Sunday, July 27, 2014

Mary Kay Cabot: Barging Through Doors

Mary Kay Cabot, Cleveland Browns Beat Reporter
 Mary Kay Cabot says she’s lucky and she knows it.

“Every single day, I’m grateful for the fact that I’m getting the privilege of doing a job that is a 100 percent, a dream-job for some people.”

This is the mantra Cabot has clung to through the obstacles she says she’s faced over the years as one of the earliest women to cover professional sports in the Cleveland area. She’s been a beat reporter for the Cleveland Browns for over 20 years.

Cabot grew up in the Cleveland suburb of Lakewood, Ohio and went on to study journalism at Kent State University. She says getting into sports wasn’t her initial plan. She did an internship with the Cleveland Plain Dealer between her junior and senior years.

“The internship was in the sports department, which was kind of out of the blue,” Cabot said. “But I was really excited about it because it was something I wanted to try.”

The PD ended up hiring her back right after college where Cabot would climb the ladder. She says that ladder wasn’t always easy.

In the beginning of her sports writing career, Cabot says there were a lot of doors she had to kick down- almost literally. She recalls a time when she went to cover a Bengals, Redskins game in Washington. They wouldn’t let her in the locker room.

“I had deadline looming, and you know my paper was expecting to be in there,” Cabot said. “Even though the policy was that I was allowed to be in there, they wouldn’t let me. That was a time I literally had to barge through a door that was closed to me.”

And then she had to deal with push-back getting to the players she needed to interview. There were many more experiences like this one, Cabot says she had to overcome early on. She says that, back then, some of her colleagues were OK with her covering football and getting in the locker rooms, but others were not. Same with the players.

 When she first started, Cabot says she was fortunate enough to have another woman with whom she could help battle sexism through the field: Marla Ridenour. Ridenour had been covering the Browns for five years with other area newspapers like The Dayton Daily and The Columbus Dispatch when Cabot joined with The Plain Dealer.

“It was nice to have someone else who understood what you were going through,” Cabot said. “Because it was a real trailblazing thing for both of us way back then.”

Cabot says today she hardly experiences the tough times she did a decade and more ago. She attributes a great deal of the progress to efforts made by the Association of Women and Sports Media. AWSM is a nonprofit organization that was created in 1987 as a support network and advocacy group for women who work in sports.

“It’s a tremendous organization,” Cabot said. Because of its efforts, “you really don’t have to beat your head up against a wall like you used to have to back in the day.”

One thing Cabot says she always did to help herself early on – and still does - is make sure she knows as much as possible about football. She describes learning the sport as something that has been ongoing. She says she watches a lot, including Browns film, and reads a lot to stay in the know.

“I did do a lot of extra stuff, because people are always kinda on the lookout,” Cabot said. “Or want to watch you fail. So you just have to make sure that you know exactly what you are talking about or you are gonna get called out on it.”

Cabot says people can be very judgmental, especially when a woman is covering a “man’s” sport. But many of those harsh voices are limited to social media.

“They’re what I call a ‘vocal minority,’ ya know people who can hide behind an anonymous Twitter account,” said Cabot. “The way I deal with that now, is ignore it all.”

Cabot says there’s so much more to the job that keeps her going. She’s covered Super Bowls, the Olympics, and enjoys the fact that her summer job involves being at Browns training camp every day. She looks at how far she’s come in the industry and the reward it’s been, obstacles and all.

“I can honestly say now that we brought down a lot of barriers,” Cabot said. “We worked our tails off to basically help this next generation of female reporters not have it so hard.”


https://soundcloud.com/user112704074/interview-with-mary-kay-cabot

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Interview transcript


Gab: Have you always been the only female to cover a Brown's beat? I've just noticed, I know now, with the Northeast Ohio Media group online, I know you're the only woman. 

Mary Kay: You know what, ya for the most part ya. But throughout the times that I was covering the Brown’s, there was another lady who had been covering them longer than me and she was covering it for different newspapers in Ohio than me, like the Dayton Daily and the Columbus Dispatch. Her name is Marla Ridenhouer, and she still works for Akron Beacon Journal as a columnist. But she was covering the Brown’s probably about 4 or 5 years before I did, so it was nice to have someone else who understood what you were going through. Because it was a real trailblazing thing for both of us way back then. You know there was a lot of battles that you had to fight and doors you had to kick open- literally. I can honestly say now that the people who did that ya know we brought down a lot of barriers and worked our tails off to basically help this next generation of female reporters not have it so hard.

