10/01/2016
By Katharine Webster
On the second night of the Democratic National Convention, Adeja Crearer ’17 was heading out to the deserted media tents to edit footage for Agence-France Presse TV when a crowd of disappointed delegates for Sen. Bernie Sanders rushed out of the Wells Fargo Center chanting “Bernie! Bernie!” They took over a media tent and she went in with them—just as police moved to block the exits.
“So I’m trapped inside,” she says. “I was in shock for one minute and then I realized, you can’t live it, you have to start working.”
She snapped into action, using her phone to take photos and record interviews with the protesting delegates. After a while, she was able to go to the AFP-TV tent, grab a camera and shoot some video. She edited it all together for an exclusive story. That was a thrill for the aspiring journalist.
“That was real. It was then that I knew—I love that feeling. It was a rush of adrenaline,” says Crearer, an English major with a journalism concentration and a digital media minor from Piscataway, N.J.
Assistant Dean Francis Talty says the convention program, which also was offered in 2008 and 2012, gives students a crash course in party politics. “For students interested in the political experience, this is Woodstock,” says Talty, who manages the Washington Center partnership and serves as an academic seminar leader. “It’s total immersion.” Political science major and Hillary Clinton volunteer David Todisco ’19 says it was gratifying to witness Clinton make history as the first woman nominated by a major party.
“You knew it was coming, but to see it finally happen and Bernie turn over his delegates—it was a very satisfying moment,” he says. “I had the chills so many times from all the inspiring speeches. And that’s what I crave: inspiration in American politics.”
Tyler Farley ’18 worked as a runner for CNN at the Republican convention in Cleveland from 3 p.m. until lights out each night. For hours before his shift each day, he interviewed delegates for a research project with Asst. Prof. Morgan Marietta on the issues animating Donald Trump’s supporters. Farley, an Honors College student double-majoring in political science and economics, says he found the convention fascinating.
“It was a fun, crazy week. It was what you would expect it to be with Trump as the nominee; there was controversy every night, always something dramatic, and it was exciting to be there—to be part of the show.”