>> Well, I think it's probably no different
today than it was back when I was doing it,
and that was to, you know, get yourself in the
game somehow and whether, you know, for me,
it was volunteering on Channel 12, WHYY's
auction or finding someone that was doing video,
and if they, you know, if it
was for free or if it was paid.
I worked at the Insurance Company of North
America, which doesn't exist anymore.
It's called Cigna now because they merged, but
they had [inaudible] industrial, if you will,
television studio down in the
basement where they shot, you know,
videos of, that executives had to watch.
It was not good television,
but it was experience.
And, you know, when you're just, you find these
little niches where you can kind of climb in,
and Temple has, you know, a
great internship program, and it,
and you just have to be somewhere where
what you want to do is being done.
And from that, to me, it seems like
those opportunities begin to come to you
because you meet people, you make more
contacts, and you just keep taking that thing
and spreading it, and, you know, I think
it's still a formula that works today.
I actually think there's more opportunity
today than there was when I was coming in,
and as you said before, name the networks,
name the opportunities for video production,
for whatever you want online now.
There's thousands of times more
than it was back in the day.
So kind of find your way to get in
the game and pursue anything you can
so that you can put yourself
where opportunity exists.