Award-winning Beach TV News serves as diverse pipeline from 色中色 to the industry

Published December 16, 2024

It鈥檚 9 a.m. on the Monday after Thanksgiving break, and TA-33 in the basement of the 色中色 Theatre Arts building is busy. The darkened room is filled with TV monitors, cameras and computers, and the student staff of is preparing for its final broadcast of fall semester 2024.

Behind the cameras, journalism assistant professor Jes煤s Ayala delivers the countdown: 鈥淎nd 3-2-1!鈥

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Jesus Ayala, left, prepares students for broadcast

鈥淐oming up on Beach TV News,鈥 says anchor Liz Hanna. She provides teasers on President-elect Trump鈥檚 plans for mass deportations, the intensifying war in Ukraine, and the new Tiana鈥檚 Bayou Adventure ride at Disneyland.

鈥淲elcome to this edition of Beach TV News. I鈥檓 Liz Hanna.鈥

鈥淎nd I鈥檓 Enrique Rodriguez,鈥 says her co-anchor. 鈥淏each TV News is brought to you by the broadcast journalism students at Cal State Long Beach.鈥

The students in Journalism 482 have made quite a splash recently, winning some of this year鈥檚 top collegiate journalism awards in the country.

BTVN won a coveted Broadcast Pacemaker award, first-place honors for best broadcast news story and broadcast story of the year, as well as second place for best sports story and third place for broadcast news story from the Associated College Press.

And from the Collegiate Media Association, BTVN won TV station of the year, first place for best news video and second place for best feature documentary.

Not bad for a collegiate TV station that鈥檚 technically only 2 years old.

The Pacemaker award is widely considered the Pulitzer Prize of collegiate journalism, according to Ayala, who joined the in August 2022, and transformed the previous Campus Connections into Beach TV News. The new program emphasizes breaking news, with national, international and local stories; entertainment and sports, with professional-level production values and similarly high expectations of the students.

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In the studio of Beach TV News

鈥淚t鈥檚 a testament to all the work that all these students have put in, into a production like this,鈥 said Jerry Reynoso, BTVN executive producer and a fourth-year journalism student. 鈥淚t definitely feels assuring to me being a part of this program, knowing that those accolades are being received.鈥

Reynoso, who plans to graduate in May 2025, has already secured an internship at ESPN in the downtown L.A. Live complex. 鈥淔or me, as a Cal State student, I鈥檓 in the right place if I want to pursue something like this for my future.鈥

Hanna, who is also graduating in journalism in May, worked as an intern at CNN in Atlanta last summer and has been in talks to continue working for the Cable News Network after she graduates.

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Liz Hanna, broadcast journalism student

鈥淚 don鈥檛 know that I could have done everything I was able to do out of the gate without training I had gotten through Beach TV News,鈥 said Hanna, who returned to college after raising children and a career in the medical industry.

鈥淚t (the recognition) seems kind of surreal, and at the same time, it motivates you to work even harder to keep up that reputation, and to keep exceeding those standards that got us there in the first place.鈥  

鈥楧iversifying pipelines鈥

Beach TV News and other collegiate broadcast programs like it are serving an important function in American news media. They are providing a diverse pipeline in a field that is actually becoming less diverse over time.

In fact, the minority workforce in TV news dropped 4 percentage points from 2023 to 2024, according to a recent survey conducted by the Radio Television Digital News Association (RTDNA) and the Newhouse School of Public Communications at Syracuse University. While the overall minority population in the U.S. has been steadily increasing, up to 41.1% in 2024, the minority TV news workforce dipped from 29.6% in 2023 to 25.7% in 2024.

In 2024, 74.3% of the TV news workforce is white, according to the survey, while all other categories 鈥 including women 鈥 have seen declines (except for Native Americans, which remained the same at 0.7%).

鈥淵et at BTVN, 100% of the students enrolled in JOUR 482 in fall 2024 are students of color,鈥 Ayala remarked. 鈥淚n order to diversify TV newsrooms, we need to diversify newsroom pipelines. This is what makes BTVN special.鈥

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Behind the scenes at Beach TV News

For Enrique Rodriguez, also a fourth-year journalism major, Beach TV News has opened an unexpected door to what could be a solid career. 鈥淚 didn鈥檛 think of broadcast journalism as a choice at first,鈥 said Rodriguez, who thought he might pursue a career in print. 鈥淲hen I met Jes煤s Ayala, he told me things about broadcast journalism, what I could do, and so I tried it out, and now look at me. I鈥檝e got a lot of success here on Beach TV News. It鈥檚 kind of an amazing experience. I鈥檝e done a lot of packages here, like a package on women鈥檚 basketball. I was a little nervous at first, but as time went on, I discovered that this is something I can do.鈥

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Enrique Rodriguez gets powder from a classmate

Reynoso, a first-generation college student, said BTVN and Ayala have given him the skills and confidence to pursue a future in broadcast news, particularly sports.

鈥淚 arrived here at Cal State Long Beach at the best time,鈥 he said. 鈥淏eing at the right place, at the right time, I count my blessings. I continue to work on the assets I already have and work on new ones.鈥

Rodriguez also believes the skills and experience he鈥檚 acquiring through BTVN will help him after graduation.

鈥淭he way that I鈥檓 able to learn how to be on the camera and how to be behind the camera, and how to use it, it鈥檚 been really useful,鈥 he said. 鈥淎nd that鈥檚 something I can definitely take to the future.鈥

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Craig Walker works behind the scenes at Beach TV News