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Ļć½¶Ö±²„rakes in national broadcasting awards

Ļć½¶Ö±²„rakes in national broadcasting awards

Contact: Sarah Nicholas

STARKVILLE, Miss.ā€”Ļć½¶Ö±²„ students and faculty received top awards for their broadcasting skills at the recent Broadcast Education Association Festival of Media Arts.

Ļć½¶Ö±²„Department of Communication logoIn the Audio and Sports faculty division, Terry LikesĀ­Ā­ā€“ā€“professor and head of MSUā€™s Department of Communicationā€“ā€“received two Best of Competition awards for his audio documentaries ā€œSharing a Laugh: The impact of popular culture on the White House Correspondentsā€™ Dinnerā€ and ā€œCowbell Culture: Small instrumentā€“ā€“big impactā€¦the cowbell as a fixture in American music, sports and popular culture.ā€

In the student Sports competition, communication graduate students Cody Blaszczak, of Pelham, Alabama, and Tanner Marlar, of Corinth, earned an Award of Excellence for play-by-play announcing. Senior geoscience major Dylan Hudler, of Kernersville, North Carolina, won second place for Best TV Weathercast for his submission from ā€œTake 30,ā€ MSUā€™s student television newscast.

More than 80 colleges and universities were represented in the virtual submission process and a total of 1,885 submissions were reviewed during the juried event.

ā€œBEAā€™s Festival of Media Arts is a prestigious and highly competitive national collection of faculty creative scholarship and student media work,ā€ Likes said. ā€œThis is external validation of high-quality work, allowing students to add a national credential to their portfolio.ā€

Founded in 1955, BEA is the premier international academic media organization for career advancement for educators, students and professionals. For more, visit .

MSUā€™s College of Arts and Sciences and Department of Communication are available online at and .

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