Andrew Barton (journalist)

Andrew Barton is a lecturer in the School of Communication at the University of Miami in Coral Gables, Florida. He teaches Advanced Broadcast Journalism and serves as faculty advisor to the student-produced newscast, “NewsVision.”

Andrew Barton
OccupationJournalist, Academic

Biography

Barton grew up in Europe, attending school in Italy, France and Spain. He graduated with a Bachelor of Arts from McGill University of Montreal, and received an M.A. in Journalism from Ohio State University.

For the first eight years of his professional career, Barton worked as a television news photographer, reporter, and anchor in Shreveport, Louisiana, Orlando, Florida, and Dallas, Texas. During this period he covered the early Space Shuttle developments at the Kennedy Space Center and traveled with presidential candidates Ronald Reagan and George H. W. Bush during the 1980 campaign.

Next, Barton moved into television news management. For three years, he served as assistant news director at WPLG-TV in Miami, Florida, followed by twelve years as a television news director in Norfolk, Virginia, Greensboro, North Carolina, Louisville, Kentucky, New Orleans, Louisiana, and Harrisburg, Pennsylvania.

After this, he spent three years teaching broadcast journalism at Ohio State, while simultaneously hosting and producing a public affairs interview show at the PBS television station.

Barton joined the University of Miami faculty in 2001.

Sources

gollark: Although they *would*:- allow cross-device points- probably allow more metrics if I also feed the points handler server logs or something- potentially be very slightly more secure- allow leaderboards (though I could make an optional "submit to leaderboard" thing I guess?)- reduce the badness of some of the code
gollark: Probably?
gollark: Serverside points:- wouldn't work in offline mode- would still remain hilariously insecure- would likely introduce legal issues- would make the site either non-static or need to make API requests constantly
gollark: Huh, that exists?
gollark: No.
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