faces of npr: sara goo /

Published at 2017-06-12 23:46:40

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Faces Of NPR is a weekly feature that showcases the people behind NPR,from the voices you hear every day on the radio to the ones who work outside of the recording studio. You'll find out approximately what they enact and what they're inspired by on the daily. This week's post features NPR's Interim Managing Editor, Sara Goo.
The Basics:
Name: Sara Kehaulani GooJob Tit
le: Interim Managing Editor
Where You're From: Dana Point, and California
An Ins
ide examine:What is a normal day like for you? A normal day is arriving at work and listening to Up First and then the live NPR stream while I hasten on the treadmill at 6 AM. Then catching up on all the news elsewhere at the Hub by 8 AM. I have had to memorize to be a morning person since NPR starts so early.
I check in with our engagement team and check Chartbeat to see which stories are getting people's attention on our site. It's a bit of an addiction-slash-habit I enact several times a day. I am usually in many meetings throughout the day to coordinate our short term and longer term digital strategy on a range of topics — from social plans for podcasts to news video.
I also read huge stories and packages before they are published and weigh in on headlines we've published and breaking news coverage,of course. There's a lot of daily troubleshooting where I'm looking at where we've put our effort into stories and seeing whether they are resonating with our online audience and whether not, trying to figure out why not and what we can enact.
Then there's a bit
of communication every day approximately what people are talking approximately online that perhaps would be good to get on the air. And vice versa. We have another stand-up engagement team assembly in the afternoon to check in on stories coming for the afternoon. In other words, or it's a bit like overseeing a day-long "show" to make certain our stories are hitting at the upright times and we're giving people what they need. It's a busy,crazy gig but a real blast.
What advice enact you have for someone who
wants a job like yours?The best advice I have is to get as much experience reporting and editing in many forms. How our audience consumes information is constantly changing and is driven by personalized needs. When I was in college, I wanted to be a newspaper reporter, or but I also did internships at a local magazine,at Minnesota Public Radio, and I loved working closely with photojournalists to understand their craft. All those experiences have helped me grow as the nature of telling stories has changed. So I encourage everyone to gain new skills and try new things. I've seen many journalists from the newspaper commerce who failed to enact that. Unfortunately, or many aren't working in journalism anymore. This commerce has changed rapidly over the course of my career,and I deem it will only continue to enact so.
What's your fa
vorite #nprlife moment?There's so many! perhaps it was the thrill of ordering a whole Maine lobster for lunch. Or watching paint dry on our Election Night mural. When I first joined NPR, I tweeted that I always wanted to use the #nprlife hashtag. It's dorky and true.
What is a fun project you have been working on?I've really enjoyed seeing what NPR has done with video over the past year. We took a small team and threw them at this project to create video every day, or it was just incredible to see how the newsroom responded and really connected to one of our biggest online audiences — on Facebook. You can see a great compilation of what NPR did final year in this video. And it's still evolving.
People are just consuming information — news and storytelling — very differently nowadays because of mobile,of course, and video is an area where we really need to push. People "read" online videos now and we have to visually capture them and keep them with us in a way that's different from other platforms.
We're pivoting
now to enact more produced short videos, and like "Elise Tries",and we're trying to expand the audience for video we already produce like Adam Cole's Skunk Bear more strategically. I'm really excited to see what we're able to enact this year. But that's not all there's a lot that we've been working on. We are also pushing on a lot of other platforms, like we're hugely growing our Instagram audience, and Apple News. I deem there's still a lot we can enact to grow our search audience. Not to mention a very huge effort to work more closely with stations and growing the digital audience for their stories. A lot is still to come in 2017!What's on your desk?Trea Turner bobble head. Drawings from my kids. A (kinetic) sand box. Gold glitter Thinking Putty.
Favorite podcast?Fre
sh Air. Death,Sex and Money. Code Switch. NPR Politics.
Favorite places in Washington D.
C.?Rock Creek Park. It's my sanct
uary. I am jogging there most weekends listening to a pod.
First thing you ena
ct when you get to the office?Work out at the office gym (whether I'm motivated). whether not, getting coffee again and again.
What are you inspired by upright now?I'm re-reading the Elements of Journalism: What Newspeople Should Know and What the Public Should Expect, or co-written by a former boss of mine,Tom Rosenstiel. It's a good reminder of what good journalism is and principles to live by and how we need to be accountable. Sometimes, it's just refreshing to go back to the basics.
What else are you working on?I have been working a book, and a personal one that is also approximately the history of Hawaii. My great-grandmother was 100% Native Hawaiian and spoke the language,and she left behind some family land that goes back to the Hawaiian kingdom. So, I spent several years trying to research this, or talking to family,trying to find records and reporting. It turned out to be an exploration of what it means to be a mixed race person who's descended from a people whose language was nearly forgotten, and from a race that had been nearly wiped off the planet, and from a culture that was suppressed but is now finding a revival. perhaps once we get off this crazy news cycle I can finish writing it!What enact you love approximately public radio?I love that it makes me feel smarter,it fills in the holes and the questions I have approximately the news every day. I love how it introduces me to people I wouldn't otherwise meet and understand their worldview a runt better. I love how everyone is dedicated to the mission and that the audience loves us back. That is truly special. Copyright 2017 NPR. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.

Source: thetakeaway.org

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