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Authors In The Media With Steffani Costigan
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Authors In The Media Q&A With Steffani Costigan
Recently I did a regular Q&A with author & journalist Steffani
Costigan who her publicist Mickey Mikkelson was kind enough to connect me with.
It was fun discussing her books. In this edition of Authors In The Media
Q&A we will discuss Steffani’s journalism career which I’m very excited to
do!
Q: Steffani what made you choose to be a journalist &
how long have you been a journalist for?
A: Well, the idea of being a journalist didn’t come to me until around
covid time. My teacher at the time thought I would be really good in journalism
and encouraged me to go into the program. I have been doing journalism now for
over a year.
Q: Some authors who are or were journalists have said
different things. Some of them went to college & others didn’t have any
college degree or experience. I want to know what your personal journey was
like. Did you have to go to college to be a journalist or did you just apply
for the job?
A: A bit of both; I took a two-year program to do journalism after
successfully completing my first year in journalism. I got a summer job working
for my local paper. It was meant to be just a summer job, but they liked my
work so much they offered me a contract I couldn’t refuse. However, this did
mean I could not complete my diploma. So, I had to pick, and after finding out
I was pregnant I decided it was in my best interest to keep working rather than
return to school. I do however plan to finish my school down the road. The
journalism industry values experience more than the diploma that is why you
sometimes encounter journalists that have not gone to school for it well others
have. So, you could say I am in the middle of this, I have half of my education
completed, and half of the experience.
Q: Would you like to give a list of people you’ve
interviewed in your journalism career and what those experiences were like?
A: A lot of politics, police, homeless individuals, authors, varying
organizations. Every interaction is unique and different depending on the
story. There have been a lot of sad interviews. My beat in journalism is crime
and homelessness, so with that comes a lot of sad situations.
Q: You said in our regular Q&A that your journalism
writing has taught you not to over complicate your details in your book
writing. That journalism is a simple writing style where information is given
with not as much detail as writing a novel. Do you enjoy writing books more or
journalism writing more?
A: Oh, that is a tough one. I think it depends on the story. With
Journalism it is simple and straightforward, you know the facts and where the
story is going. But with creative writing there is so much more of a thought
and pondering process that happens. Layering the story with details. There are
different reasons I enjoy both writing styles. I enjoy the simple laying down
of the facts and summary journalism writing has, but I also enjoy the creative
writing process too and world building.
Q: What are the most important lessons you’ve learned in
your journalism career that you would like future journalists to know and why?
A: The most important thing I want to highlight in journalism that I
think we are losing is keeping your opinion out of the story. It is a part of
our code of ethics as journalist to keep our opinions out of the story.
Especially with politics we are meant to be in the middle with no opinion in
the story. People are smart enough that if the facts are shared, they can make
up their own mind. I have witnessed some very crooked things going on behind
the scenes and as a journalist you are summarizing the facts for the people.
Any emotion in an article should come from quote of the interviewee not from
the reporter. There are many times I have reported on political issues from
both sides and people at the event will ask me “who do you support?” or “whose
side are you on?” and I tell them “No one. I am not for or against.” And it
makes people at the events uneasy but that is my responsibility as a
journalist.