By the numbers, from Florida to Minneapolis

So I finally made it to my new city. I’ve spent the last few weeks visiting friends, family, taking a lot of pictures and traversing America’s highway system. I enjoyed it immensely and saw a lot of great things and met some good people. However, I am anxious to get to know my new city and get to work for Minnesota Public Radio.

Here’s a quick rundown of my trip by the numbers.

Total miles traveled: 2,303

Total gas bill: Approx. $292.00

Lowest gas price paid: $3.74/gal – St. Louis, MO

Highest gas price paid: $4.15/gal – somewhere in Georgia along I-95

    States visited or passed through: 9

  • Georgia
  • South Carolina
  • North Carolina
  • Tennessee
  • Kentucky
  • Illinois
  • Missouri
  • Iowa
  • Minnesota

Total food bill: Approx. $175.00 (I ate for free a lot with friends)

Hotel stays: 3

Traffic tickets: 0

Items lost: 1
- I left the sun hood for my camera lens at my dad’s in Tennessee. I think I’ll just get a new one.

So that’s that. I’m moving into my temporary apartment tomorrow and then I’ll start getting acclimated to my new city, my new job and getting this blog on track. To infinity, and beyond!

Making the most of your internship

10,000 Words.Net has a great post about making the most of your journalism internship. With the volatile landscape of the journalism world these days it may be nerve-wracking for students and those just out of school to deal with an internship. Truth be told, if I were interning at a paper right now and saw the things happening around me, I’d be terrified.

All is not lost however. The best thing you can do at an internship is learn from everything that is happening around you, both good and bad. 10,000 Words offers these tips, but be sure to read the full post for the detailed descriptions of each tip.

  1. Get paid
  2. Speak up
  3. Ask questions
  4. Jump into multimedia
  5. Fraternize with the staff
  6. Get business cards
  7. Make yourself indispensable

Obviously I couldn’t agree more with the tip regarding multimedia. Right now there is a big initiative to cross-train the journalists in the newsrooms and hey, if you can get some of that training for free then why not?

The Washington Post just made a big showing of how they recently finished training over 200 of their journalists on doing video for their stories. I know of several newsrooms (*wink wink*) that were doing this over six months ago. Imagine walking in the door for an interview and already having those skills. You are instantly a more viable candidate than the other guy, who doesn’t have those skills and the paper will have to spend time and money training, by taking the necessary steps.

Nikon D700 is ultimate piece of mojo swag

Nikon D700

The new Nikon D700 mid-range DSLR looks to be the cat’s meow of DSLR cameras. It seems to be the new cool for DSLR makers to make cameras with enough features for the pro, but not make it too complicated that amateurs can’t pick it up and shoot photos of their feet and cat with it. The D700 appears to meet that criteria in spades which makes it a pretty good camera for the mobile journalist or solo journalist.

Click the link to the Gizmodo post for a full review and a gaggle of mouth-watering pictures.