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News Is My Job: How I Interviewed Warlords, Sun Yat-sen and Mao Tse-tung in China



A foreign correspondent often lives abroad. For example, a correspondent from the U.S. may live in China to report on events in that locale. Likewise, foreign correspondents from other nations live in the U.S. to report on U.S. politics and economic news.


Typically, correspondents start careers in domestic news or field reporting positions before advancing to cover news for cities or larger towns. Next, they can advance to editor or anchor roles. Other career opportunities can exist abroad, setting the stage for a foreign correspondent career.




News Is My Job: A Correspondent in War-Torn China



Strong communication and writing skills are vital for foreign correspondent roles. With these skills comes the ability to be a good listener, which encourages interviewees to share their stories. Additionally, technology and social media skills and knowledge of different platforms enable individuals to write news stories for distribution to various media.


Foreign correspondents who cover news related to governments should have an interest in politics. Integrity, trustworthiness, persistence, curiosity, and determination also are necessary skills of an individual who must find and reveal the truths about an event, particularly when the information is obscured from the public.


According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, reporters, correspondents, and broadcast news analysts earned a median annual salary of $46,270 in May 2019. In certain cities, such as Washington, D.C., and New York, foreign correspondents can make more: the median annual salary is $90,160 in New York and $103,320 in Washington, D.C.


While the BLS reports that diminishing advertising revenue in traditional media such as radio, newspapers, and television could limit overall job growth in traditional foreign correspondent roles in the short term, hiring can potentially increase in digital media.


The relationship between Pavel and Emily will shape not only what readers learn about daily life in a war-torn country, but how the reporter and his editor come to redefine "local news" in an interconnected world.


Based in Italy since 2016, Doane has covered terrorist attacks and breaking news across Europe, traveled with Pope Francis as part of his coverage of the Vatican, and has reported on issues ranging from migration to climate change. He has covered conflicts in the Middle East, reporting live from Damascus as U.S.-led coalition airstrikes hit targets in Syria, and Doane was among the first journalists to travel into the war-torn suburb of Douma as Bashar al-Assad's forces took control. He reported extensively from the West Bank, Gaza and Israel as the U.S. moved its embassy to Jerusalem.


Just prior to the completion of this article, abducted Christian Science Monitor correspondent, Jill Carroll, was freed after over 3 months in captivity. The world waited anxiously on her fate, as it did that of captured (also freed) Italian reporter, Giuliana Sgrena, as it mourns the deaths of Elizabeth Neuffer of the Boston Globe and Atwar Bahsat of Al Arabiya. The intrepidness of these women in going out into the community to touch the people and source the news somehow affects us in a different way. Perhaps it is because we, still on the underside of this, one of the last of the glass ceilings, continue to see them as more fragile than men.


Do you have a knack for storytelling and a passion for uncovering the truth? These are two of the cornerstones of a career in journalism. Whether writing for print publications or reporting live on television news, journalists inform, inspire, and investigate for the singular purpose of serving the public interest. They hold leaders accountable and expose wrongdoing - all while meeting deadlines in a fast-paced work environment. From the sidelines of a big game as a sports reporter to the border of a war-torn country as a foreign correspondent, journalists are never far from the center of the action.


Fox News correspondent Benjamin Hall pushed back on Tuesday after Fox News host Greg Gutfeld accused news outlets of airing emotionally manipulative footage from Ukraine in an effort to advance a pro-war narrative.


Yahoo's latest online news project is called "The Hot Zone" and is billed as a much-needed look at war-torn regions that have drawn scant mainstream media coverage. But the title could just as easily describe the trouble the media giant could encounter as it ventures for the first time into original news reporting. 2ff7e9595c


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