Proud PapaBy Gene Mueller
I wish I could say I had something to do with it, but honestly, I didn't. My daughter Alyssa got a part-time job this week in the business. This business. The one that her mother frets about her becoming part of. The one that's been known to eat it's young. She'll be working the weekend assignment desk at WLUK/Fox 11 in Green Bay, and she couldn't be more excited.
Alyssa is a senior at St. Norbert, so any kind of a job is welcomed, even if it's only part time. It'll eat up a good chunk of her weekends, but it's a good lesson: entry level jobs in this business have a tendency to do that. They also have an appetite for holidays, too. I remember spinning discs of pre-recorded Yuletide specials and tapes of church services on more than a couple of Christmas Eve nights at WHBL in Sheboygan. Sure, the Mueller holiday tradition was to open gifts on the 24th and suck old fashioneds, but I wanted a taste of radio so bad I really didn't complain. I was on the air. I was working in radio! I was where I wanted to be!
Did I mention that I was making minimum wage at the time? We've all been there, in order to land the job we wanted, or at least, get an entry level spot in our chosen career field. Crappy hours, lousy pay, rookie hazing: it's all part of the real-life workforce experience. Our industry doesn't offer many of those any more. For all of the Sheboygan and Stevens Point opportunities I received when I was coming up, I wonder how many still exist for today's communications newbies. Weekends and late nights were perfect times to learn the ropes, get your sea legs, and make mistakes when no one was really listening. It was a chance to find out if this is REALLY what you wanted to do the rest of your life, while meeting some of the most colorful characters you'd ever come across. It was an opportunity to work with real, honest adults who'd seen and done it all: big people with kids and mortgages and maybe even a divorce or two along the way. They were folks who told you how to write, report, edit, cut tape, schmooze contacts, work phones, and stay awake at school board meetings that seemingly had no end. They'd teach you the subtleties that you wouldn't learn in any college classroom--such as when NOT to air the interview some drunken local official insisted you record with him while you were working late one night and just happened to pick up the newsroom phone. And, those same vets would be the first to offer up a recommendation when it was time for you to spread your wings and try to find a better job in a bigger market. All this, while making minimum wage. Places like that are hard to come by in this era of vanishing small-town radio newsrooms and computers that take the place of pimply, wanna-be disc jockeys. Management runs leaner and cleaner now, not just in major markets but in places like Point and Sheboygan and Rhinelander and all up and down the radio dial. The result: the end of a farm system that taught big-city skills at small-market wages to the broadcasting talent of tomorrow. I'm proud to say my daughter got her job on her own--she took an internship and worked it into an employment possibility. Dad didn't push, nudge, cajole, or even lift the phone. The only thing I added to her skill set was to cultivate her dark sense of humor so that she is neither shocked nor surprised at what gets discussed off-air in the average radio/television newsroom. She may work a few weeks and decide that t-v news isn't her calling. If and when she leaves, I hope it happens only after she's met some of the same colorful characters that I came across when I was learning the trade. My wish is that she gets a full taste of the industry--the good, the bad, the rewarding and the disappointing. I hope she gets the adrenalin rush that comes with handling a big story, as well as the soul-crushing boredom that is your partner as you stare at a silent police scanner, hoping that something would happen. It's all part of the business--one that she's now a part of. All while making minimum wage. Enjoy, kid. I can't wait to share war stories with you. |
Wisconsin Morning News Podcasts
|




Monday, Oct 26 at 9:55 AM Ellen wrote ...
Have you ever thought about writing a book about your experiences in radio? I would love to hear the stories from back in the day when DJs really were DJs and not what they are today.
31115197 Flag for moderationFriday, Oct 23 at 9:29 AM Brian Kerhin wrote ...
As one of the newsroom managers at Fox 11, I can confirm that Gene had no role in Alyssa getting this job. However, I want to point out she will be making more than minimum wage!
31007509 Flag for moderationFriday, Oct 23 at 7:11 AM Joe Mutranowski wrote ...
That's Awesome Gene! Congratulations to you, LuAnn and to Alyssa. Please let her know we are thinking about her!
30999414 Flag for moderationFriday, Oct 23 at 6:57 AM Shirley Draeger wrote ...
Nothing wrong with earning minimum wage. Key word is earning. How do you appreciate reaching the top if you haven't started at the bottom! And each raise is confirmation of the job you are doing-becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy of success. You also learn in these positions to speak up for and sell yourself.
30998803 Flag for moderationThursday, Oct 22 at 8:46 PM Tetvet wrote ...
Congrats to your daughter and you Gene, for giving reality a shot. Too many kids today want the easy way out, using Mom's or Pop's name to open a door. I live in Neenah, so I will be watching your little girl break in in GB. Good Luck always helps.
30984734 Flag for moderationThursday, Oct 22 at 6:47 PM Ryan wrote ...
Congrats Gene.
30980527 Flag for moderationAdd a comment
Most Popular