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  2. Work with us. The News & Observer summer 2023 internship ...

    www.aol.com/us-news-observer-summer-2023...

    Internships are full-time for 10 weeks and typically start at the end of May or beginning of June. Interns are paid and earn $600 per week. Internships are in-person and are based in the Raleigh area.

  3. Apply now for breaking news, sports, other internships at The ...

    www.aol.com/news/apply-now-breaking-news-sports...

    Apply for a Star internship for an opportunity to work in a newsroom. Positions are available in breaking news, sports, local government, state legislative reporting and audience engagement.

  4. These Digital, Broadcast And Cable Companies Are Hiring Interns

    www.aol.com/news/2014-04-25-digital-broadcast...

    APTwo broadcast interns edit a video story at the Arizona Capitol Television studios. College students and recent graduates who have interned at least once get a significant leg up in today's ...

  5. Broadcast journalism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Broadcast_journalism

    United States stations typically broadcast local news three or four times a day: around 4:30–7 am (morning), 11:30 or noon (midday), 5 or 6 pm (evening), and 10 or 11 at night. Most of the nightly local newscasts are 30 minutes, and include sports coverage and weather. News anchors are shown sitting at a desk in a television studio.

  6. Television crew - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Television_crew

    They are heavily used in sports programming, and in all video taped productions, including television news programming, and sometimes sitcoms, if they are shot on video tape), they are also responsible for action replays and quickly editing highlights while a show is in progress. As the title suggests, video tape operators only work in video ...

  7. WFTV - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WFTV

    The same subchannels are broadcast as 9.11 through 9.14 and 65.14 from WFTV's digital replacement translator at Deltona in Volusia County. [153] The 2000s saw the WFTV transition to digital and high-definition broadcasting. WFTV was the first Orlando station to broadcast a digital signal, beginning in April 2001. [154]