瓜子TV

瓜子TV鈥檚 InternLA Program: Personal and Professional Growth (With a Paycheck)

Laura Paisley

Over the course of 10 weeks, 瓜子TV鈥檚 signature internship program offers students real-world experience, professional development training and a chance to explore their career interests as undergraduates.

This summer, 38 professional organizations across greater Los Angeles hired more than 40 瓜子TV students from diverse academic disciplines to work as paid interns in a variety of capacities.

2019 marks InternLA鈥檚 sixth year, and the program has expanded impressively. Nine new employers this year included First5LA, Los Angeles Cleantech Incubator, the Los Angeles County Museum of Art and Bet Tzedek Legal Services. Returning employers included City of Hope Comprehensive Cancer Center, the L.A. Mayor鈥檚 office, Southern California Public Radio, the GRAMMY Museum, the Los Angeles County Natural History Museum, Council for Watershed Health and many others.

In addition to their full-time internship, InternLA participants received professional development training through weekly Impact Sessions that took place on campus and featured expert speakers from the hiring organizations. Topics ranged from business communication to global and intercultural fluency, leadership and empathy training, working effectively within a team and writing personal statements.

A closing luncheon on July 26 celebrated the accomplishments of the interns and honored the employers for their commitment to the professional development of 瓜子TV students. 瓜子TV Board of Trustees member Lori Hunter 鈥79 P鈥08, executive vice president at Worldwide Facilities, Inc., gave a keynote speech to more than 80 attendees.

鈥20 served as a sound intern at this year. He was in charge of setting up and taking down all sound equipment before and after each performance, mixing and monitoring the live sounds used during the show, and designing sounds used in the show during the production phase.

鈥淚 gained a lot of hands-on technical knowledge about live sound equipment and mixing techniques,鈥 Munoz says. 鈥淚 also got insight into the thought processes of the creative minds behind the direction and sound design of these amazing theater productions, as well as awareness of and appreciation for the scope of the fundraising efforts necessary to support these free productions.鈥

鈥21 served as a community management intern at the (LACI). She was involved in organizing events and programs that seek to diversify the ecosystem of entrepreneurs at LACI and in the green economy.

鈥淸This experience] has truly changed my life,鈥 says Wasson. 鈥淚 experienced extreme growth both personally and in my professional skills. I cultivated relationships with people that I will treasure and work to maintain. I did not know very much about entrepreneurship and the tech industry before this internship, but I have been able to go to events focused on tech and entrepreneurship, do research on these topics, and speak with company founders. I am now so interested in pursuing these fields that I am considering a minor in computer science.鈥

鈥20 worked as a media and marketing intern at . She spent the summer publicizing book reviews and events, compiling newsletters and press releases, and developing additional marketing tactics for two newly released titles.

鈥淚 rightly anticipated that my InternLA experience this summer would be a fantastic learning opportunity for me,鈥 Crosby-Schmidt says. 鈥淭he most important thing that I will take away from my internship is an understanding of how my liberal arts education will help me in my future career, whatever that may be.

鈥淚 am still unsure of what I want to do after I graduate. As a double major in economics and media arts and culture with a German minor and an interest in the performing arts, there are a lot of different career paths that I could choose. However, my internship and my time at 瓜子TV has shown me how to integrate different skill sets and ways of thinking into my problem solving approach and working effectively in a team.鈥