in journalism affected how you see your future?鈥

鈥淲ow, oh my god. Great question,鈥 I said, buying time to think.

I honestly don鈥檛 remember the answer I gave (I hope it was inspiring). But the question remains with me.

Although he asked about my future, I spent the following weekend thinking back to my beginnings as a journalist. I could鈥檝e never predicted where I am now when I was his age. In fact, I was almost out of college when I started to see journalism as a viable career.

It was my second semester of junior year in college. I was working toward a communications degree, but had no plans after graduation. I remember sitting in class, at a table with some of my friends during our internship class. We had gotten an assignment: Find someone who you admire in your dream career, interview them and write an essay on what you鈥檝e discovered.

I slumped into my seat, threw my head over the back of the chair, and stared at the ceiling. 鈥淯gh, I don鈥檛 know what I want to do,鈥 I complained to my friend sitting next to me.

Without looking up from her phone, my friend said, 鈥淚 don鈥檛 know, I think you鈥檇 make a really good journalist.鈥

My ears perked up. I wouldn鈥檛 even know where to start. My high school, unlike Lakewood High, didn鈥檛 have a newspaper or blog. I didn鈥檛 have a journalism internship lined up. The most experience I had had with journalism was working at the campus radio station, and, truthfully, that was just a weather update between playing the music.

But, if she thinks I can do it, then why not? I do love talking and asking questions.

On a whim, I decided to become a journalist. I was an outsider, but in the span of a year, I joined my college paper, wrote a few freelance articles, and secured an internship at that radio station.

I worked hard to get where I am. But, the beginning is so fragile. Without an off-the-cuff complaint to a friend, where would I be? Would I find my way to journalism without that comment? How many potential journalists never came to the realization that this was a profession worth pursuing?

I believe that stories like mine are important. My story shows the disparity in opportunities for upcoming Black journalists. My high school didn鈥檛 have a newspaper club. Journalists didn鈥檛 show up for our career fairs. We didn't visit the local public media operation and didn't talk to any of its young journalists.

So, while my white counterparts had years' worth of print, audio and video stories, I was just getting started with no real resources. And my experience isn鈥檛 an outlier. Only 6 percent of journalists today are Black, according to I, like many other potential Black journalists, just wasn鈥檛 aware of the profession.

Next week, it will be five years since I earned my undergraduate degree. I couldn鈥檛 have imagined how my life has played out so far. I鈥檝e produced stories with politicians, entrepreneurs, activists, musicians 鈥 people from all walks of life. I worked in Los Angeles, then moved to Cleveland to be part of Ideastream's engaged journalism team, where I tell the stories of Northeast Ohioans in their own words.

Journalism has made me connect with others in ways I couldn鈥檛 fathom.

Now that I鈥檝e had a few weeks to think it over, I think I have an answer to that student's question, 鈥淗ow has working in journalism affected how you see your future?鈥

Journalism has given my life a broader sense of purpose. I want to make sure that others have an opportunity to tell their stories, whether that鈥檚 in front of the microphone or behind it. That鈥檚 what my future looks like.

Also, to the young Black student who asked the question: You definitely have a future in this industry. Let me know if you need anything. I鈥檓 just trying to pay it forward.

"The Cut" is featured in 海角破解版's weekly newsletter, The Frequency Week in Review. To get The Frequency Week in Review, The Daily Frequency or any of our newsletters, sign up on Ideastream's newsletter subscription page.

Expertise: People and communities, audio storytelling, race, social policy, local politics and the economy