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Job Opportunity Dilemma: Love Location or Love Cash. WWYD?

Discussion in 'Journalism topics only' started by exmediahack, Jan 4, 2024.

  1. I Should Coco

    I Should Coco Well-Known Member

    Maybe it’s because you get used to it, with so many job changes in the media business (and other industries too), but other than when I left my first full time job, I don’t remember being emotional on my last day. Actually, in a couple cases, I was quite excited to be leaving.

    Yes, you leave behind colleagues you enjoyed working with and some of whom became good friends. But as a rule I pack my box of belongings, wish everyone good luck and walk out the door without looking back.
     
  2. swingline

    swingline Well-Known Member

    None of my friends — people who would bail me out or get in trouble with me — are from newspapers. Those newsroom friends I made were of a time and place that no longer exists. I have fond memories of folks I worked and hung out with, but I’m not really in contact with any of them.
     
    2muchcoffeeman likes this.
  3. dixiehack

    dixiehack Well-Known Member

    One thing I never got was the weepy goodbye column. If you’ve been in the same place for 20 years or more, OK maybe. But even then it’s easy to let ego overinflate the role you play in the life of the community.

    My first two stops I was a one-man department and I stayed roughly 13 months at each. I tacked on a single sentence at the end of my last column and called it good.
     
  4. Slacker

    Slacker Well-Known Member


    Agreed. The old days were great, but it's all business now below the surface.
    With some exceptions, of course.
     
    Liut likes this.
  5. playthrough

    playthrough Moderator Staff Member

    When I started at my university comms job, I was assigned to write a press release one morning and had it done right after lunch. "Ohh, I didn't need it this fast," my boss said. That's when I knew this might not be a very tough gig.

    So of course I eventually left to go back to daily journalism, because I'm an idiot.
     
  6. I Should Coco

    I Should Coco Well-Known Member

    Someone I worked with a while ago left the newspaper world and got a spokesperson job in government (in a smallish city). She quickly learned that the speed of government is slow, slower and slowest — especially compared to being on deadline at a daily newspaper.
     
    MileHigh, wicked and Liut like this.
  7. wicked

    wicked Well-Known Member

    I do some side work in government comms. It is as slow as molasses. So many approvals are needed. We're so used to operating without a safety net in the newsroom and dealing with the consequences of messing up later, which is probably not the way it should be.
     
    I Should Coco likes this.
  8. Batman

    Batman Well-Known Member

    I've worked at one newspaper in a small town for 25+ years. Almost every week I meet somebody who has no freaking clue who I am, and I always assume most people don't know me.
    Hopefully I'm able to go out on my own terms some day and be able to write a farewell column. I'll still assume nobody knows who I am or cares all that much. Even if I stay here forever, other people come and go often enough that there are always new faces.
     
    dixiehack likes this.
  9. MileHigh

    MileHigh Moderator Staff Member

    Pretty much the same thing happened to me when I started at my city comms job. Yup, it's slow and something that takes no time at all is still met with, "Oh, thanks for the quick turnaround." And it's just me and my boss. Learned a lot from him being on this side of things.

    I certainly have no plans to go back to daily journalism. I'm good with the slow pace and not having to deal with asshole bosses and fretting if I'm going to get holidays off or not.
     
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