As the University of Regina looks ahead to equipping the next generation of journalists and communicators with its new BA in Journalism, News Media and Communication, Degrees caught up with four School of Journalism alumni and where they’re at in their exciting careers.
The University of Regina School of Journalism has a more than 44-year history of producing some of the country’s most esteemed journalists and communications professionals. Filling newsrooms and communications teams alike since 1980, the J-school has helped facilitate countless internships with national broadcasters, and news outlets of all sizes.
Whether reporting from Washington,the Paris Games, or rewriting the narrative with Indigenous storytelling, Kerry Benjoe BA’00, MJ’20, Devin Heroux BJ’12, and Kelly Malone BAJ’13 are at the top of their game in an ever-changing industry.
What do you they all have in common? Love of their jobs, a commitment to truthful storytelling, and a deep appreciation for their time at the University of Regina.
Reporting with heart
Telling compelling stories is something Devin Heroux BJ’12 has put into practice for years as a senior reporter for CBC Sports and News, most recently at the 2024 Olympic and Paralympic Games in Paris. What he recalls most about his journalism school experience at the U of R is learning how to report from a place of learning, not knowing.
“That has been the aim of everything I’ve done,” says Heroux, who now lives in Toronto. “To explain to the audience that I’m not the expert … but in the most authentic way possible, to lean on everything I’ve learned and observed to try to tell the best story possible.”
Heroux recalls, as a journalism student, parachuting into the small town of Mortlach, Saskatchewan to find stories that “captured the essence of the place.” He discovered the remnants of a nearby ghost town that was, he says, “frozen in time,” and put together a story, with the help of the locals, that painted a picture of small-town life in Saskatchewan.
“It’s a piece that I was incredibly proud of,” he says.
That experience and his internship at the Bangkok Post changed his perspective when it came to sports journalism. A Rider superfan who, as a teenager, worked for local sports’ broadcasters in Saskatoon— interning at CBC in Saskatoon before heading to journalism school —Heroux realized that sports stories could be about heart.
Paris was Heroux’s fourth consecutive Olympics as a CBC reporter, but his first as a member of CBC’s Olympic broadcast team. He interviewed athletes, set scenes, and gave updates from the swimming and athletics events.
“It was the most enriching experience of my life,” says Heroux. “It was magical.”
A meaningful moment for Heroux was speaking with Mara and Kirby Wasserman, the parents of Jacob Wasserman, who survived the Humboldt Bronco’s bus crash in 2016, and who made his Paralympic debut in Paris in para-rowing. Knowing it would be an emotional interview, Heroux was anxious when he got to Kirby, who said a few words before breaking into tears.
“What made my heart soar in that moment was that Kirby felt safe enough to cry,” Heroux says.
Heroux’s ability to meet people where they are at is something he says he owes to his experience growing up as a gay kid in Saskatoon, who had to read people’s energy, be a chameleon, and learn how to fit into spaces. He feels a responsibility to be “genuinely curious and caring” for those he interviews. “That is what’s at stake every time I have a conversation,” he says.
The collective experience of sports is a transformative thing for Heroux because of how it brings people together. “We'll never know what it's like to swim like Summer McIntosh or run like Andre De Grasse, but all of us know victory and defeat,” he says. “We know loss, we know what it's like to have fears, hopes, and dreams and fall short - only to try and achieve that again in our own lives.”
Heroux’s empathetic approach to journalism has not gone unnoticed. On September 20 he was awarded the King’s Charles III Coronation Medal in Quebéc City by the Governor General for his reporting. “I’m thrilled that the stories I share and the voices I choose to elevate are being heard,” Heroux says. “I think I have the best job in the world. I am blessed everyday that the CBC gives me a platform to be able to do this.”
Committed to positive Indigenous news
After a major surgery in 2018, Kerry Benjoe FNUniv’00, MJ’20 had some down time. She had lost her leg and wondered about her future as a journalist in a shifting news media landscape. As a reporter at the Regina Leader-Post for 12 years at that point, and not one to stay idle, she decided to pursue her master’s in journalism at the University of Regina. “I really don’t think I would have fallen back in love with journalism, had I not gone back to school,” she says.
Benjoe, who is Saulteaux, Dakota, and Cree, from Muscowpetung First Nation, was the first full-time, Indigenous reporter in the Leader-Post’s history when she started there in 2006. The irony of this fact hit her every time she walked past Nicholas Flood Davin’s portrait on the wall of the newsroom. Davin, the paper’s founder, wrote an influential report recommending the implementation of residential schools in Canada to the federal government. Benjoe was the last person in her family to attend the Indian Industrial Residential School in Lebret, which was one of the first to open and – in 1998 – was the last to close in Canada. Her parents, grandparents, and great-grandparents were also residential school survivors. “I just always kind of gave [Davin] a smile,” Benjoe says. “I was taking up space and I felt empowered by that because I was in a place where I was meant to be.”
Benjoe’s graduate research at the U of R focussed on the last generation of residential school survivors at the Lebret school(, sharing her personal story and focussing on resiliency not just hardship.
