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Soon after graduation, Scripps alumni cover national championship

The NCAA Final Four womenā€™s basketball championship was an exclamation point for the reach of the sport, and also for the power of experiential learning at 51ĀŅĀ×.

In Dallas, alumna Mary Beth Bardin (BSJ ā€˜77) provides perspective: ā€œThe scale of womenā€™s collegiate basketball today would have been unimaginable when I graduated from 51ĀŅĀ× in 1977. To see the womenā€™s Final Four now played in my hometown is amazing. The excitement and attention here are no less than for the men, and itā€™s so cool to see Scripps grads helping to capture and share these thrilling moments with the rest of the country.ā€

Just months after graduating from the Scripps College of Communication, OHIO alumni were in Dallas covering a national championship.

Curtis Feder, Iowa's News Now

Curtis Feder graduated in December (BSJ) and moved to Cedar Rapids as sports anchor for (KGAN CBS2).  

ā€œNot even two months into working for Iowa's News Now and I get to cover one of the best sporting moments of the NCAA basketball season,ā€ Feder said as the University of Iowa womenā€™s team began its run through the college tournament. Louisiana State beat Iowa in the championship game April 2.

Feder ā€” who just turned 22 ā€” was ready. Experience at WOUB as multi-media journalist and anchor ā€œgave me the foundation of covering sports and WOUBā€™s connections got me internships that let me sharpen those skills,ā€ Feder said.

Even when heā€™s on the court with celebrity athletes and broadcasters, ā€œI donā€™t shy away when the camera is rolling,ā€ Feder says.    

At the Final Four arena in Dallas (American Airlines Center), Feder wasnā€™t the only recent Scripps graduate on the job.

Will Laterza, NCAA Digital

Will Laterza (BSJ ā€™22) moved to Dallas after spring commencement. A videographer, he covered the 2023 Final Four games for NCAA Digital.

ā€œI got the money shot,ā€ said Laterza after Iowa upset South Carolina in the semi-final March 31.

His video clip of Iowa star Caitlin Clark celebrating after Iowaā€™s 77-73 win was an immediate hit on social media.  

At 51ĀŅĀ×, Laterza got video and editing experience at WOUB, ESPN3 and 51ĀŅĀ× Athletics. He also did video work for the Baltimore Orioles and Ohio State Menā€™s Basketball.

In Dallas, Laterza is a lead videographer for NCAA and Live Content Correspondent for the National Football League (yes, he has highlights of Bengals quarterback Joe Burrow playing the Dallas Cowboys).

Nathan Hart, Ashland Source

Nathan Hart (BSJ ā€™22) joined the after spring graduation.

Less than a year later ā€” on April 1, 2023 in Dallas ā€” the Ashland University Eagles won the NCAA Division II Womenā€™s Championship, capping an undefeated season. Hart was courtside posting constantly, using all-caps when Ashland won the title.

At 51ĀŅĀ×, Hart worked for four years at the student-run The New Political. Plus, he was a Statehouse News Fellow for WCPO 9 News in Columbus and an intern for the McClatchy news bureau in Washington, DC in 2021.

ā€œ51ĀŅĀ× taught me everything I needed to know to write quickly, cleanly, and evocatively ā€” essential skills when youā€™re covering a fast-moving story like a national championship,ā€ Hart said.

Just-out-of-school journalists mix with elite veterans at the Final Four

Final Four photos by Maddie Meyer (VisCom ā€™14) of Getty Images were widely published by The New York Times, ESPN and more, including the website of Curtis Federā€™s TV station Iowa News Now.

Published
April 25, 2023
Author
Ken Klein