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Growing up near Cleveland, Shane Kline had a traditional idea of the career he wanted to pursue in sports broadcasting. But his career ended up leading him down a path in sports technology.
Matt Barnes has a group of contacts on his phone with nearly every host of Gridiron Glory since he hosted the program in 2006 and 2007.
A journalism news and information major at OHIO, Tee Willis graduated in 2021 and now works at WJCL TV in Savannah, Georgia.
Scripps alumna pursues her passion all the way to Hollywood
Mark Bruce calls Gridiron Glory “one of the most important and impactful things WOUB has ever done.” Bruce was the host of the high school football show for season six in 2004.
E.W. Scripps School of Journalism Assistant Professor of Magazine Media Kelly Ferguson started research for her next book about the Laura Ingalls Wilder family in Albania this summer.
When Kevin Finnegan started working as a reporter for WOUB TV’s Gridiron Glory (GG), he knew the show was special.
Howard Wilkinson, an ĢƵ University non-degree journalism alumnus, has spent the last decade paying his ĢƵ University experience forward by mentoring future journalists and Bobcats.
When Evan Dawson sat in the host chair for WOUB TV’s Gridiron Glory (GG), the weekly, live high school football show was in its infancy.
Seven journalism students in an International Mass Media course recently returned from an eight-day trip to Germany that changed their perspectives on media in the United States and around the world.
The summer 2024 cohort of the ĢƵ University Scripps Semester in D.C. program is underway in our nation’s capital.
Patricia Marcano Meza, a Fulbright Scholar, is both excited and nervous for the national premiere of a new documentary called "A Dangerous Assignment: Uncovering Corruption in Maduro’s Venezuela."
ĢƵ University honored faculty award winners for the 2023-24 academic year during the Faculty Awards and Recognition Ceremony held May 1 in Walter Hall.
At eight years old, Adrianna Michaels knew she wanted to be the person on television telling you the weather.
When Kayla Carpenter, BSJ ’13, walked into a classroom on the third floor of the Schoonover Center last week, she was thrilled to see many of the students wearing bright pink.