Sports writer - Grant writer

Category: Uncategorized (Page 7 of 34)

A Year In Review…And What’s Next

Happy 2013!2012 rivaled 1999 for the best year of my writing life. Okay, rivaled isn’t the correct term. Blew 1999 out of the water would be more appropriate. 1999 was the year I won a national haiku competition and was named editor of my school newspaper. 2012 was the year where I had a story picked up by the national media, got to write my first NFL piece and picked up a bunch of new beats.

I think we can all agree that 1999 has been trumped.

I wrote several pieces this year that I’ll be proud of for years to come. These were pieces that reaffirmed that my “double life” of part-time writing, full-time administrating is absolutely worth it. Here they are, in chronological order.

Media Roundup: New England’s Remaining Small Market Sports Radio Stations Serve Unique Audiences – SBNation Boston, January

To All The 9-12 Year Old Girls in Baltimore Monday (From A Buffalo Fan Who Has Been There) – Personal blog, January

Doctor By Day, Lacrosse Pro By Night SBNation Boston, July

Motivation Comes Super Sized for Flaherty  Boston Herald, September

Lacrosse Aids Yeatman, Hogan In NFL Quest – Inside Lacrosse, September

Kids thrilled to ‘play ball’ Boston Herald, November

Fitting fine with the Crimson: Jillian Dempsey – New England Hockey Journal, December

Former Husky Rylan embraces new grind – New England Hockey Journal, December

What will 2013 bring? I have some goals I’ll be working on.

I hope that 2013 brings my writing in a few new markets. I’m querying some figure skating publications to fulfill a childhood dream and to hopefully position myself well to cover the 2014 US Figure Skating Championships in Boston for a media outlet. I also would like to break into a few publications in my hometown of Rochester, NY. Also, now that I’m a proud car owner, I’m hoping my writing allows me to travel a bit more around New England.

In addition, I used the second part of 2012 to work on my speaking skills. Blog readers saw some of my practice through a series of videos I posted this summer. I did a lot more work offline as well. I know how to better prepare for a video or radio appearance, what words will always trip me up, and how to not look or sound like a deer in the headlights. I’m hoping that 2013 brings some chances for me to use what I’ve practiced. (If you need someone to talk for a few minutes about high school gymnastics, college lacrosse, men’s or women’s college hockey or anything else, please consider me!)

Lastly, I’m going to write more about social media. I’ve been doing social media management for several years, and many of those who purport to be social media “gurus” are writing material that really (to quote Peter Griffin) grinds my gears. I want to counter the so-called “social media” gospel they’re proselytizing with reality.

Those are some lofty goals for 2013, but nothing that is completely out of my reach. I know if I continue to get support like I have in 2012, so much is possible. Let’s see what I can get done in 2013. Thank you all for your support and feedback – I take it all in and appreciate the time that you share with me.

Happy New Year!

What Are Your Sports Listening Habits?

I don’t know about you, but I survive my commuter rail-subway commute every morning by listening to either music or sports talk. The sports talk is usually things I have downloaded or are streaming to my phone on demand. I rarely listen to live sports radio (every once and a while I get to listen to afternoon sports radio in my office, and on the weekends when I’m driving to and from writing jobs I catch more.) Most of the sports audio I listen to is on-demand and shorter in length than a typical sports radio show. It works for me – I get concentrated discussion on topics that interest me most.

One of my on-and-off gigs is to run the social media presence for one of the pieces of on-demand sports audio I listen to – a college hockey radio program called Hockey On Campus. It was a traditional radio program until the radio station it was on switched formats, forcing the show online. I am trying to find the best ways and times to share the show’s audio files on social media. I would also love to establish better means of communication between the show’s host and the audience.

How to do that? Create a survey, of course. (So very grad school of me, I know.)

I know how I interact with on-demand sports audio, but I’m just one person. So if you listen to “on-demand sports audio” – i.e. you listen to sports audio you can download or stream whenever you want to – please consider taking this survey. To do so, click on the continue button below. Consider it your Christmas or early birthday gift to me.

