Friday, October 29, 2010

Jenni Carlson: A Woman in the Sports Media World

             Coming from a sports-oriented family in which her dad played small college baseball before moving onto a coaching career and her mother’s father was also a baseball coach, Jenni Carlson was exposed to an array of sports from a young age. In high school, Jenni Carlson decided to experiment with marrying her love of sports with her newfound interest in journalism into a career. It worked.
Born in Clay Center, Kansas, a small town about 40 miles from Manhattan, Carlson earned a Bachelor’s Degree in Journalism in May of 1997 from the University of Kansas. The day after graduation, she began her job as a high school sports columnist for the Kansas City Star. In August of 1999, she was hired by the Oklahoman and has worked there ever since as a sports columnist.
Jenni Carlson, sports columnist for the
Oklahoman, poses in the studio
located in the newspaper's building.
PHOTO: Chelsey Kraft
Carlson says that despite being a woman in a journalist field that is characteristically male-dominated, she has never felt any overwhelming negativity or sexism. She also says she has had constant support from the people she has needed on her side, such as her coworkers, bosses and sources. Also, she understands that her specific job as a columnist may receive negative attention, whether she is a man or a woman.
“As a columnist there are going to be people that disagree whether I am a woman, man, it doesn’t matter. Part of being a columnist is saying things and eliciting emotion that may not be comfortable. Some of the emotion may be very negative, very angry,” Carlson says.
Although Carlson’s background is as a writer, she has had to learn new skills that fit into the strides the Oklahoman has taken in order to fit into the new media shaped by recent advances in technology. Aside from her column, Carlson also writes a blog.  Once a week, she and other columnists and reporters chat with readers online, and they also appear in videos for the newspaper’s website, www.newsok.com. Facebook and Twitter are both also utilized by Carlson because the two can create some exposure of the Oklahoman to a generation that is computer-oriented. She also uses the social media outlets in an attempt to show her personality and try to build a connection with readers because she believes it is important to be more than just a flat, two-dimensional face in a newspaper.
Carlson says that despite the change going on, she and her colleagues are still focused on the basics of journalism.
“What we do is still rooted in what we have always done, which is build sources, break news, tell stories, entertain, inform, all those sorts of things that newspapers were always meant to do…Those are things that we are going to do whether it’s now or ten years ago or ten years from now or ten minutes from now,” Carlson says.
            For aspiring journalists, Carlson offers advice including to possess a willingness to work hard and to take any story that may come one’s way and make the most of it. Also, she suggests that journalism students do their best to become as well rounded as possible since multimedia is becoming predominant in the industry. She says writers now have to think about if there is a video element, multimedia element, web link or blog, among other aspects, that could become part of a story.
            “Thinking about those things has made me a better storyteller. It has made me think of things more visually…You tend to think a little more broadly than you used to if it was just words on a page,” Carlson said.



Jenni Carlson, sports columnist for the Oklahoman,
discusses what it is like to be a woman in the
male-dominated world of sports media as well as
gives advice to aspiring journalists.

Thursday, October 14, 2010

CART Shuttles Provide Convenience for Sooner Fans

Selena Belvin, Safety and Security Officer and 
Route Supervisor for CART, stands by a bus 
parked at the garage area.
PHOTO: Chelsey Kraft
            During OU home football game days, traffic and limited parking locations around Gaylord Family Oklahoma Memorial Stadium may make parking difficult. Cleveland Area Rapid Transit (CART), which provides public transportation for the city of Norman and the University of Oklahoma, offers a solution to this dilemma.  
            Selena Belvin, Safety and Security Officer and Route Supervisor for CART, says for two dollars round-trip, fans can park in the Lloyd Noble Center parking lot and ride the CART shuttle to campus. A five dollar round-trip service is available for people who wish to park at the Westheimer Airport. A total of 16 buses operate on game days, and about 7000 people utilize the CART service when the Sooners play in Norman.
             The shuttles begin running three hours before kickoff during most home games. This Saturday will be an exception when the Sooners host the Iowa State Cyclones for homecoming. CART will run buses four hours before kickoff, which is set at 6 p.m., so that people can attend the homecoming parade. After the game is finished, the buses will run for up to an hour or until the lines no longer exist. CART does not run regularly scheduled bus routes during home football games due to traffic congestion and the general access closure of the South Oval, which serves as the transit hub for CART.
Belvin, who began working for CART as a route driver seven years ago, says the football shuttle has run since before she began working at the company. Now, as a route supervisor, she has a different role on game days than she originally did.
“My role on game days is to coordinate. What I do is that I make sure the drivers are where they need to be when they need to be there to be more efficient with transporting our passengers. I also answer any questions for our customers. I am actually out on scene during the whole time, except for when I go to my office to do some paperwork,” Belvin says.
After this Saturday’s game, CART will also operate for the final two home games of the season on Oct. 30 and Nov. 13.


