I took a chance on news writing and found a passion
During my time at Del Mar College, I ended up receiving much more than some credits and a diploma. My life and my goals for the future completely evolved into something I never would have guessed. And it all started with Foghorn News.
When I first started taking classes at Del Mar, it was mostly because my mom kept telling me to. After having taken some time off, too much time in her opinion, my mom was convinced I would never get a degree if I didn’t do it now. To her, putting this off was only wasting time and wasting the opportunity to create a better future for myself. “Just pass your classes and get your degree” she told me. So I registered, and slowly but surely started inching my way to the finish line.
As a Public Relations and Advertising major, part of my degree plan included a news writing class. As someone who loved writing research papers in high school, I figured it wouldn’t be so bad. And then I found out we had to interview people, make phone calls and emails and just communicate with others in general. Immediately, I knew I was out of my comfort zone.
“It’s just one semester, be uncomfortable for one semester, pass the class and get it over with,” I thought. But that’s not how it turned out.
I found an unexpected passion during a class I only took for the credits. I fell in love with connecting with others, hearing what they have to say, and weaving it all together to bring a well-rounded story to readers. I enjoyed it so much that I kept writing for the Foghorn, and it set me on a completely new and exciting path for the rest of my time at Del Mar.
I dove in headfirst: I wanted to cover more, to learn how to use the cameras and take better photos, to attend different events and meet new people to interview. I wanted to learn how to do the job right and do these stories justice. That passion took me places I never would have imagined. I was given the opportunity to represent the paper at different conferences in San Marcos, New Orleans, and even New York. During my time on the paper some of my work even won some awards, and our work as a team brought home even more. Everything the Foghorn staff has achieved as a team has been because each one of us had a passion for news that paid off.
Even with all our successes, it’s not always easy being a student journalist. You get rejected sometimes, and that’s fine. You work on time crunches, often trying to balance schoolwork and stories, but somehow (with lots of coffee) you make it all work. You get critiqued … A LOT, and you learn how to deal with being told that something you put hard work into might not be as good as you thought. You write, and rewrite, and rewrite some more. You have great story ideas that fizzle into nothing sometimes, so you pick back up and find another. You deal with dodged questions and the scavenger hunt for the truth. You work your butt off for a few years on staff, then everyone graduates, and the newsroom still picks up and moves on without you.
One news writing class set me down a path I never knew I’d end up on, and it all happened because I decided to do something outside of my comfort zone. I’m the type of person to try something once and then decide if it works out or not, and I highly recommend it. Don’t count something out just because it seems weird or a waste of time, or just overall not your vibe. Take the class, try the hobby, go to the event. You never know when you’re going to run into something that will change your life for the better.
Latest Foghorn News
- Bringing home the gold for Del Mar College“I was expecting a bum rush, I was just thinking that this is gonna be a dogfight in the beginning.” Boxing is a sport of toughness, determination and endurance. To become the best, you must be willing to continuously trade fierce blows and outlast the strongest of competitors. Through years of training and dedication, 28-year-old Kennedy Contreras did just that as she turned dreams into reality on March 29 in Macon, Georgia, becoming the first woman in Texas to win a championship title at the United States Intercollegiate Boxing Association’s National Tournament. Originally from Midland, Texas, Contreras’ boxing journey began…
- A look at Del Mar’s own mariachi groupEvery Monday, Wednesday, and Friday afternoon, the Richardson Performance Hall is filled with Del Mar’s mariachi ensemble. The mariachi group has grown over time, and it’s thriving as a proud part of campus life. Today, it gives students a chance to express their heritage, grow musically, and share the spirit of mariachi with the community. Del Mar’s mariachi program originally began in the early ‘90s and quickly gained attention after placing in the Mariachi Extravaganza in 1999 which was very meaningful to the program. But after a few strong years, the group went inactive until 2014. Del Mar brought the…
- Medical Support Squad on wheels for Del Mar College studentsA new Medical Support Squad is helping make health care easier to access and more affordable for DMC students and staff. The mobile medical services are available for Del Mar students and staff in a new partnership with South Texas Family Planning and Health Corporation. The Medical Support Squad is a medical clinic on wheels with a lab and two exam rooms and can provide many pharmacy, lab and health services to all three Del Mar campuses. Patients have access to free and affordable services, screenings, and treatments including women’s health exams, breast and cervical cancer screenings, a full range…
- SGA wraps up spring semesterDel Mar’s Student Government Association held their final meeting for the Spring 2025 semester at Heritage campus where the group discussed an upcoming conference, the success of two on-campus programs and the addition of a new mobile medical clinic. TJCSGA Convention The meeting kicked off with a discussion of the Texas Junior College Student Government Association convention, held April 10-13 in Galveston. “State conferences are about visiting with 50 other community colleges throughout Texas and discussing the needs for our students,” explained SGA Director and Advisor Beverly Cage. “These resolutions were sent to our state representatives in Austin, then DMC…
- Looking back on the deep history of Del MarWhen I arrived at Del Mar College in 1967 the new library had just been completed and thousands of books brought from the second floor of the History Building which had been housing them. Designers had the foresight to include two extra floors for future expansion. I was delighted to find all 130 volumes of the Official Records of the Civil War, an absolute must for Civil War research. When I was assigned a student typist, I knew what that meant: I was expected to publish. I had been told by Del Mar recruiter Grady St. Clair that four-year status…
- Del Mar College paralegal students join LEX honor societyEight Del Mar students were inducted into the Lambda Epsilon Chi (LEX) national honor society for excellence in paralegal and legal studies April 23. The ceremony was held inside of a fully replicated courtroom in room 240 of the Venters Business Building and featured keynote speaker and Corpus Christi independent business owner Lino Diaz. The American Association for Paralegal Education founded LEX and define being a member as, “a prestigious achievement that reflects a student’s mastery of rigorous coursework, commitment to academic honesty, and dedication to advancing the paralegal profession.” The Spring 2025 inductees are Alejandro Benavides, Sarah Carroll, Laura…