Kat The Barista (And What Nastia Liukin Has To Do With It)

I know what you’re saying. “Kat, you’re blogging again? It’s only been, like, months. You stink at blogging.”

Patience, people! If I’m not here, just check my Writing page or Twitter feed. It’s not that I haven’t been writing – I just have been writing a lot for others.

———-

I have become a bit of a kitchen barista. Since I was a teenager, a part of me has wanted to spend a spell behind an espresso machine. This dream was fueled by my (infrequent) teenage visits with my friends to Moonbeans, a coffee shop on the corner of University and Atlantic Avenues in my hometown of Rochester, NY. (The awesome Starry Nights Cafe is now in its place.)

The dream was reborn by my visit last week to Southern California, where I became enamored with The Coffee Bean and Tea Leaf – aka, the official coffee shop of Olympic Gold Medalist gymnast Nastia Liukin, who loves to Instagram every single time she visits. There was one within two blocks of my hotel, so while my husband was working (we were out there for his work) and I was left to my own devices, I wandered over there thinking, “Well, if it’s good enough for a famous gymnast, it’s good enough for me.”

Holy smokes. The Coffee Bean is absolutely addicting. It makes my past addiction to Dunkin’ Donuts iced coffee look tame.

My first Iced Blended Coffee from the Coffee Bean and Tea Leaf. Screw the calories – this thing is worth it.

No wonder a gymnast loves it. It’s straight caffeine with sugar. Down one of their lattes and you don’t need any food or drink for the rest of the day. You’re ready to vault for hours on end.

The Coffee Bean’s trademark is their vanilla powder. It’s blended into many of their lattes and is one of two key ingredients in their well-known ice blended coffees. Luckily, you can buy their vanilla powder in cans, and I was able to bring some back to Salem with me.

Don’t mind the dent – that’s what happens when you put the can in your checked luggage.

I have been experimenting with my Keurig machine and the powder, and I’ve stumbled upon the best homemade latte recipe ever. I take two and a half tablespoons of the powder (I know that seems like a lot, but the packaging on the powder recommends to use more and I’m trying to conserve it), 2 ounces of warm milk, and a small brew of coffee from my Keurig machine (this morning I used Dunkin’ Donuts Pumpkin Spice, because that’s all I have right now.) I dump everything in my blender, run for 20 seconds on blend and another 20 seconds on liquify (with the lid on very tight so I don’t splatter and burn myself.)

Volia! A addicting homemade latte that tastes almost as good as the ones I had at The Coffee Bean and Tea Leaf in Huntington Beach, CA.

(But if anyone would like to bring a franchise here to Massachusetts, I would be forever grateful. Across from the Herald, please.)

(Until then, if you want to buy me more vanilla powder, pure coffee extract or winter dream tea, their online store is here. You think I’m lying. Those are the only thing on my holiday gift list.)

When Listening To Home Is As Easy As Opening A Browser Tab, Why Is Sports Radio Going National?

A Tune In Radio app screen capture full of post-related goodness.

When Buffalo Bills training camp began in July, Buffalo, NY sports radio station WGR upped their camp coverage. They added the John Murphy Show to their evening lineup, allowing the longtime Buffalo Bills announcer to report in-depth on a Bills team with great expectations.

I listened to the show’s first broadcast on July 26th while on the commute from Boston to Salem, MA from my iPhone via the TuneIn Radio app. I wasn’t alone. When Murphy took his first round of calls around 7:45pm that night, most of his callers weren’t Western New Yorkers, but listeners from North Carolina and Pennsylvania.

When I want to listen to sports radio, I’m no longer turning on a physical radio with knobs and an antenna, but services such as TuneIn. I am no longer limited to the offerings of my geographical area, and I “humble brag” as such all the time on Twitter. When I am able, I listen to WGR, Rochester, NY (my hometown)’s John DiTullio Show on 1280 WHTK, or even radio stations from the Midwest. Even though I have lived here for eight years, I don’t listen to Boston sports radio regularly, because half of my sports interests and allegiances don’t align with the geographic area in which I live.

And, thanks to technology, that is not a problem in 2012.

