UNLV Presidential Debate

Students cover the news — Hank Greenspun School of Journalism and Media Studies

CNN Tells UNLV Journalism School C-NO

Posted by charlotteanne on November 14, 2007

By Aaron Murphy

When UNLV’s journalism students were told they were going to be allowed to tour CNN’s setup for the presidential debates being held on our campus, there were a lot of very high hopes.

Unfortunately most of those hopes were dashed, as the students were treated to a tour of a hallway, a dark staircase and a closed door. This closed door would prove more than symbolic for the UNLV Greenspun School of Journalism students.

When asked for an explanation for the “brief” nature of the tour by members of the faculty, Bridget Leininger, a spokesperson for CNN, said, “We are very busy getting ready for the debate. Everyone upstairs was trying to get us to get people out.”

The “upstairs” she was referring to is where all of the action would have been taking place, with anchors and reporters preparing to go on air and collecting information for their stories.

Debate hallDebate preparation

(These are photos taken of what was going on upstairs in the Thomas & Mack Center– one of many areas CNN declared off-limits to UNLV journalism students. Downstairs, a dozen or so journalism students and faculty were being stonewalled.)

Making room for the little guy has always been a problem, both in politics and in the media, and Tuesday night was a perfect example of the flaws in these systems. While one of us students may potentially be employed by this company, we were not considered of enough importance to even get a glimpse of what may very well be our future.

As is so often the case with governments, bureaucracies, or corporations, it would seem that those who have the least access and get the least respect, are the same individuals with the most drive, passion and skill for the work.

One can only hope that at some point the individuals who are making the decisions on access will be the same people with the ability and desire to identify those who truly are, and will be able to reward them for their enthusiasm.

These individuals will be the students.

These individuals will be us.

Leave a Reply

XHTML: You can use these tags: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <pre> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>