“We’re more than just our trauma,’” says Benjoe.
Benjoe is editor-in-chief of EFN Media, formerly Eagle Feather News, a digital news platform and quarterly magazine, which published its first issue this summer. Eagle Feather News, which was once the most widely distributed monthly Indigenous newspaper in Saskatchewan, folded in January due to declining ad revenue. But Benjoe didn’t give up on it.
“I said, ‘It’s not going to die on my watch!”
A month later Benjoe began conversations with Pattison Media, and in June they announced a partnership to get EFN back online as a digital news platform.
“My whole career has been in mainstream, so coming back to community news, it was really important for me to leave the baggage of mainstream media behind and just concentrate on what Eagle Feather was good at: telling positive Indigenous stories,” she says.
Key to Benjoe’s vision for EFN Media is the idea of partnerships, and not just with Pattison. The magazine’s first issue includes stories written by students she taught at INCA Summer Institute at First Nations University. Benjoe also created a feature called Common Threads, funded by the Multicultural Society of Saskatchewan, that highlights the traditions of other cultures,
Benjoe says she wants to be “an agent of change.” While she knows well the thrill of hard-hitting news—she recalls how two of her stories at the Leader Post led to swift government action on issues of missing persons in the province, and international travel for First Nations people after 9/11—what excites her the most now is sharing her skills and wisdom as a skilled journalist and industry expert when it comes to Indigenous storytelling.
“Indigenous-led news organizations have always lived in this struggle,” she says, referring to the challenging times journalism is facing. “Most Indigenous news organizations have never had a newsroom.…We always worked in our silos. Now I see mainstream news flipping into what we’ve always done. We’re becoming experts in how to tell these stories, how to be resourceful and being able to survive.”
The adventure of covering history as it happens
Kelly Malone BJ’13 can only plan her life one week at a time since she hit the ground running in June as The Canadian Press’ Washington correspondent..
“It’s a wild time to be writing ‘the first draft of history,’” Malone says, describing her work writing for Canada’s national wire service, which keeps newsrooms and media across the country up-to-date on stories of national interest. Malone spent six-and-a-half years as a CP reporter in Saskatoon and Winnipeg before moving to Washington. “I just exist in a state of exhaustion at this point,” she laughs.
The past four months have been a whirlwind for Malone in her new role. In a matter of weeks, in the U.S., there was an assassination attempt on former president Donald Trump, the Republic National Convention took place in Milwaukee, President Biden gave a speech at NATO’s 75th anniversary, and the Democratic party revamped their campaign to back Vice President Kamala Harris after President Biden removed his name from nomination. Malone covered all of it.
“I think it was beyond anyone’s expectation,” she said about Harris’ rise. Older Black women at the Democratic National Convention in Chicago told her they never thought they’d see a Black woman run for president in their lifetimes. “That is something that has broken a ceiling that is palpable in the United States, and is certainly palpable in the Democratic party,” saysMalone.
The significance of the moment at the DNC, when Gretchen Whitmer, the Obamas, and Hillary Clinton took to the stage to address their party faithful, was not lost on Malone. “The energy in these buildings is phenomenal,” she says. “It’s such an amazing thing to be in that room and experience something like that.”
Before journalism school, Malone was an aspiring writer, keeping the browser tabs open on her laptop by holding it outside her apartment window to reach free Wi-fi on Saskatoon’s Broadway Avenue. She worked in cafes and restaurants, travelled, tree planted and freelanced.
“I lived in a van — all those things you can only do between the ages of 18 and 22, when your back doesn’t hurt,” she laughs.
After four years, Malone attended the U of R school of journalism, which offered her the opportunity to develop the multiple skills she needed to thrive as a multimedia reporter. She learned she could find a story anywhere when she was given a news release in her print class about a temporarily closed intersection and assigned to write a story about it. After door knocking on businesses and calling city hall, Malone wrote a story about a problematic truck route in the city causing road damage and multiple closures for businesses.
“When I wake up in the morning and I know I need to pitch something, I always think of that—‘Okay, you can find a story in anything!’” she says.
With newsrooms across the country struggling to stay afloat in an-ever-changing industry—Vice, Bell Media, and CBC all had major layoffs this year, Malone acknowledges the grim reality and says journalists are asked to do so much more now. “The pay is stagnating, the hours are extending … and with the lack of advertising money, you’re not having someone assigned to cover city hall or education board meetings,” she says. “If you don’t have a reporter there, you don’t know what’s going on.”
Still, Malone remains hopeful that journalism will adapt. “I don’t think journalism is dead. People have a huge appetite [for it],” she says. “Throughout history, there have been ebbs and flows of how journalism works: when radio came out, newspapers were dead; when TV came out, radio was dead. With the internet, it’s just another challenge and change.”
At the time of writing, Malone had a day off before taking the train to New York to cover the United Nations General Assembly. “What other job provides you the travel, the opportunity, the connection with people?” she says. “I love it so much. When I’m 80 or 90, I’m going to look back and remember all these moments.”