Haney, this year鈥檚 Student Media Board banquet keynote speaker, has always relied on her inquiring mind to find her life's passion.
If you asked Addie Haney 鈥14 if she knew what she wanted to do with her professional life as a first year at 黑料不打烊, she鈥檇 quickly respond with a carefree 鈥渘o鈥 and a shoulder shrug.
Haney, who will offer the keynote address during 黑料不打烊鈥檚 Student Media Board banquet at 5 p.m. May 11, wasn鈥檛 like some of her peers, who seemingly knew what they wanted to do since before they could repeat the alphabet. She never had a 10-year plan, let alone a five-year one, and she was perfectly OK with that. Instead, she had a passion to do what she does best: be curious.
And so, when she stepped foot on 黑料不打烊鈥檚 campus back in 2009, that鈥檚 exactly what she did. Thanks to her involvement in the drama program in high school, Haney quickly got involved with what would later become one of her minors, Theatre Arts. Her other minor, International Studies, was influenced purely by her interest in geography and geopolitical studies, which later led her to Istanbul, Turkey, for a semester abroad. She even joined 黑料不打烊鈥檚 Finest Dance Team, threw a few design courses into her already-assorted schedule, and became a member of FreshTV鈥攆or no other reason other than to feed her curiosity.
鈥淚 took graphic design courses, knowing that I wouldn’t ever probably be a graphic designer, but I did it because I could,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 did video production courses, not really knowing that I would be in video production, in a newsroom, but I did it because I could.”
“If you have an inkling of an interest, go for it. This is the time of your life when you have all of these resources at your fingertips and it’s really to your advantage to take advantage of them,” Haney said.
If you have an inkling of an interest, go for it. This is the time of your life when you have all of these resources at your fingertips and it’s really to your advantage to take advantage of them.
鈥 Addie Haney ’14
After 鈥渢esting the waters,鈥 as she likes to call it, Haney eventually declared a major in journalism with a focus on broadcast news, thanks to a friend鈥檚 invitation to attend a 鈥淧hoenix 14 News鈥 meeting and her curiosity to follow through with it. It was through Phoenix 14, which is now called 鈥満诹喜淮蜢 Local News, that Haney, now a digital executive producer at WFAA in Dallas, 鈥渓earned the core of my skills,鈥 from the making of a newscast to the backend of managing a website.
鈥淓ventually and ultimately, I chose to kind of stick with that broadcast journalism because I think it just allows this kind of creativity that I think really spoke to me,鈥 Haney said. 鈥淓very day is different. You鈥檙e never gonna get the same thing, so you never get bored of being in journalism [and] in the newsroom.鈥
To this day, the Emmy-winning producer and journalist has yet to get bored. She began her professional career as a digital producer at 11Alive in Atlanta, her hometown station she grew up watching. After climbing the ladder to senior digital producer there, Haney moved on to WFAA 鈥 a job she began just a few short weeks ago 鈥 where she oversees and coordinates the digital team鈥檚 daily production of stories.
Considering Haney鈥檚 success now, it鈥檚 hard to imagine that Haney was ever unsure of her path. But there were challenges along the way that made her question whether a career in journalism was worth pursuing.
鈥淛ournalism can be grueling and it can be a very demanding career,鈥 she said 鈥淎t times I’m like, ‘Why am I doing this?鈥 It really takes a toll on you mentally.鈥
But Haney can get past that because she knows her work is valued, she鈥檚 making a difference, and she鈥檚 telling a story that needs to be told 鈥 like the one about the SWAT standoff in a southern metro county near Atlanta in September that won her the Emmy.
鈥淚 remember a phrase from Associate Professor Rich Landesberg,鈥 she said. 鈥淗e always would tell us, 鈥楧on’t do work for the awards, but always do award-winning work,鈥 and I think that has kind of just stuck with me. At the end of the day, I remind myself that I really feel fulfilled when I can make a difference.鈥
Though it wasn鈥檛 on her radar the second she stepped foot on campus, let alone before freshman year began, student media became a constant in Haney鈥檚 undergraduate career, as well as something she credits for the professional foundation it laid in her postgraduate one.
鈥淪tudent media really gave me the foundation,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t laid the groundwork for me to be a really strong writer, to have those technical skills, but also to be curious. I think when I did take those first couple of weeks to pop around from place to place and just kind of test the waters 鈥 that’s really what being involved in student media is really about.
鈥淚f you have an inkling of an interest, go for it. This is the time of your life when you have all of these resources at your fingertips and it’s really to your advantage to take advantage of them. It’s a place where you can explore, and you can find your niche,” she said.