- Fri Jan 08, 2016 10:27 am
#21668
So this is kind of a mess at the moment. I wanted to differentiate myself from other applicants and I thought explaining my (sort of) unique reasoning for wanting to attend law school might be a good way to do that. However, I'm a little afraid that I took things too far. Any commentary would be much appreciated!
I have always had a fondness for words. As the daughter of a journalist, this was probably fairly inevitable for me. One of my earliest memories is sitting on the floor of my living room, begging my parents to listen to me spell just one more word. H-A-P-P-Y. The way I would feel when I started reading chapter books before everyone else in my Kindergarten class and again when I got special permission from the librarian to read Margaret Mitchell’s several hundred page long classic, Gone With the Wind in sixth grade.
Words would continue to bring me joy throughout my primary education and into high school. As I got older, I began to pay more attention to how words were communicated and how this communication affected people.
At age sixteen, when all of my friends spent their summers laying out by the pool, I applied to and was selected for a high-profile journalism camp in Washington D.C. This experience completely changed my life. The camp hosted dozens of speakers from the media world and we, as budding journalists, were encouraged to ask them anything that we wanted. I spent the week in awe as we rubbed elbows with MSNBC reporters and received VIP tours of The Washington Post headquarters and the Newseum. Wide-eyed with pen in hand, I was exposed to public relations for the first time when a presidential press secretary gave a lecture. A career that allowed you to control what information was communicated— my interest was piqued.
During my freshman year of college, I took an internship on a whim. At the time, I didn’t realize that this experience would shape my interest in public relations into a passion. Allied Integrated Marketing, the company that I was working for was hired by various entertainment companies to promote upcoming movies to the Dallas market. That particular year, the movie that was taking up the most of our time was The Hunger Games. The stars of the movie were on a well-publicized mall tour and Dallas was one of their stops. Being the avid reader that I am, I was wild with excitement at the opportunity to meet the actors who would be bringing one of my favorite books to life. But on the day of the event, it wasn’t the actors who held my attention, but rather their publicist. Before each interview, she would brief the actors on what they needed to say and how they needed to behave, in order to cast the movie in the best light. I was completely mesmerized by the way she coached the actors. I felt like I was witnessing my future.
From that point forward, my love of words had been transformed into a clear path that I wanted my life to take. I spent the rest of my college career learning as much as I could about public relations, even going so far as to transfer colleges to the University of Texas, a school that is consistently recognized as one of the top PR schools in the country. However, the closer I came to receiving my degree, the more I realized that I wasn’t finished learning.
I want to study the law because I want to continue learning about words. My passion for communication hasn’t been quelled and I eventually see myself pursuing a career as a publicist, but I want to this from the standpoint of an attorney. Words can be interpreted in so many different ways and I can’t be satisfied to just read or write them without understanding their impact. Although my experience in law school will likely be atypical, I can’t imagine moving forward in my career without earning a law degree first.
I have always had a fondness for words. As the daughter of a journalist, this was probably fairly inevitable for me. One of my earliest memories is sitting on the floor of my living room, begging my parents to listen to me spell just one more word. H-A-P-P-Y. The way I would feel when I started reading chapter books before everyone else in my Kindergarten class and again when I got special permission from the librarian to read Margaret Mitchell’s several hundred page long classic, Gone With the Wind in sixth grade.
Words would continue to bring me joy throughout my primary education and into high school. As I got older, I began to pay more attention to how words were communicated and how this communication affected people.
At age sixteen, when all of my friends spent their summers laying out by the pool, I applied to and was selected for a high-profile journalism camp in Washington D.C. This experience completely changed my life. The camp hosted dozens of speakers from the media world and we, as budding journalists, were encouraged to ask them anything that we wanted. I spent the week in awe as we rubbed elbows with MSNBC reporters and received VIP tours of The Washington Post headquarters and the Newseum. Wide-eyed with pen in hand, I was exposed to public relations for the first time when a presidential press secretary gave a lecture. A career that allowed you to control what information was communicated— my interest was piqued.
During my freshman year of college, I took an internship on a whim. At the time, I didn’t realize that this experience would shape my interest in public relations into a passion. Allied Integrated Marketing, the company that I was working for was hired by various entertainment companies to promote upcoming movies to the Dallas market. That particular year, the movie that was taking up the most of our time was The Hunger Games. The stars of the movie were on a well-publicized mall tour and Dallas was one of their stops. Being the avid reader that I am, I was wild with excitement at the opportunity to meet the actors who would be bringing one of my favorite books to life. But on the day of the event, it wasn’t the actors who held my attention, but rather their publicist. Before each interview, she would brief the actors on what they needed to say and how they needed to behave, in order to cast the movie in the best light. I was completely mesmerized by the way she coached the actors. I felt like I was witnessing my future.
From that point forward, my love of words had been transformed into a clear path that I wanted my life to take. I spent the rest of my college career learning as much as I could about public relations, even going so far as to transfer colleges to the University of Texas, a school that is consistently recognized as one of the top PR schools in the country. However, the closer I came to receiving my degree, the more I realized that I wasn’t finished learning.
I want to study the law because I want to continue learning about words. My passion for communication hasn’t been quelled and I eventually see myself pursuing a career as a publicist, but I want to this from the standpoint of an attorney. Words can be interpreted in so many different ways and I can’t be satisfied to just read or write them without understanding their impact. Although my experience in law school will likely be atypical, I can’t imagine moving forward in my career without earning a law degree first.