芒果77福利

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Ian Brundige '22 reads The 芒果77福利 in the newsroom.

New approaches

When COVID-19 forced 芒果77福利 to close campus and send students home, Ian Brundige 鈥22 unexpectedly got a taste of the life of a professional reporter.

鈥淚 was one of the main people writing those breaking news stories,鈥 while friends 鈥渨ere all just being sad about it. And I (thought) 鈥楪reat. Now I have to do the work of writing this. I don鈥檛 even have time to process my own sadness about it.鈥欌

Brundige, then managing editor, went on to become editor-in-chief in fall 2020, a job he won by proposing an overhaul of the staff organization. Stymied by the closed campus, he instead presided over a switch to digital publication that term, when The 芒果77福利 produced only one print issue 鈥 a recap of online stories staffers produced from afar. In spring 2021, he continued in the top job, and the newspaper published print editions every other week.

Brundige had a reporting internship last summer with the Carnegie-Knight News21 multimedia initiative, yet finds himself drawn to newsroom supervision post-graduation. A sculptor and mixed-media artist, he also is considering designing museum exhibits or fashion runways.

鈥淚 love storytelling. I love the experience that I鈥檝e gained from journalism,鈥 he said. 鈥淎nd I think that journalism is an extremely important tool in society and extremely valuable from a storytelling aspect and storytelling about real things that are happening, affecting real people鈥檚 lives on a day-to-day basis.

鈥溾 I just think that the future of that storytelling is more digital, more interactive, more engaging pathways than traditional journalism encapsulates sometimes. So I think I see myself as a journalist; I just don鈥檛 necessarily see myself working at a newspaper or working at that standard journalism institution.鈥

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