Hope is nature's veil for hiding truth's nakedness. --Alfred
Bernhard Nobel
My limbs have been spread over
a heap of clothes for the past half hour and yet the only thing
I’ve managed
to put on is a pair of Hello Kitty briefs. Usually I love creating
outfits; I find it therapeutic. But on days that fall on my broadcast
news internship, deciding what to wear is an exasperating task:
I could wear something pretty and feminine (the good), or I could
begrudgingly put on a frumpy outfit (the bad). Something sexless
and horribly plain (oh how very, very ugly). For a moment I wish
that we lived in the time of Adam and Eve, when a mere palm-leaf
was the extent of your wardrobe. But a world without Miu Miu? I
could never. Now you might be wondering why I would even relinquish
my love for fashion and consider wearing something drab. The nuda veritas is
this: Although broadcast journalists are afforded a glamorous perch
on top of society, there is very little glamour afforded to their
wardrobes. To make matters worse, an invisible memo must have been
passed about the newsroom ages ago, declaring that earnestness
for the profession leaves scant room to exercise a creative fashion
sense. The job of a news journalist is no-nonsense, calling for
ruthless aggression, a healthy set of lungs for yelling, and a
dependable pair of trainers to chase after story leads. But as
a fashionista with only ten minutes left to decide on an outfit,
I shrug off the bad and the ugly and decide to wear a chiffon blouse
and flute skirt to work. And I cannot resist strapping on chic
straw wedges crowned with oversized poppies. Satisfied with my
outfit, I convince myself that these misinformed journalists will
see that a woman can be intelligent, talented, and run with the best
of them even in three-inch heels. Perhaps I’m still too green,
too naive in this profession, but the eternal optimist in me is hoping.
My experience at both local
and national news stations has made me a subsequent Nancy Drew—trench coat and oversized sunglasses
obligatory. I’ve done some sleuthing and noticed that when
the cameras are rolling, the studio flows with composition, gracefulness,
and magnificence. But behind the backdrop of bright-eyed anchors
lies a disheveled newsroom with an oftentimes unfocussed, hurried
structure. It is a place where gray is the New Black. Where journalists’ mouths
are in need of some thorough soap washing as profane one-liners zip
through the air like fireflies. Each second can vary wildly from
the next and the peculiarities of each employee range from strange
to unacceptable, fashion sense notwithstanding. Is this how it is
in the real world? I don’t know, but I’ve discovered
that this is a profession where careful balance is a necessity—and
I’m not talking about the balance a pair of Gucci’s on
the runway may call for. Broadcast journalism is where artifice and
authenticity are carefully balanced; the faster you develop a “tough
cookie” façade, the less you’ll fall flat on your
face. A strong-minded fashionista working towards a high position
in news journalism (or any male dominated workplace for that matter)
should be commended of her bravado. Hopefully, my experience will
help—or at the least, entertain—so go get ‘em,
tigress.
You will inevitably come across
people with tendencies to take their bad days out on anyone standing
within the twenty feet radar. Once, a reporter returning from an
assignment with nowhere to sit snarkily informed me that as an
intern, I should be the first to give up my seat. I had to bite
my lip from singing back, “Okay Mister—and
might I inform you that your comb-over is failing miserably?” I
think people have a tendency to write-off interns as less capable
and more dispensable, but that does not call for rudeness. It has
been difficult to prove my worth while fetching tea for Prima Donna
anchorwomen, but I’ve learned to remain confident in my abilities
and save the vexation for someone worthwhile. A writer, notorious
for her bouts of rage, once fired a blatantly spiteful comment towards
me that came out of nowhere. I decided not to be miffed by her words,
because her sourpuss attitude should not be wasted on me-- she needs
to save that energy and direct it towards her God-awful wardrobe.
(A frequenter of exercise pants and baggy shirts, on this particular
day she was running around the newsroom barefoot.) As a coy retort,
I chose to deliver her request using excessive politesse. A lady
should always use diplomacy and grace to come out on top; after all,
defeat is never in style.
The first time I talked to
a female boss on the phone, her terse words and baritone voice
led me to wonder, “Is this a man?” Femininity
is not celebrated in the male-dominated world of journalism. End
of story. The byline? If a woman desires a high rank, she needs a
persona androgynous in both dress and demeanor. Androgyny is fine
when it comes in the form of Lagerfeld’s newsboy caps and layered
cardigans. But the group of women I work with have grown so eager
to prove their abilities to hang amongst the authoritative male gum-chompers
that they have stamped out gender specificities with baseball caps
and frumpy garments. The few that try to execute style have a tendency
to ooze tackiness instead, wearing garish cheetah-print blouses and
unflattering minis. It would be nice if our comely, Emmy-award winning
anchorwoman would lose the orange pleather motorcycle jacket and
put on a Chanel tweed piece instead. Clearly, an injection of uptown
refinement needs to be had; these women that may have their careers
pulled-together, but a little fashion pulled-togetherness would be
the sine qua non of total success. What would be more office-appropriate
than a baseball cap? A timeless Herm è s silk scarf, of course:
authoritativeness is not sacrificed, yet elegance is added.
The pure and simple truth is rarely pure and never simple. –Oscar
Wilde
I entered the world of broadcast
journalism not knowing what to expect. At times it is exhilarating
and rewarding; giving Madeline Albright’s makeup tips before her a national cable television
appearance and sitting among the press at the Scott Peterson murder
trial are experiences the average person are rarely afforded. Yet
at other times, the packaged world of broadcast journalism is ruthlessly
cold. The Pope’s death was written four days before his actual
passing, his legacy turned into a one-dimensional stack of paper
ominously lying by the printer. Just today, I heard a writer say, “We
call the station ‘Dante’s Inferno’ because there
are so many layers of Hell.” Does Hell ever change into Heaven?
Experience has been the clarifying factor to help peel away at the
layers that lie between me and a rewarding career; as a senior on
the cusp of graduation, dreams I can defer no longer. Although I’m
still not clear of my direction, experience with news journalism
has made me realize that I am not a person who will abdicate fashion,
elegance, and the desire to be adorable because others have done
so. I will always be the girl who plans her Paris schedule around
a special event at Au Printemps and seriously considers donating
bone marrow just to purchase a Chanel jacket. One of the best pieces
of advice I’ve received comes from a high-school English teacher.
He wrote in my yearbook, “Your quiet strength is alluring.
Use your sweetness to charm and then astound them with your unlimited
capability and intelligence.” Will this be enough to succeed
in a cutthroat profession? I’m not sure, and I’m not
sure I even want to find out. What I do know is this: Yes, a feminine
woman will continue to be called “sweetheart” by the
men and cast off to the side until she proves her strength. But when
she does, success will overflow in the palm of her hand. She will
be unstoppable, and you can bet the only time anyone will be calling
out “sugar” to her is when he is taking a coffee order.