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What is a problem is something I touched upon in an article I wrote in January for SBNation Boston: large media entities thinking sports radio should go national. The article’s Twitter length synopsis: Smaller regional markets are losing local sports programming in favor of syndicated national programming like Mike and Mike In the Morning and the Jim Rome Show. Continue reading

What Life Lessons The Boston Red Sox Mutiny Can Teach Us

Fenway Park and a Boston Red Sox banner for the ballpark's 100 anniversary.New England is watching their beloved Boston Red Sox fall to a level of organizational failure not seen in quite a while. Players pitted against teammates, players forming factions against their manager, players not seeing the need to give any effort – every other day gives fans a new example of the reported mutiny in the dugout.

Whether these allegations and incidents are true or exaggerated, they can provide everyone with some key life and career lessons. Like the higher education administrator and student affairs professional that I am, I had to write a blog post with those lessons. Read on, so you don’t make the same mistakes the Red Sox did.

If you have a problem with your supervisor, address it with management appropriately.

Yahoo! Sports reported Tuesday afternoon that Adrian Gonzalez text messaged Red Sox brass to tell them that he and others had issues with manager Bobby Valentine. The text ended up being the impetus for a meeting between the disgruntled players and management.

Text messaging is a useful form of communication. But when it comes to business, text message is not the most appropriate medium in which to tell your management that you are having severe issues with your supervisor. Discreet conversations initiated by a more personal medium – such as in person, or if you are away, on the phone – are a far better way to lodge such a complaint. Older generations (who are usually the ones in management roles) don’t view text messages with them same validity as other forms of conversation, because they can be sent without much thought.

How about we don’t take photos we wouldn’t want other people to see?

In that same Yahoo! Sports article, second baseman Dustin Pedroia allegedly took a photo mocking a napping Bobby Valentine and made a snide remark about his napping habits, which was texted among players. Now that the possible existence of such a photo has made it to the media, Pedroia has backtracked and claims it never existed.

What happened to Pedroia happens to thousands of Americans every day. You don’t possibly know where that photo of you faux-stripping/completely trashed/hanging off someone’s arm you aren’t supposed to be/making a politically incorrect joke came from! But you posed for the photo, and you texted it to your friends. So yes, you do know where it came from.

How about we, collectively, as a populace, decide that taking photos that could be used against you probably isn’t a good idea? Dustin Pedroia can be our spokesperson. Don’t take photos you don’t want to come back to haunt you. Easy enough, right? And if you must take that photo, keep it on your own darn phone for you – and you only – to look back at.

The conversation has been had – let’s not broadcast it to everyone.

Valentine has been criticized (most recently by the Boston Herald’s John Tomase) for opening his mouth and divulging details of otherwise private conversations between himself and players. He tells the media what he’s talked to other players about, even though some players (like outfielder Carl Crawford) allege that they thought such conversations were held in confidence.

If you have a honest one-on-one conversation with a co-worker or supervisor, be discreet if you feel the need to tell others about it. Many times, it’s no one else’s business but the two people who took part in the conversation, especially if it is about an injury, illness or job performance.

Personal branding is important, but don’t let it seem to distract from your full-time job.

Valentine has been criticized for seemingly continuing to pursue his own interests – being über accommodating to the media (which he once was a member of) and appearing in all sorts of commercials. (Awkward Dunkin Donuts spots chatting iced coffee with centerfielder Jacoby Ellsbury, anyone?) Especially in the preseason, it made it appear that Valentine was a tad too invested in keeping up the “Bobby V” brand he had built up in non-coaching years, and maybe he was not completely invested in the Sox.

While branding yourself and having outside interests besides your full-time gig is highly recommended these days, make sure you give everything you have your hands in the appropriate amount of effort. You don’t want to ever be in a spot where your supervisor calls you out because it seems like you aren’t giving enough effort at your full-time job because you’re spending all of your time on outside interests. In this current economy, personal branding is important – but so is the gig that you’ve committed to full-time.

No matter the culture at work, limit your on-the-job drinking.

Even though your company has a Friday beer cart (which is an idea I am behind 100%), you should probably not pull a John Lackey and double fist in your workplace (even if it’s a light beer.) Just trust me on that one.

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