old opinions
Columns from my undergraduate days that I have not disowned
What’s the hardest thing about being a journalist? Is it coming up with interesting ideas that could be developed into newsworthy pitches? Finding the motivation to crack on with difficult assignments while juggling day jobs and distractions elsewhere? Being able to cope with evenings of networking and nights alone at the laptop trying to finish a piece? For a journalist with Asperger’s Syndrome, you would be likely to answer “all of the above”. Asperger’s Syndrome is a hidden learning disability on the Autistic Spectrum. As a young woman with the condition, I have to work hard at improving my social communication, concentration skills and spatial awareness. People with Asperger’s are defined by their tendencies to stick to routines and certain regimes and their (in)ability to adapt to changes such as relocation or breaking into new groups. Some of you neurotypical journalists reading this may assume that I am automatically unsuitable for working in the media. Your assumptions were probably raised by the Onion News Network’s (obviously fake) autistic reporter who is more comfortable parroting facts about trains than interacting with grieving relatives. But I would like to think that this is a reflection on how my condition is reflected...
What’s the hardest thing about being a journalist? Is it coming up with interesting ideas that could be developed into newsworthy pitches? Finding the motivation to crack on with difficult assignments while juggling day jobs and distractions elsewhere? Being able to cope with evenings of networking and nights alone at the laptop trying to finish a piece? For a journalist with Asperger’s Syndrome, you would be likely to answer “all of the above”. Asperger’s Syndrome is a hidden learning disability on the Autistic Spectrum. As a young woman with the condition, I have to work hard at improving my social communication, concentration skills and spatial awareness. People with Asperger’s are defined by their tendencies to stick to routines and certain regimes and their (in)ability to adapt to changes such as relocation or breaking into new groups. Some of you neurotypical journalists reading this may assume that I am automatically unsuitable for working in the media. Your assumptions were probably raised by the Onion News Network’s (obviously fake) autistic reporter who is more comfortable parroting facts about trains than interacting with grieving relatives. But I would like to think that this is a reflection on how my condition is reflected...
?? Everyone's talking about bloody Tom Cruise, his bloody bride and their bloody expensive wedding in bloody Castello Odescalchi. Even though it was not even their actual proper wedding, the most 'overrated night of the year' had all their guests dressed in custom-desgined Armani, Andrea Bocelli singing at the reception (and you probably had the McDonald Brothers doing 'Love is All Around' at the last wedding you went to), three nights of wedding feasting and the Scientologist celebrant didn't reveal his lifelike mask to reveal himself as Chris Klein in order to rescue Katie Holmes and stop the wedding. Truly, it was the worst wedding ever. That's enough Tom Cruise. This issue's column is an unseasonal slant about how weddings are getting silly. From crystal-encrusted wedding dresses that weigh the same as your average British nuclear family, honeymoon destinations that get more outlandish with every year and the debt that comes with keeping up with the Joneses' daughter's wedding at Stirling Castle, this column demands, like the sickened guests watching Tom and Katie kiss, 'Stop! Stop!'. This is where I negate all this earnest rantiness and turn into a hypocrite. I am a smart young woman (apparently!) who thinks...
Bridget Orr cuts into the closet of boybands and hobbits who are secretly really fond of each other in the world of slash fiction . Publication Committee meetings are humid with sexual tension. You have to witness the tension between our beleaguered Publications Convenor and our put-upon editors; trying to maintain a civil face in front of their contributors but no-one knows about the man-love going on in the Convenor's Office every other Sunday. Think of it as a student journalism version of Brokeback Mountain, but on desktops and with none of this "I don't know how to quit you" nonsense. Before the board of management start complaining, I would like to express that it is all fictional and just a figment of idle thought. Those all-day sessions in the Convenor's Office that happen every fortnight before the qmunicate deadline are not orgies. The doors open to Publications volunteers to help them with sandwich replenishment and in-design trickery are not open invitations. Those above “observations” are merely what would happen if the world of slash fiction invaded the qmunicate team - and the erotica stops here for now. The world of slash fiction is one of the internet's worst-kept...
Loading
Comments
Sign up or log in to post something
Log in to your account
Sign up: It's free and anyone can join.
Verify your account
Nearly there! We've sent you an email – just click on the link in the email to verify your account and you'll then be a fully fledged member of IdeasTap.
If you can't find the email in your inbox, check your spam folder - if it's in there, save the address in your contacts. That way you'll always get our emails.
If you're still having problems, email us at info@ideastap.com.