![]() Thousands of interns join the city workforce every June, ready to do what it takes to get that return offer. Then she was introduced to New York City’s summer housing market. “ Things are going to be okay.” That feeling lasted for about a month. She was relieved. “ The biggest weight is lifted,” she remembers thinking. After weeks of applications and multiple “superdays” - part final-round interview, part endurance challenge for finance interns and junior-analyst hopefuls - she secured an internship at a major bank’s Manhattan office. The competitive program provides extraordinary opportunities for undergraduates and graduates to have the work featured with named credits and bylines under national brands.Photo-Illustration: Curbed Photos: GettyĬarly had survived recruitment season (her name has been changed for this story). ![]() The Dean's Internship program pairs SOC's top students with selected partner organizations for semester-long, for-credit internships. Working as an intern doesn’t have to be intimidating. I’m also learning how to spend less time doubting myself and more time simply being confident. Now, I’m learning how to emphasize my strengths and areas of expertise in the ideas I pitch to my editor every morning. The day after it was published, I saw that it was ranked #10 on Vox’s “Top 100” list. ![]() It was the longest article I’ve written for Vox so far and required the most research and thought – definitely hard work.īut my experiences studying East Asia as a part of my international studies major, attending panels on campus with North Korea experts and traveling along the Chinese-North Korean border during high school all helped me conceptualize the article. I explained what happened and attempted to answer a few big questions about the bizarre event. This hit me last week when my editor asked me to cover the latest North Korean scandal, the murder of Kim Jong Nam. I haven’t written articles like that.”īut as I’ve gotten more comfortable at Vox, I’ve realized that I actually do have something unique to offer. I wondered, “How can I offer anything useful to this team? I haven’t read those books. ![]() Maybe I’m just fangirling, but they have read every relevant book, have connections with all the right experts and people in power, and have written articles that masterfully make sense of this world. It didn’t take long to realize that the five journalists sitting on couches next to me were, and are, brilliant. The conversations moved seamlessly from my editor talking about his struggles of finding dog sitters while he was reporting for months in the Middle East to the group questioning the value of realism and other big ideas that drive U.S. ![]() On the morning of my second day, my editor hosted our team at his home for a meeting focused on setting this year’s goals. I’m not going to lie: working with Vox.com’s foreign team can be pretty intimidating. This was first published in March on the Dean's Internship Blog. Below is a first person account from Dean's Intern Lindsay Maizland on her internship at Vox. ![]()
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