
When opportunity presented itself, Tee Willis was ready because of 51ĀŅĀ×, WOUB

As Tee Willis sits in the control room and directs newscasts at WJCL TV in Savannah, Georgia, he almost canāt believe the path his career has taken in the three short years since he graduated from 51ĀŅĀ×.
āI never saw myself doing what I am doing now,ā said Willis. āI used to say that I would never be in local news, and I would never be behind the camera. But now I realize that I prefer this.ā
When Willis came to Athens, he wanted to be a sports journalist but not in the traditional sense.
āI wanted to and planned to do my own thing and make my own lane for what I wanted to do,ā said Willis. ā51ĀŅĀ× was the only school where I applied. I knew it had one of the best journalism schools in the country, and I wanted to go to school there.ā
During his freshman year, Willis was in the 51ĀŅĀ× Marching 110. But as soon as marching season was over, he got involved at WOUB. Willis started as a reporter for WOUBās high school basketball program, āHardwood Heroes.ā
āI learned how to edit and shoot video. I fell in love with it. I loved staying late at WOUB. While other students were out on the weekends, I was in the edit bay,ā said Willis with a laugh. āWOUB gave me the structure for how to do things on my own by being able to work in a team setting and learn what it is to be a part of a news/production team.ā
By Willisā sophomore year he was a reporter for āGridiron Gloryā and then became online host for āHardwood Heroes.ā
āI learned a lot from the other students who worked on those programs,ā said Willis. āThey helped me and made me believe in myself and what I needed to understand about the business of being a journalist.ā
During Willisā junior year, he became the co-host of āHardwood Heroes.ā But, during his senior year, Willis made a change and started working for The Post. He wanted to learn as much as he could about both broadcast and print journalism.
After graduation, Willis did an internship at the Knoxville News Sentinel working on breaking news. About a month into the internship, he was offered a full-time position. But Willis didnāt stay in Knoxville very long.
āThe breaking news desk was too much. We covered school shootings and murders. I just couldnāt handle it and I resigned,ā said Willis. āI moved back home to Savannah, Georgia, and started working at a hardware store while I figured things out.ā
One day while at work, one of the anchors at WJCL TV came into the store, and Willis knew that he had to take advantage of the opportunity.
āI learned at a National Association of Black Journalist conference that I needed to have a 10 to 15 second elevator pitch ready to go at all times,ā said Willis. āSo, I used it and told him who I was, what I wanted to do and how I was a graduate of the E.W. Scripps School of Journalism.ā
The anchor promised to talk to his news director and see if there was a position available for Willis at WJCL. Before Willis knew it, he was working part-time at the station as a production assistant. By February of the next year, Willis was working with the production team learning how to be a director. And in May of 2023, he was hired full-time as the weekend newscast director.
āYou just never know how things are going to go,ā said Willis. āWOUB set me up to be a professional, to learn how to make contacts and connections with the right people and gave me the right tools to pursue my career. There are certain things you are going to have to learn on the fly when you get to your first opportunity out of school, but WOUB and 51ĀŅĀ× give you the tools to know what you are talking about and do your job correctly. And when you do the small things correctly, news directors and people in high positions, they see that and really notice those things.ā