I want to be an entertainment publicist, but I don’t want to devote 4 years of my college career to get a degree in a difficult job market. Basically I don’t wanna be that person with the degree but can’t find a job in that field. Will i have difficulty getting a job in this field after i graduate? Help lol=/
I want to be an entertainment publicist, but I don’t want to devote 4 years of my college career to get a degree in a difficult job market. Basically I don’t wanna be that person with the degree but can’t find a job in that field. Will i have difficulty getting a job in this field after i graduate? Help lol=/
After I complete my master’s degree?
I have an Associate of Applied Arts degree in Journalism, a Bachelor’s in Sociology with minors in Psychology and Visual Communication. I am getting my Master’s in Communication with an emphasis in Visual Communication.
I was editor of my junior college newspaper and yearbook, I’ve worked in graphic, web and multimedia design and I’m currently doing design and writing for the Public Relations department at my university.
I am a senior in college (major public relations/business) next week I am going to meet with the big names in public relations. We will be going to places like CNN,Coca-Cola, UPS,etc to help with their new public relations campaigns. I want to have business cards made for networking purposes of course. What should they look like and say? Picture or no picture? Catch phrase or no? Thanks in advance
The Cherokee Freedmen were voted out of the Cherokee Natioin as citizens in a vote in March 2007. California Senator Diane Watson introduced legislation to remove federal recognition of the Cherokee Nation, taking with that vote away all federal funding and the tribe’s right to gameing. I’m curious if the possibility really exist that Watson could get such a bill through the house and senate. I’m not sure how the government, politicians, view the tribes, particularly the Cherokee, and what they are doing in their Nations/governments. I’m most curious about what the lobbying efforts, costing perhaps as much as 1M or more, will do for the Cherokee, if anything. And, I’m also interested in what the public image is of these events and if the public relations campaign of the C.N. is helping cure that image.
Note: It should be Rep. Diane Watson, D- California. – The Congressional Black Caucus said they were “shocked and outraged,” more than two dozen members of the Congressional Black Caucus signed a letter to the Interior Department’s Bureau of Indian Affairs questioning the “validity, legality, as well as the morality” of the March 3 vote.
“The black descendant Cherokees can trace their Native American heritage back in many cases for more than a century,” said Rep. Diane Watson, D-Calif. “They are legally a part of the Cherokee Nation through history, precedent, blood and treaty obligations.”
I’m curious if research has been conducted regarding those ousted in regard to their blood ties to the Cherokee people, as a race, not just citizenship issues.