Gab: What were some of those initial challenges you had to overcome?

Mary Kay: Oh, you know you’d go to cover a game and I once had to cover a Bengals, Red-Skins game in Washington and they wouldn’t let me in the locker room. I had deadline looming, and you know my paper was expecting to be in there. Even though the policy was that I was allowed to be in there, they wouldn’t let me. And so that was a time I literally had to barge through a door that was closed to me. And you know, some of my male colleagues were on board with it and some were not back then. There were some that had a problem with it. There were some players who were fine with it, and there were other players who had huge problems with women being in the locker room. So we had to ya know, fight all those battles in addition to getting the job done effectively.

Gab: Do you fight any of those battles still today? How's that transition over the last ten years been?

Mary Kay: Not so much, not really. Through the Association of Women and Sports Media which is a tremendous organization that fights for the rights of female reporters and journalists and just from all the things that all of us old timer’s had to go through, you really don’t have to beat your head up against a wall like you used to have to back in the day.

 Gab: So are you involved in it (AWSM) or has it just influenced you?

Mary Kay: I haven’t been as involved in it as I should but early on I did go to some conventions and things that they had but then I got really busy with my job. I also have three children.

Gab: That’s a full time job in itself! Moving back more a little towards the Brown’s part, how did you um get so involved in football, being a sport that’s kind of hard to cover since we don’t really play it?

Mary Kay: Well I started covering college football to start off and then I don’t know it was just sort of a natural transition after that and it was just something I felt really comfortable with and I liked a lot and I don’t I think they were pretty set on some of their other beats like baseball and it was something I was just really interested in.

Gab: Did you have to learn more about the sport as you went a long? Was it hard at first?

 Mary Kay: Yes, and that’s ongoing. And that’s one thing I always wanted to make sure was that I always knew what I was talking about and id watched a lot of things, read a lot of things. I actually at certain points was invited to watch the film with former Brown’s head coach, Bill Belichick, and a reporter who was a good friend of his. I would go watch film with them sometimes on Mondays after the game, and I learned a lot from doing that. I did do a lot of extra stuff, because people are always kinda on the lookout or who want to watch you fail, so you just have to make sure that you knew exactly what you were talking about or you were gonna get called out on it.

Gab: How have you dealt with that criticism, especially when people may be, uh, hyper-conscious of a woman covering a man’s sport?

Mary Key: Well, over the years, it wasn’t too bad, but the criticism wasn’t something that you were necessarily aware of. But now of course, with social media and you’ve got all the people on twitter and the comments on the stories and stuff like that, but I will honestly say, I don’t read the comments and I usually don’t look at my mentions on twitter, because you know there is a lot of prejudice out there. There really are a lot of people who are still unwilling to accept a female in this role. So unfortunately, even though I’ve been doing this for over 20 years, you still run into that. So the way that I deal with that now, is I ignore most of it. It’s not gonna do you any good to read that stuff or listen to it. They’re what I call a “vocal minority,” ya know people who can hide behind an anonymous Twitter account. But you know the people that I meet out on the street and the fans and the people at games and training camp are overwhelmingly, overwhelmingly supportive. So I really ignore the anonymous criticism on social media.

 Gab: I know how you go through some of those hard times, what has been the most rewarding part, what has kept you going for the last 20 years?

Mary Kay: You know what, every single day, I’m grateful for the fact that I’m getting the privilege and honor of doing a job, that, is a 100 percent, dream-job for some people. And I do realize that, and I don’t take it for granted. Ya know I’ve been to super bowls, I’ve been to Olympics, ya know I go to Brown’s practice every day in the summer for my job ya know. And you know, just the travel is amaxing, and the people that you meet. You know just the relationships that you build with people over the years, with your colleagues, in some cases with players, ya know ive had some players who I might not have gotten along with at the time that they were playing for the Brown’s then they’d leave and come back and they’re so happy to see me, and they wish that I’d stay in touch with them- ya know you build through the war of a season with everyone ya know this whole unbelievable thing that happens over the season. Theres so many great things about it. And ya know,now- I minored in telecommunications is what they called it back then, which is on-camera stuff. So now I get to do all that. I do a lot of television, I do a lot of radio, do internet chats and all those things. Now I do a little bit of everything, which is what makes the job so great! It has evolved over the years. And it’s evolved into things that I really love to do. It’s always new, and fresh and different and exciting, and it never gets old.

