Editor’s note: Taylor Dobbs is a student at Northeastern University. After his summer internship with VTDigger.org, he is moving on to boston.com.
My first story for VTDigger.org ran on May 11. Twelve weeks, 37 bylines and 25,000 words later, my internship is finished.
I’m not in journalism because I aspired as a young boy to spend my mornings in the Vermont Statehouse covering three-hour policy meetings and listening as lawyers debate the meaning of a single phrase for more than 30 minutes.
But walking the streets of Montpelier and the hallways of state office buildings, or wherever our governor’s next press conference might be, I learned about my state from a different angle. One hopes that politicians see issues from the same side of an issue as everyone else, but they don’t.
Lawmakers and lawyers parse language that at first glance can seem arcane, but I learned that a few words can make a difference in the quality of life of hundreds, and even thousands, of people who look to the government for answers.
I learned to see the governor, one of only 50 in America (an obvious fact that still gives me pause every time I step into the room with him), as another human being. A man who can make mistakes, but more importantly, make decisions because he feels in his gut — without always looking at numbers or bulleted lists or commission reports — that people need his leadership on a given issue. I grew up 0.47 miles from the governor’s office, but it took me 21 years and the right internship to realize this.
It was painful to watch much of the time, but the education I got looking over Anne’s shoulder as she restructured and reworked my stories was the best journalistic education I’ve had so far.”
If I had to guess how many times I heard my editor, Anne Galloway, say “If you only take away one thing from this summer…” it was definitely more than just once. But if I only take one thing away from this summer, really, it’s that no matter how much research I do, how many interviews I conduct, or how many meetings I attend, I’ll never write the perfect story. Writing alongside my fellow intern Eli Sherman (literally — we shared a desk), Anne, and the other journalists covering Vermont policy and politics, I saw stories written three different ways about the same thing. And I saw stories about three different things all come from a single event.
Sometimes I’d see a story about an event I’d passed up and realize it would have been the best story I wrote all summer. The good stories aren’t always where you expect them, and the good become the best sometimes by chance and sometimes because of that one extra phone call.
People on the outside of VTDigger know Anne by her byline, the back of her head in press conference footage on the local evening news, or her phone calls. The only way to truly know an editor, though, is by dragging your chair into their office, sitting over their shoulder and watching them tear apart — with a precision that to the untrained eye looks remarkably similar to reckless abandon — your day’s work.
It took me a good few weeks to write a lede (the first sentence of a story) that Anne didn’t promptly delete. It was painful to watch much of the time, but the education I got looking over Anne’s shoulder as she restructured and reworked my stories was the best journalistic education I’ve had so far. And I go to a journalism school for upwards of $40,000 a year. Anne has an uncanny ability to articulate exactly what the story is without sounding too convoluted, or worse: making an incorrect statement in an effort to be direct. I feel lucky to have written for her this summer.
I learned more about photojournalism than I thought there was to know in the arena of taking pictures of press conferences and political meetings from Josh Larkin, VTDigger’s head honcho of technology, design, and photography (and cool hats, but he doesn’t put that on the business cards).
The newsroom, despite being roughly the same size as some of the jail cells we saw on our prison tour of Southern State Correctional Facility in Springfield, Vt., was the best place I’ve ever worked. Walking in every morning, I was ready for something new and different. Almost every morning, I got it. From prison tours to digital nature walks to press conferences with the governor, every day was a new experience. If I began my summer with any doubt in my mind that I want to spend my life as a journalist, it has since disappeared.































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Nice piece, and you’re right–Josh does wear cool hats. Guess that’s what one needs for a cool head.
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Congratulations on a great summer. As your career progresses please remember you are writing to real people, and framing issues and events in ways that will shape the community. Try always to inform your readers, and to help them see their community in a way they may not otherwise. Too often journalists write what their readers want to read, and simply reinforce existing knowledge and viewpoints. A good journalist recognizes the community is fractured, and writes to integrate the various elements into a cohesive whole. That’s my two cents, and hopefully it’ll be added to the many other pennies you’ve picked up along the way. Enjoy your next step on an exciting career path that can take you to a thousand different places.
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Taylor, you have done a fine job this summer. I am proud that you were at MHS while I was there as the planning room guy you never had to go see.
Good luck.
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Taylor,
This sounds like such a great experience and I’m so happy for you that you’re following your dreams to become a journalist! I wish that all journalists/media outlets had the same drive to share honest, thought-provoking, and meaningful stories to the public. It’s easy to lose faith in media sources but with people like you out there, I feel much better about the future of journalism. When you’re an editor for your own paper one day, I can guarantee it will be the only paper that I spend my time reading. Proud of you!
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Nicely done.
Love, Dad
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Thanks for all your contributions, Taylor. You’re an example of what a journalist should be; Anne, and all of us benefitted greatly from your hard work. You’ll be missed around these parts, but I’ll look for you on boston.com. Be seeing you, I trust.
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Wow, Taylor, but didn’t you, like, just graduate from MHS? You can’t possibly be getting published already. But you are, and you sure write well. All my best to you at the start of your career! Fond memories.