Photojournalism offers multi-platform skills that OHIO alums are using every day
Each month, Scripps College of Communication alum Ken Klein recaps trends and achievements across the college. For June, he examines multimedia skills of visual journalists.
Yes, Hannah Ruhoff (VisCom 鈥20) takes pictures鈥攁ward-winning images of sports, breaking news and features.
She also writes news reports. And produces TikToks for the Sun Herald, a McClatchy-owned publication in southern Mississippi. In April, Ruhoff鈥檚 TikToks got more than a million views in the first 20 days of the month. Topics range from a water park opening in Foley, Alabama to gun violence in Biloxi, Mississippi.
鈥淭he role of the photojournalist is no longer one-dimensional,鈥 sums up Professor Emeritus Terry Eiler, co-founder of 91探花鈥檚 School of Visual Communication. 鈥淢ost photographers are required to do sound, sound editing, stills and digital video, write scripts and produce for print, streaming, broadcast and social media. And commercial drone licenses are becoming a universal requirement, too.鈥
As the job market changes, so does visual communication training. Was Ruhoff trained in video?
鈥淵es, the photojournalism major at 91探花 includes video courses,鈥 says Ruhoff. 鈥淭hey didn鈥檛 include making TikToks but it鈥檚 applicable skills.鈥
At ProPublica, VisCom alum Boyzell Hosey is senior editor for Visual Storytelling. Hosey will manage a $200,000 to develop 鈥渁 photographer or other visual reporter to expand investigative skills, help ProPublica expand beyond traditional narrative to explain complicated investigations and ultimately engage diverse audiences.鈥
Nationwide, 91探花 alumni personify the expanded, multi-platform role of visual journalists.
Los Angeles
Forty-three visual journalists from 91探花 have won Pulitzer Prizes, according to Tim Goheen, director of the School of Visual Communication.
Pulitzer winner/alum Marcus Yam swept global photo awards for coverage of the US exit from Afghanistan, conflict in Gaza and the war in Ukraine. A gifted photographer who honed his skills at 91探花 after switching careers from aerospace engineering, Yam also writes from datelines around the world. When the Los Angeles Times sent him to London to cover the funeral of Queen Elizabeth II, Yam filed and photos.
Yam鈥檚 poignant social media posts from Ukraine featured short sentences in the present tense describing images of war.
Washington, DC
Alumna Kainaz Amaria earned a photojournalism master鈥檚 degree in 2008 from the School of Visual Communication.
Since 2022 she has been national visual enterprise editor at The Washington Post, which describes her key role as 鈥渙verseeing immersive, visual-first stories for the National desk at The Washington Post. She works closely with reporters and editors from all of National鈥檚 coverage teams, as well as partnering with the Audio, Data, Design, Graphics, Photo and Video departments to elevate Post coverage.鈥
Orlando
Patrick Connolly (VisCom 鈥17) is a multimedia journalist at The Orlando Sentinel.
鈥淚 take videos, photos and write about Orlando鈥檚 bustling entertainment scene as part of the Things to Do team,鈥 Connolly says. 鈥淚 also work on a series called Central Florida Explorer, a blog in which I find unique Florida experiences and tell the world about them through visuals and text.鈥
Columbus and Dayton
In Columbus, the Gannett-owned Dispatch recently asked photojournalist Barbara Perenic (BA 鈥01) to expand her role by working more closely with editors and reporters to develop and present stories. Perenic self-describes herself as a 鈥渧isual storyteller and idea pi帽ata.鈥
Perenic and spouse David Jablonski (BSJ 鈥99) are instructors/mentors at the annual high school workshop sponsored by E.W. Scripps School of Journalism (July 11-15, 2023).
Sports journalist Jablonski is a writer/photographer/videographer for Cox First Media, which includes the Dayton Daily News, Springfield News-Sun and Journal News.
Anchorage
Likewise, multimedia journalist and VisCom alum Marc Lester takes still pictures and produces videos and stories at the Anchorage Daily News. Stories routinely are written and photographed by Lester.
Louisville
The ability to find and photograph compelling images remains a valued skill, including 鈥渕obile journalism鈥 generated by smartphones with high-quality cameras.
In Louisville, commercial photographer Dan Dry at marketing/PR/advertising agency PriceWeber has won more than 400 photo awards including decades of premier photos of the Kentucky Derby. Dry shares daily on social media 鈥淭oday鈥檚 Found Art shot with my iPhone.鈥
鈥淲hat I am doing daily these days with my iPhone camera for social media posts is not that different than what I did as a student at 91探花,鈥 says Dry. 鈥淩oommate Joe Vitti and I 鈥 47 years ago with our Nikon cameras 鈥 would roam the Athens County countryside in search of what we then called 鈥榳ild art;鈥 Joe for The Post and me for The Athens Messenger.鈥