Name: Megan Alexander
Job: CBS News CorrespondentÂ
Website:Â http://www.meganalexander.com/Â
Twitter: @MeganAlexander
Instagram: @MeganJAlexander1
What do you do as a news correspondent for CBS?Â
Megan Alexander: I am one of six reporters for Inside Edition. There are four of us here in New York City, two out in LA, and our anchor is Debra Norville. For those of you that don’t watch the show, Inside Edition is a syndicated news magazine show, so as a reporter I cover a little bit of everything. We do politics, business, lifestyle, entertainment, and medical stories. Itâs 30 minutes long, and we do tape it, so weâre not live. So we get a little bit of time to put together our stories. I am actually headed into my ninth year with the show!Â
What is the best part of your job?Â
MA: You know, I think itâs just being in so many interesting situations that you would never be in. Especially our show, we really have a front row seat to pop culture, world events, and just some interesting stories. For example, we actually got to interview Guinness Book of World Records folks. So I’ve met the tallest man in the middle of Times Square, covered seven Super Bowls, you know, things like that I really enjoy. My colleague Les Trent and I â heâs one of my fellow reporters here â we often joke that the cover of People Magazine or The Huffington Post, weâll joke with each other and often weâll say, âokay, whoâs going to be interviewing her?â because we cover those same stories. Or when you watch Good Morning America, you know, most likely there in a day or two, we will also be talking to those people. I think itâs just meeting all of those people that are creating headlines around the world â Iâve interviewed Donald Trump numerous times, way before he got into politics, so thatâs interesting, you know? Good dinner conversation.
Would you ever have imagined that this is what youâd be doing?
MA: You know, itâs funny. I watched the show when I was in high school and college, and I remember thinking âI would love to do a show like this because of the variety.â Every day is different, and you meet all sorts of interesting people, but you just never know where life is gonna take you. And as Iâll explain, it was a lot of small steps that led to this job, which Iâm really grateful for â a lot of hard work, a lot of midnight shifts doing other things, so.
So what was that first step? Where were you in college and how did you figure that this maybe was something you wanted to do?
MA: So, I grew up in Seattle, Washington, and was involved in a ton of activities as a kid. Just loved sports, loved performing, was in the school play, just a little bit of everything. I was always trying all sorts of things. But I knew I always wanted to do something in entertainment and media and performing â I love writing, I love producing, creating. So in college, there was no broadcast journalism program at my school â I went to Westmont College in Santa Barbara, California. But thatâs okay because in this industry you donât necessarily need it â itâs the job experience that counts and I started doing internships. I did internships in radio, television, the local TV station in Santa Barbara, and, you know, just learning on the job is the best thing you can do. I was a political science major in college and my first radio job right out of college was the midnight to 6 a.m. shift at a classical music station.Â
And out of all the experiences that you had before coming to CBS, what do you think taught you the most? Or what was the most challenging?
MA: I would say again being on the job â I remember the first time I watched an anchor handle breaking news and just being in the room â you canât teach that. To be in the room and to see them â the papers are flying, informationâs coming in, or at a radio station, when something goes wrong and you need to fix it, those are the moments that I remember where your heart starts pounding and youâre like âoh my gosh, this is really exciting but really scary too.â Like, what about if you mess up?
How do you handle breaking news?Â
MA: So one of the best things that I ever heard was when I got a job in San Antonio, Texas, as a reporter/anchor after multiple jobs in radio and a part-time job in television and all these different things. Finally got that full-time gig in San Antonio, Texas, and one of the coaches that came to the television station would come and give us advice. I loved it, asking questions and theyâre like, âWhoâs this eager, young reporter, get her out of the way.â But I remember they said to me, âWhen breaking news happens, take a deep breath, get your pen in your hand and just start writing, and just say, âThis is what we know so far. You donât have to know everything, just this is what we know.â And I thought, âOkay, I can do thatâ and itâs just a step-by-step process as the news is coming in: âThis is what we know next, this is what we know now.â And just try to stay with it and pace it, and remain calm, stay conversational, and, you know, walk the audience, walk your viewers through whatâs going on. Easier said than done, but I remember those words and I think about that a lot when Iâm in high-stress situations: just take a deep breath, pace with the story, âthis is what we know.â So, good advice â again, easier said than done.
