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Students shine in podcasting competition

Journalism
May 15, 2025

Ninety students from six classes showcased their podcasting chops March 7 at the Denison journalism program鈥檚 7th Annual Podcast-a-thon, colloquially known as the 鈥漛est listening event of the year.鈥

A total of 48 projects vied for the Podcast-a-thon鈥檚 grand prize: the Golden Buzzy trophy.

The participants鈥 journey to the big day began months earlier, when science and humanities professors Heather Rhodes, Eric Klemetti, Alan Miller, Lucy Bryan, Julia Kolchinsky, and Doug Swift invited their classes to create podcasts on subjects of their choosing. Faculty are as invested in the competition as the students 鈥 the Golden Buzzy adorns the winning podcast鈥檚 professor until the next competition.

Denison journalism alums Anna Jones 鈥24, Jack Reaney 鈥22, and Sarah Hume 鈥22 served as audio mentors, advising the students how to take their stories from 鈥済ood鈥 to 鈥済reat.鈥

At the 6 p.m. start time, Swift welcomed listeners with a little help from his dog, Figgy, the department’s unofficial mascot. He handed the microphone off to Emmet Anderson 鈥25 and Abigail Jump 鈥25, journalism department fellows or 鈥淛ellows鈥 and the evening鈥檚 emcees.

Seven audio stories made it to the final round, when the audience and judges listened to each podcast.

鈥淲e wanted to honor them all on one basis or another,鈥 judge Jeff Gill said. Maddie Luebkert and Shaye Phillips, both members of the Class of 2027, won the grand prize for their podcast, Reporting the Unimaginable with Anne Saker. Gill said Luebkert and Phillips had won for their 鈥渃ombination of editing, production, and straight-up reporting chops.鈥

Reporting the Unimaginable with Anne Saker delivers a glimpse into how journalists can navigate ethical obstacles with sensitivity. It followed the story of Saker, a former journalist at The Cincinnati Enquirer, as she faced the challenging dilemma of whether to include the overdose death of a new mother in the newspaper鈥檚 Pulitzer-Prize winning series, 7 Days of Heroin.

Luebkert and Phillips won on behalf of Alan Miller’s Journalism Ethics and Empathy course. It was Miller鈥檚 first win, and his enthusiasm for winning comes through in photos of the event.

The annual event is largely the work of Swift, who designed the audio storytelling tutorials used by faculty and students in preparation for the event, and visits classes to support as needed.

Listen to the five winning student-created audio stories:

Buzzy Grand Champion

  • , by Maddie Luebkert 鈥27 and Shaye Phillips 鈥27, on behalf of Miller’s Journalism Ethics and Empathy course.

Honorable Mentions

  • , by Chloe Benson 鈥25, Luke Dunlap 鈥27, and Selah Griffin 鈥25, on behalf of Bryan鈥檚 Beyond Good Intentions course.The story of local nurse Heather Long鈥檚 generous donation of a kidney to a nine-year-old boy after responding to a billboard advertisement.
  • , by Ray Vo 鈥27 on behalf of Swift鈥檚 Multimedia Storytelling course. The story of how a TMJ-alleviating pen was created by an inventor affected by the disorder himself.

People鈥檚 Choice Winner

  • , by Megan Kennedy 鈥25 and Sarah Kissinger 鈥25, on behalf of Rhodes鈥 Neuroscience Seminar. The audio story divesinto the neurological changes that occur postpartum to provide a more scientific reasoning for 鈥榤om brain.鈥

Community Participant Category Winner

  • , by Brie Coleman 鈥27. Featured in February on the Ohio Newsroom, Coleman鈥檚 podcast follows the startling reveal of a Black cemetery buried beneath a central Ohio high school and sets out to rediscover the stories of those nearly forgotten by time and ignorance.
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