Gab: What’s your favorite part of the multi-platform duties, do you like on camera the best?

 Mary Kay: Yes, I do, the thing I like about the on-camera, whether it be a stand-up, or on television or whatever the case may be, is, you get to be yourself. And maybe show a little flare, or personality with it.. and then you’re done. Ya know, when you’re writing for the newspaper or even for the web or whatever, you gather all your facts and get all your interviews, and you transcribe and you do all that, sometimes it could take you seven or eight to put a whole good story together. And I like the immediacy of standing in front of the camera with the michrophone and ya know you do your bit. For Cleveland.com I do the stand-ups, but I also do stuff for the Bleacher Report, Fox Sports 1,NFL Network, I’ve done some stuff for ESPN over the years and locally for Sports Time Ohio.

Gab: Have you ever thought about covering other uh, teams besides Cleveland? Or has it always been your passion and everything to stay here?

 Mary Kay: Well I have had uh, numerous opportunities to do some national things, including ESPN several times. But for whatever reason, including the fact that this is where my family is, my husband and three children live, there’s a lot of things that I haven’t been able to go take. But I have had plenty of great opportunities and I’ve been grateful for those. But for now, this is the place for me.

Friday, July 25, 2014

From College Cafeteria to a National Network: How Molly McGrath Paved Her Own Way to Success

By Julia Morris


Hosting a television show in a college cafeteria might not be the conventional way to start out in broadcasting, but that is exactly what current Fox Sports 1 anchor Molly McGrath did to jumpstart her career.

25-year-old McGrath moved from San Francisco to Boston to attend Boston College in 2007.  After arriving in her new home, she realized right away that she wanted to study sports broadcasting.

“When I moved to Boston, the Red Sox had just won the World Series in 2007 and the Celtics won in 2008 and I was just in a really wonderful sports town,“ McGrath said.  “My college had a great athletic program so it really moved me to have more of a passion than anything for working in sports.”

While McGrath knew what she wanted to study, she also realized that her communications degree alone would not be enough to land her a job on-camera.

"I knew that I needed to find some kind of experience if I wanted to be on camera out of college," McGrath said.

During her senior year in 2010, McGrath was named cheerleading captain.  As an athlete with proven leadership abilities, she developed close relationships with the staff of the Boston College Athletic Department, including Athletic Director Gene DeFilippo.  McGrath took advantage of her connections and pitched an idea to DeFilippo that would help her gain sports reporting experience. 

“I said…I'm the cheerleading captain, I’ve worked with everyone here, and I know all of the athletes really well is there a chance that I could create a student reporter role, you really don’t have anything like that that exists,” McGrath recalls.  “If I do this and interview the athletes a couple times a week could we put this on the website as a way to help promote BC Athletics.”

DeFilippo agreed to let McGrath produce and host the show, which was shot in one of Boston College’s dining halls, Hillside Cafe.  The show, Mondays at Hillside, featured interviews with various athletes, including members of the women’s basketball team and the men’s hockey team.  

“It’s just very basic but it was a way to get me to figure out how to have live experience,” McGrath said.

After graduating from Boston College in 2011, McGrath used her college on-air experience to help her land a job with the Boston Celtics as a live in-arena reporter.   

"I applied with the reel made from all of my college stuff and they called me and had me come in for a meeting and I ended up getting the job," McGrath said.

McGrath now works for Fox Sports 1 in a variety of on-camera roles, including sideline reporter for NFL games, highlight reader, anchor, and co-host of a daily show.  Her dream is to one day cover the Super Bowl.  Although she looks back now on the Mondays at Hillside show and laughs, she knows the experience it provided was invaluable in helping her achieve her current success. 

“It got me comfortable hosting in front of my peers and in front of people so you know it’s silly but it really did help,” McGrath said.  “Any small experience can help you.”

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Interview Transcription

JM: Molly what made you want to pursue a career as a sports anchor and a reporter?
MM: Well I always knew that I wanted to work in television.  I went to Boston College and when I moved to Boston I was trying to decide if I wanted to work in news or sports.  I always loved sports and I have an older brother who played football in college and I come from a family with a strong sports background so that kind of made me think more about sports.   When I moved to Boston, the Red Sox had just won the World Series in 2007 and the Celtics won in 2008 and I was just in a really wonderful sports town. My college had a great athletic program so it really moved me to have more of a passion than anything for working in sports.

