• About
  • First Amendment
  • Gallery
  • Resume
    • Clips
  • Useful Links
    • Social Media
    • Technical Communications Portfolio
      • Project 1
      • Project 2
      • Project 3
      • Project 4
      • Project 5

ejridener

~ "This above all; to thine own self be true." – Hamlet, William Shakespeare.

ejridener

Tag Archives: journalism

30-day writing challenge: Day 10

11 Thursday Jun 2015

Posted by ejridener in Life, Uncategorized

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

celebrity, challenge, College, equal rights, Imagine, inspiration, John Lennon, journalism, LGBTQ, Life, writing

Day 10. Write about something for which you feel strongly

As a journalism student it is important to begin removing yourself and your opinion from your writing. I guess you could say there is one thing I cannot remove myself from because frankly I don’t think I can let go and must stay true to myself.

Equal rights, particularly the rights of the LGBTQ community.

I’ve written quite a bit about the type of home I was raised in and how it’s shaped my life. I never knew there was supposedly something wrong with someone loving another person just because they happen to be the same gender. I’m not quite sure when I became aware that homosexuality was “wrong” or a “sin” but I would guess it was sometime between fifth and seventh grade.

I never caught on to it being “wrong” because it’s not wrong.

In a past post I talked about how I became aware of how judgmental the people in my town are. It made me angry knowing I was being raised next to so many small-minded people. Homophobia spreads like a disease in a town like this. There were many of us that shrugged and said “so what” if someone came out and never batted an eyelash when a celebrity came out.

One of the required courses for my degree is called Reporting on Race, Gender and Culture. The big project in the class is to get into teams and create a panel based on a particular group of people that you have been assigned. My team had the LGBTQ and one of our panelists was Jerry Peterson, the executive director of the Ruth Ellis Center in Detroit, a safe haven for at risk LGBTQ youth. He made the point that it’s difficult for people to come to terms with being born in the incorrect body but trying to tell your friends and family is one of the even larger hurdles.

Caitlyn Jenner's Vanity Fair cover.

Caitlyn Jenner’s Vanity Fair cover.

There are so many people, youth and beyond alike, who are afraid of being who they are because of the ridicule they will face. With Caitlyn Jenner’s recent Vanity Fair cover, we were able to see the horrific side of the connectivity the Internet has provided us.

My thoughts? Congratulations Caitlyn, you’re free.

Some people’s thoughts? That’s disgusting and some people even signed a petition trying to get Bruce Jenner’s Olympic medal revoked.

Why? Bruce may have always known he was Caitlyn but he won those with pure athletic talent. Not to get sappy but I’m pretty sure this is one of the many reasons John Lennon wrote “Imagine.”

30-day writing challenge: Day 9

10 Wednesday Jun 2015

Posted by ejridener in College, Life, Music, Uncategorized

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

books, challenge, College, future, history, journalism, knowledge, nerd, past, present, technology, wisdom, writing

Day 9: Post some words of wisdom that speak to you

51qQSFR17uL._UY250_Way back when I was a freshman at Wayne State University, every journalism class required you to write a book report. Some professors found clever ways around it and others ignored it altogether. In my journalistic style and grammar class our professor told us to choose a book and review it similar to how The New York Times reviews books. The other catch was she wanted it to be a book about the area of journalism we were interested in. At the time, I wanted to get into magazine or newspaper publishing and the closest I found was a book by Jason Epstein call “Book Business: Publishing Past, Present and Future.” Yes, it was about book publishing but some of the words on the first page stayed with me.

“Without a vivid link to the past, the present is chaos and the future unreadable.”

I’m a history nerd. I’ve always loved looking at old things be it a book or a painting because they always tell a story. In my antique book collection I have “The Picture of Dorian Grey” with the previous owners name in it and I have walked through many art museums staring at paintings that likely once sat on a palace wall as historical kings and queens built or ruined empires.

Everything has a history. Billy Joel has a song called “We Didn’t Start the Fire” in reference to nothing we do is new when it comes to making history, we just build upon what already exists. It’s a catchy song with a message that likely flew over everyone’s perm when it came out.

Sometimes I feel like Moss from The IT Crowd as I watch Billy Joel's fire grow.

Using Billy Joel’s fire analogy, I feel like Moss from The IT Crowd when it comes to history.

A key part of understanding what’s happening in our world now is picking up the discarded history book. It’s funny to me how many people just don’t know…period. There are many people my age who don’t know when World War II was (as in the time frame), don’t know what Kennedy was known for, don’t know what the Berlin Wall was, don’t know who signed the Declaration of Independence, don’t know how the United States became involved in Vietnam and don’t know the original 13 colonies.

For the most part, I think people don’t care. They can Google the answer if they need to and put it on a flashcard if they need to know for a test. Seeing as my generation is what I call the “iGeneration,” understanding how to use our technology and make it better is more important to them.

Who cares how the technology got to us in the first place?

30-day writing challenge: Day 2

03 Wednesday Jun 2015

Posted by ejridener in Uncategorized

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

beautiful, challenge, College, goth, halloween, journalism, style, writing

Day 2: write something that someone told you about yourself that you never forgot

My friend Liz and I met in our News Editing class a few years ago and she’s become a sort of campus mother to not only myself but also many in the journalism department. One day during the Fall 2014 semester she told me something no one had ever told me and I was flattered, thankful and taken aback.

“You do Goth beautifully.” She said. Her comment stemmed from seeing my Facebook posts about Halloween and my mother and I’s costumes for my favorite holiday. We switched personalities and many found it funny seeing as she is the Doris Day to my Wednesday Addams and we couldn’t be anymore different in the style department.

Ironically, one of the weekend radio programs Liz listened to had a segment that Sunday involving either Goth fashion/style or how Goth has evolved over the years. I’m not sure which it was but she told me she thought of me as she was listening and said she feels many people have a more loud or gaudy or even gimmicky approach to Goth style but, in her opinion, I do Goth beautifully.

This may seems small potatoes to people who grew up in a place where you could have the freedom of open expression and didn’t feel the pressure to fit in with everyone else. I’ve mentioned plenty of times the small town I was raised in and it’s hard to find your place when everyone dresses and acts the same. Being the person wondering down the hallways of a high school in all black when everyone is in pastel Hollister and highlights gets challenging. There is a thrill but it gets old being the only one brave enough not to dress as everyone else.

I had always hated the thought of being another brick in the wall.

It’s funny how such a simple statement can make you feel so great about yourself and relieved that at least someone else out there appreciates your sense of self.

Follow me on Twitter

My Tweets

From the Archives

  • May 2019
  • September 2015
  • August 2015
  • July 2015
  • June 2015
  • May 2015
  • April 2015
  • March 2015
  • October 2014
  • September 2014
  • August 2014
(adsbygoogle = window.adsbygoogle || []).push({});

Create a free website or blog at WordPress.com.

Privacy & Cookies: This site uses cookies. By continuing to use this website, you agree to their use.
To find out more, including how to control cookies, see here: Cookie Policy
  • Follow Following
    • ejridener
    • Join 71 other followers
    • Already have a WordPress.com account? Log in now.
    • ejridener
    • Customize
    • Follow Following
    • Sign up
    • Log in
    • Report this content
    • View site in Reader
    • Manage subscriptions
    • Collapse this bar
 

Loading Comments...