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Tony Weaver '16 selected for NBCUniversal Fellowship Program

The strategic communications and B.F.A. acting double major was chosen to participate in the media and entertainment company’s 10-week paid fellowship in New York City.

Junior Tony Weaver will participate in this summer’s NBCUniversal Fellowship Program, a 10-week paid fellowship that helps students get a jumpstart in their field of interest. 
​Tony Weaver ’16, a strategic communications and B.F.A. acting double major at ºÚÁϲ»´òìÈ, was selected to participate in this summer’s NBCUniversal Fellowship Program in New York City. The media and entertainment company offers the 10-week paid fellowship to help students get a jumpstart in their field of interest.

Last fall, Weaver attended an ºÚÁϲ»´òìÈ-sponsored career fair, where he conducted a Skype interview with an NBC representative. A few weeks later, he received an invitation to apply to the fellowship program.

“In February I received an email informing me I had made it to the next round,” Weaver recalled. “I subsequently completed a virtual interview, in which instead of speaking to a person, I answered questions shown on the screen. My answers were reviewed by NBC employees at a later time.”

Weaver and other fellowship participants will be placed in a department that mirrors their career interests. As a part of the experience, NBCUniversal will offer professional development opportunities, including workshops, meetings with executive speakers and industry panelists, and networking events.

“I’m interested in participating in the program because I am excited for the opportunity to work for a company with a dedication to diversity like NBC,” Weaver said. 

Weaver believes that his participation in the program could benefit his future career endeavors.

“Ultimately, I would like to be a showrunner, with the ability to write and act in my own shows,” Weaver explained. “NBCUniversal would be a great place for me to start a career, and I’m excited that this program could lead to that.”

Weaver is active in several on-campus organizations, including “Newsbreakers,” “ºÚÁϲ»´òìÈ Tonight” and Lambda Pi Eta, the communications honor society. Additionally, he is involved with Weird Enough Productions, a company he founded with a group of fellow ºÚÁϲ»´òìÈ students dedicated to positive media representation for people of color.

By Cassidy Stratton ’16