By Jonathan Arkin
M.A. Specialized Journalism '10
USC Annenberg graduate student Wendy Carrillo (M.A. Specialized Journalism '09) proved you can return from
Carrillo recently swept through the city known for gambling and financial heartbreak by ensuring unregistered voters could register and then vote in the 2008 presidential election. With her focus at Annenberg on Latinos and their voting patterns in the current presidential election, predictably, she spent her time in Vegas not by playing the slot machines, but by rocking the vote.
“I recruit, engage and train young Latino volunteers to get out the vote,” said Carrillo upon returning from her busy trip to
Carrillo, a master’s degree candidate in the inaugural Specialized Journalism program at USC Annenberg, just completed a stint with Alma Marquez, director of the CA Latina Vote who is also in charge of Latino voter turnout for
“While in
In her spare time, Carrillo, who was once mentored in broadcast journalism by CNN anchor Rick Sanchez, hosts two public affairs radio programs in
“I talked to an African American woman in her mid 50s who was living paycheck to paycheck, had just moved from Louisiana and wanted to vote so badly, but did not have the money to go get a new state identification to register to vote in Nevada,” she said. “These are the stories that break my heart, but are very real to the situation that many people are living in.”
But the biggest coup of the year for Carrillo was getting the chance to represent her
“Now that I am the political go-to gal for SiTV and Voto Latino, I think I may ask Barack Obama if he likes flour or corn tortillas... or tapatio or tabasco?” Carrillo on her official blog. She inserts an ellipsis. “NOT!”
But a thorough perusal of her blog will make it clear to readers that Carrillo is not a person who is not solely interested in static demographics as she is in the human stories that she encounters in her traveling research. One person who remains prominent in Carrillo’s consciousness is the woman in
“Personally, to see a woman in her situation, so proud of Barack Obama and so excited in doing whatever she could to be able to vote, is a realization that our country is desperately in need of inspirational leadership,” she said. “If it weren’t for the fact that I’m in grad school, I would be working in
Carrillo sighs and disappears into her specialized journalism class, prepared for another spirited debate with her professor.