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Growing up near Cleveland, Janelle Coleman knew she wanted to be a writer. But she didn’t think about being a broadcast journalist until her high school English teacher suggested it to her.
When Andrew DiPaolo was a young boy, he dreamed of being a TV meteorologist in his hometown of Youngstown, Ohio.
When Sarah Holt Doll was graduating from high school in 2008, she thought her future was either in musical theater or journalism.
Six current and former WOUB student workers were recipients of the Ohio Valley Chapter of the National Academy of Television Arts & Sciences (NATAS) 2022 College Student Production Award.
When Sue Rachunok came to Athens in 1974, she had no idea she’d end up running her own web design company.
Ohio University senior in the E.W. Scripps School of Journalism Lexi Lepof interned with WNBC over the summer. She has now been offered another internship with the Today Show during the fall.
When Skip Porter first came to Ohio University in 1985, he thought he wanted to be a recording engineer.
When Tammie Imel came to Athens from Ada, Ohio in 2003, she knew she was attending one of the best journalism schools in the country at Ohio University’s E.W. Scripps School of Journalism.
"Extra" TV Co-Host Jennifer Lahmers ’06 will kick off the Fall Semester 2022 "WOUB Wednesday" series on Sept. 14 at 7:30 p.m.
Rick Wagar’s Ohio University story has a false start, then a restart, with an ending that contains a strong passion for television inspired by WOUB Public Media.
Steve Grisetti’s confidence to pursue his dreams in Hollywood is because of the knowledge and experience he gained at Ohio University and WOUB.
Most of the time when students come to Ohio University to study sports broadcasting or media, they think their career will allow them to cover their favorite football, basketball and baseball teams.
When Karen Deime arrived on the Ohio University campus in 1990, she was a girl from Dayton, Ohio with big city dreams.
Students don’t typically go to journalism school to become a lawyer. But, in a way, that’s exactly what Sean Balewski did.
When Greg Koogler came to Ohio University on a college visit in the early 1970s and found out about the opportunities available to students at WOUB Public Media, he was intimidated.