Is there anything that you wish you were doing more of in your day-to-day job, anything you wish you could be covering?
MA: I wish that we could do a few more, just positive stories about family and faith. Easier said than done. Iâve gotten the chance to cover a couple stories but, you know, a lot of times breaking news takes over, and weâre a 30-minute news magazine show, so a lot of those stories kinda get pushed out the window. But for example, next week Iâm covering The Shack, which is a New York Times-bestselling book. Itâs been on the New York Times list for forever â incredible story of faith, itâs being made into a movie, Sam Worthington is the lead and Tim McGraw plays his friend, Octavia Spencer plays God â itâs gonna be really cool and Iâm covering that red carpet next Tuesday, so thereâs a chance to cover some of those things. I try to pitch stories every now and then, you know, and just keep throwing out ideas. Yeah, I mean, again I love our variety, so thatâs nice, I canât complain about that.
Do you have advice for women who maybe are in a similar position as you in regards to pitching and having ideas get thrown out?
MA: Absolutely. It is very hard to catch my bossâs attention, whoâs behind us, because weâre in a newsroom, so things are coming fast and furious and youâre lucky if you get ten seconds of a lot of the executivesâ time, so I would say know your stuff, be confident, have that elevator pitch down. If you want to pitch a story, Iâve found, âokay, how am I gonna catch their attention, I need to know what Iâm talking about so if they ask me questions Iâm prepared.â And then you just gotta go for it and keep practicing and when you get rejected, keep going, because a lot of times maybe it doesnât have anything to do with you. For us, itâs time constraints, itâs other stories we need to cover, you know, things just arenât good that day, maybe crew-wise we donât have enough people to cover it. So donât be discouraged, hang in there and come back again maybe with another angle on it. I think thatâs true with a lot of jobs â you just need to be confident and I would say keep it concise. Thatâs one of the best things you can do, keep it concise. Donât waste their time!
What do you think was some of the best advice that youâve gotten?
MA: I think thatâs so important that you never stop learning. We canât stop learning if we want to be good at our craft and so I just try to take that mindset. You can always learn from somebody youâre interviewing, thereâs everybody in this newsroom that comes with a different perspective. Whether itâs reading books and trying to get advice that way, it works.Â
How do you deal body image as a news anchor?Â
MA: Aristotle said, âThere is only one way to avoid criticism â do nothing, say nothing, be nothing.â Very true. So if you donât want to be criticized, you know, go into your shell, go into a cave and hide, because no matter what youâre gonna get criticized if you step out there. I gotta be honest with you, this is an image-obsessed business. I knew what I was getting into, I gotta take care of myself, I got to look put together and look presentable. I canât sit here and say, âOh, itâs all inner beauty that counts.â I wish that were true. I think itâs getting a lot better, I think the industry is getting a lot better with celebrating women of all shapes and sizes, which is a beautiful thing. Things like the Dove campaign, all these cool things that are going on. But at the end of the day you still need to look presentable, so you know, I think there are times when Iâve compared myself to somebody else and it doesnât do you any good. Itâs hard to do â you have these magazines thrown at us and all these movies, but I just try to be the best me that I can be, know what works well on my body, know what type of clothes look best on me. Iâm not gonna look good in some spaghetti-strap dress, Iâm a bigger-boned girl, thatâs not going to work for me. So what looks good on me and then I feel good and I can forget about it and then focus on the story.Â
What is the best advice for someone applying for internships in your field?
MA: A couple of things come to mind â one, attitude. A positive attitude is huge. Energy, positive energy is such a big deal. Just being interested in what youâre doing â I know that sounds silly, but just being really interested in the company you want to work for. In the interview, know little tidbits about the company or finding out about the person thatâs going to be interviewing you â that shows interest, and that stuff goes a long way. So I would say attitude is important, and organization â you know, your resume looks good, itâs organized, youâre on time, maybe a little bit early. Thatâs really important. And then I would say persistence and determination â following up, finding out if there are some networking events where that person is going to be so that you can meet up with them, maybe have a conversation with them in a different way.Â
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