JM: I know you mentioned BC and you were a member of the cheerleading team there as well.  How do you think that being an athlete yourself affected your understanding of what athletes in sports have to go through to be successful?
MM: Yea that really helped.  Being a cheerleader at BC helped me get to know the athletic director and all of the coaches and I had a similar schedule.   I cheered for football and basketball, men and women, so I was always really busy and traveling with the team so I kind of understood what these athletes were going through in a different way but I still understood their schedule and it got me really close with some of the coaches and the Athletic Director.  One day I knew that I needed to find some kind of experience if I wanted to be on camera out of college so I went to the Athletic Director and said look you know me, I ‘m the cheerleading captain I’ve worked with everyone here and they trust me and I know all of the athletes really well is there a chance that I could create a student reporter role you really don’t have anything like that that exists.  If I do this and interview the athletes a couple times a week could we put this on the website as a way to help promote BC Athletics.   And he said yea that’s a great idea, that would be wonderful if you can kind of do the work of this then we’ll let you do it.  So that was kind of my first self-made on camera job was BC Athletics, that’s how I got my start.


JM: I’ve seen the Hillside Broadcasts it’s a great thing.
MM: Oh my gosh yea it’s funny because I knew I needed live experience to be able to say I had done stuff live so I said “Do you think we can do a show in our dining hall and it’s like so bad and very, very poorly produced it’s just very basic but it was a way to get me to figure out how to have live experience.  It got me comfortable hosting in front of my peers and in front of people so you know it’s silly but it really did help.  Any small experience can help you.

JM: I agree and I think it’s really impressive that you took the initiative with that.  I know you also touched on your experience working for the Celtics, how were you able to make the transition from covering college sports at BC to then covering a professional team?
MM: I graduated from BC and applied to over 150 jobs, most on camera and I got nothing.  I was graduating with no job and I was freaked out and I finally got a job at ESPN as a production assistant so I was behind the camera, cutting highlights, and writing scripts and printing scripts, prompting and all that.  So I took a job right out of college at ESPN as a Production Assistant and got to see what it’s like on the other side of the camera and really get that experience there.  But the entire time that I was at ESPN I was looking for an on camera job because they were not going to give me an opportunity to be on camera because they just don’t do that.  ESPN doesn’t do that kind of thing.   So I applied to a bunch of different jobs and my reel was almost getting outdated, it had been six months since I graduated so it was still sending out a lot of the videos from my college days.  And I sent that out and heard about an opening at the Celtics for their web reporter and team reporter position so I applied for that with the reel made from all of my college stuff and they called me and had me come in for a meeting and I ended up getting the job.  And that started out as a web-reporter for the Boston Celtics and then it evolved into live in-arena reporting which evolved into sideline reporter for Comcast Sports Net.  So it all kind of happened pretty quickly after that.

JM: And now obviously you are covering all types of sporting events for Fox Sports 1, what do you think is the best part of your job right now?
 MM: I think the best part of the job is definitely the opportunities Fox Sports and Fox Sports 1 have provided for me.  I came in to this a year ago with very little experience and since then I’ve gone from an update anchor to now being a co-host on a daily show every single day on a national network, which is just unbelievable.   So I’ve gotten a lot of hosting experience.  I had never done any football sideline reporting and they put me on NFL Sidelines last year which was incredible and to fill in for people like Erin Andrews who I always looked up to was just surreal.  And now I'll be doing some more college football.  So hosting experience, sideline reporting experiences, I’ve anchored, and I’ve read highlights on our show Fox Sports Live, it’s really given me a really diverse experience so that I can get talented in all different kinds of things.  That’s rare to find in a national network so it’s really great they’ve given me those opportunities. 


JM: Right and as you said just getting opportunities with professional sports and all the different things that you’ve got to experience, you have accomplished a lot thus far in your career so looking ahead what goals do you have for the future?
MM: I think my goal now is simply to just get better every single day and get more comfortable.   I’ve only been at a national network for a year but before that I really had very little experience.  They took a big chance on me so I’m still getting used to being on TV every day.  I’m still getting used to being comfortable.  I know I have a lot to work on so it’s just more of showing my personality.  Long-term goals I would love to host my own show some day.  And I would love to have the confidence to really command the show and carry it on my own so that’s definitely a goal.   And another goal of mine as a sideline reporter is to cover Super Bowl and be on the sidelines during Super Bowl I think that would be a career moment for me.

Molly McGrath Audio Interview: https://soundcloud.com/julia-morris-16/molly-mcgrath-interview