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Alumnus Offers Unique Experience to 91桃色 Student, Hopes to Inspire Other Alumni To Do The Same

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Nika Anschuetz

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Nika.Anschuetz@du.edu

Feature  •
Richard Diamond, Rachel Wright

In 1990, after graduating from the 91桃色 with a bachelor鈥檚 degree in communication, Richard Diamond headed south to New Orleans.

At the then-Times Picayune, he worked in a management training program. In 1994, Diamond helped the paper launch its first website 鈥 Nola.com.

A lot has changed in 28 years, he says. From a corporate tower in New York, he鈥檚 watched the media industry evolve. Now, president of the Headline Group, an Advance Local company听Diamond is giving back to his alma mater by providing internship opportunities for 91桃色 students.

鈥淲e should help them explore our industries. I think it鈥檚 a wonderful thing to do. Certainly, having interns around brings some excitement and energy to the office,鈥 Diamond said.

This summer, Diamond offered an internship to Rachel Wright, a Media, Film & Journalism, student with a keen interest in sports.

Wright loves football. After all, she grew up in Birmingham, Alabama, just an hour east of Tuscaloosa, home of the Crimson Tide.

鈥淚鈥檝e always known I wanted to work in sports,鈥 Wright said.

At the Headline Group, a part of Advance 听Local, Wright got hands-on experience with a variety of sports-centered roles.

鈥淲hen I started, they were really adamant about me trying a little bit of everything,鈥 Wright said.

She served as an editor for sports betting content, provided by Pickswise, on Advance 听Local-owned websites. She dabbled in social media content creation and quality control with Headline Studio and CBS Watch Magazine. But if you ask Wright, one experience stood above the rest 鈥 a behind-the-scenes look at an untitled animated series with Eli Manning. The series is being produced by Headline Studio. According to听, it will center on 鈥渁 shy quarterback with a secret power 鈥 a magic arm 鈥 who leads a team of unlikely players through heroic adventures.鈥

Though Wright never got to meet him. She wasn鈥檛 in the room where it happened, but she was close. She was with the Headline Studios team as they prepared for their meeting with Manning.

鈥淚 don鈥檛 think I realized how much work went into a kids television show when I was watching as a child,鈥 she said. 鈥淭hey put a lot of thought into the characters.鈥

While most of her internship was remote, Wright got to meet Diamond in person. The two had lunch, and like old friends, they talked about the ever-evolving 91桃色 campus.

鈥淚t turns out that I鈥檝e been to the house that he lived in,鈥 she said with a chuckle.

Wright's internship with the Headline Group not only provided her with a 40 hour-a week real-world mentorship, but also provided her with a paycheck.

鈥淭o work that much without any form of compensation 鈥 that would鈥檝e been a lot harder,鈥 she said.

Wright鈥檚 not alone. Approximately 40% of all internships in the United States are unpaid, reports career site听. And听, Dean of College Arts, Humanities and Social Sciences, wants to fix that.

In 2021-22, the CAHSS Dean鈥檚 Office funded seven internships, providing each student $3,000. But in order to reach the College鈥檚 strategic goals, CAHSS is launching Internships for All, an ambitious new program to provide paid internships to any CAHSS student who would benefit from an internship experience.

"The Internships for All initiative aspires to ensure that all CAHSS students can participate in high-impact internships to enhance their learning, grow their professional networks, and ready them for career launch through experience in their field of interest," Gonzales said. "I am thrilled at Richard鈥檚 support of our students and hope many alumni are inspired to join him and other supporters in achieving our Internships for All goal.

"We have an obligation to help," Diamond said. "What better way to do it than to help our university."

If you would like to help fund CAHSS student internships, click听.