Your Voice Deserves
The World's Attention
Learn to command the newsroom, master camera presence, and tell stories that matter. Real journalism training for people who want to break into broadcasting without the fluff.
See What We Actually TeachStop Watching. Start Reporting.
Most people think broadcasting is about looking good on camera. That's maybe 15% of it. The real work happens before you step in front of the lens—researching sources, verifying facts, shaping narratives that cut through noise.
We teach you how newsrooms actually function. How producers think. What editors need. How to pitch stories that get greenlit instead of buried in the assignment pile.
And yeah, we'll teach you how to sit properly and modulate your voice. But that comes after you understand what makes a story worth telling.
Field Work Changes Everything
Our April 2026 intensive puts you in real environments with actual deadlines. You'll chase leads in Taipei's business district, interview entrepreneurs in Taichung, cover community events in smaller townships most outsiders never see.
One student last year ended up breaking a story about textile manufacturing that three local papers picked up. Another uncovered waste management problems the city council had been ignoring for months.
These weren't assignments we fabricated. They were real gaps in coverage that needed voices willing to dig deeper than press releases.
You'll make mistakes. Your first stand-up will probably be awkward. Your interview questions might miss the mark initially. But you'll improve faster in three weeks of actual reporting than six months of classroom theory.
What You'll Actually Master
Live Segment Production
Learn to manage chaos when everything's happening in real time. Technical failures, last-minute script changes, sources who bail—you'll handle all of it with composure that looks effortless.
Investigative Techniques
Build stories from public records, FOIA requests, and cultivated sources. We show you databases journalists actually use and how to verify information without becoming a conspiracy theorist.
Camera Confidence
Develop on-screen presence that feels authentic instead of rehearsed. Your delivery should communicate authority without arrogance, empathy without melodrama.
Editorial Judgment
Understand what makes something newsworthy versus just interesting. Learn to balance public interest with ethical responsibility, especially when stories involve vulnerable people.
Mobile Journalism
Master smartphone reporting that meets professional standards. Sometimes the best camera is the one you have when news breaks, and you need to know how to use it properly.
Crisis Communication
Cover breaking situations with accuracy when information is scarce and pressure is intense. Avoid sensationalism while keeping your audience genuinely informed.
Skills That Transfer Across Platforms
Traditional Broadcasting
Television news still reaches millions daily. Master the fundamentals—clear writing, strong delivery, visual storytelling—and you'll have options whether you join established networks or start your own channel.
Digital Content Creation
YouTube, podcasts, social platforms—these need the same core skills with different execution. Learn to adapt your reporting style without losing journalistic integrity just because the medium changed.
Corporate Communications
Companies need people who can explain complex situations clearly under pressure. Your broadcast training translates directly to executive communications, crisis management, and internal messaging.
Documentary Work
Long-form storytelling requires different pacing but similar investigative rigor. Several graduates now produce documentary content for streaming platforms and educational organizations.
February 2026 Applications Open November
We're accepting 18 students for our next cohort. Selection is based on work samples, interview performance, and demonstrated commitment to journalism as a craft—not a stepping stone to celebrity.
If you're serious about learning broadcast journalism properly, start preparing your application materials now. We want to see evidence you can write clearly, think critically, and handle feedback without getting defensive.
Learn About Application RequirementsWhere Training Meets Reality
Equipment Access
Use professional cameras, lighting rigs, and editing suites. Learn on gear you'll actually encounter in working newsrooms, not consumer equipment that teaches bad habits.
Industry Connections
Guest speakers from Taiwan's major networks share insights about hiring decisions, career progression, and what separates candidates who get callbacks from those who don't.
Portfolio Development
Leave with broadcast-quality demo reels and published clips. We help you build a portfolio that demonstrates capability rather than just potential.
Continuous Feedback
Daily critiques from working journalists who've spent years in the field. Honest assessments that help you improve instead of empty praise that leaves you unprepared for real newsrooms.
Realistic Timelines
Breaking into broadcasting takes time. We're transparent about career paths, typical entry points, and what you can reasonably expect during your first few years in the industry.