Selena Belvin explains the process by which fans can ride the CART shuttles on OU home football game days.

Sunday, October 10, 2010

Athletic Trainers Aid in Helping Injured Players Heal


           With the OU women’s soccer team almost two months into its season, athletic trainers continue to play a vital role in helping players rehabilitate following injuries.
            Assistant Athletic Trainer Kristy Smith, who is in her second year as an athletic trainer for the soccer team, explains that athletic trainers are medical professionals whose jobs consist of diagnosing injuries on the field and then taking an athlete through the rehabilitation process so that he or she can return to play.
Assistant Athletic Trainer Kristy
Smith and Student Athletic
Trainer Corrie Bober
Since injury of an athlete is always a possibility, Smith is present at every practice and game. The process of helping an athlete play again is rewarding to Smith, and Student Athletic Trainer Corrie Bober agrees that watching an athlete who thought her season was over heal and play again is her favorite part of her job. Bober, a senior who is double majoring in Health and Exercise Science and Psychology, is in her fourth year serving as the student athletic trainer for the soccer program. She says her job is to help Smith with whatever she may need. As a self-proclaimed sports fanatic, Bober says she was always too small to play sports, but decided to pursue a sports-related degree in which she could help athletes recover from injuries.
For Smith, the variety of medial fields present in athletic training is one of the reasons why she became an athletic trainer.
“I think athletic training is a broad spectrum of many different medical professions, so at any given time I may need to provide emergency care for somebody, diagnose injuries similar to physicians, treat injuries and rehabilitate injuries similar to a physical therapist. We are kind of all-encompassing health care providers for athletes here,” Smith says.
The soccer team boasts an 8-5-1 record and has five more regular season games, the next being on Thursday, Oct. 14 in Norman against Nebraska. The game is set to begin at 7:00 p.m.



Here, Kristy Smith tells about her favorite part of her job.


Corrie Bober explains why she is pursuing a career as an athletic trainer.

Friday, October 1, 2010

Pride Prepares for First Full-Band Trip

            As Sooner supporters head to Dallas for the 105th edition of the Red River Rivalry game to be played tomorrow, the Pride of Oklahoma marching band will be making its first road trip of the season, and the first ever for freshmen members. Last week, a pep band performed at the Cincinnati game, but freshmen were not part of that group.
            Freshman Josh Stout from Moore is experiencing mixed emotions leading up the game this weekend, saying that he is both excited and scared.
Freshman Pride of Oklahoma member
Josh Stout holds his
 Tenor Saxophone following
 practice on Sept. 30. 
             Stout, who plays Tenor Saxophone, tried out for Pride after being part of marching band in high school. In order to prepare the Pride members for the intense atmosphere which will greet them in the Cotton Bowl, Stout says Pride director Brian Britt played audio files of people booing and cheering loudly while the group practiced its pre-game routine.
            While the OU vs. Texas game will be a new experience for some, others are experienced veterans of Pride. Fifth-year senior and multidisciplinary studies major Justin Allen is in his fourth year with the Pride. The Dallas native has played trumpet since middle school and also serves on the truck crew for Pride. Allen has a few friends who play in the Longhorn band, and his best friend since third grade is also a die-hard Texas fan.
For Allen, sleep is the most valuable way to end the weekend.
Justin Allen stands by a Pride of Oklahoma
 trailer found at the band's practice location.
 “The adrenaline from start to finish is just going, going, going. Usually when we get home on Sunday, I have to come here to the field and lock in everything, I go home to my apartment and I crash and don’t wake up until Monday morning for my class,” Allen said.
Although Stout has never attended an OU/Texas game, he has high expectations as to what the experience will be like.
“The atmosphere is just going to be electrifying. There is going to be this intensity in the air. It is completely crazy. Like goose bumps and hair sticking up the entire time,” Stout said.
            The next full band trip will be November 11 at Texas A&M. The Pride will also travel to Oklahoma State on November 27. For more information on the Pride of Oklahoma visit http://bands.ou.edu/pride/.