Journalist.
I choose this job because you can travel to differents places and meet famous people.
What do a journalist?
A journalist collects and distributes news and other information.To obtain such information, the journalist must necessarily resort to verifiable sources or his own testimony. The basis of journalism is the news, but includes other genres, many of which are interrelated, as the interview, the story, the chronicle, the documentary and opinion.
There are some different types of journalists :
-Business and finance journalism
Salaries and job outlook
The median salary earned by holders of either bachelor's or master's degrees in journalism and mass communication from colleges and universities in the United States (including Puerto Rico) entering the full-time job market in 2009 with $30,000. This was the same amount as in 2006, 2007, and 2008.
According to the Occupational Outlook Handbook of the United States Department of Labor's Bureau of Labor Statistics, "employment of news analysts, reporters, and correspondents is expected to decline 6 percent between 2008 and 2018." The Occupational Outlook Handbook report that the median annual wage for news analysts, reporters, and correspondents in the United States was $34,850 in May 2008, with the middle 50 percent earning between $25,760 and $52,160, and the bottom and top 10 percent earning less than $20,180 and more than $77,480, respectively. Median annual wages for reporters and correspondents were $33,430 in "newspaper, periodical, book, and directory publishing" and $37,710 in "radio and television broadcasting.
In Spain, the average is around 30.000 euros, but it changes because of the type of journalism.
What do you have to study to become a journalist?
-Primary school
-Secondary school
-Human and social bacalaureate
-The journalism university
You cand find some universities there.
Salaries and job outlook
The median salary earned by holders of either bachelor's or master's degrees in journalism and mass communication from colleges and universities in the United States (including Puerto Rico) entering the full-time job market in 2009 with $30,000. This was the same amount as in 2006, 2007, and 2008.
According to the Occupational Outlook Handbook of the United States Department of Labor's Bureau of Labor Statistics, "employment of news analysts, reporters, and correspondents is expected to decline 6 percent between 2008 and 2018." The Occupational Outlook Handbook report that the median annual wage for news analysts, reporters, and correspondents in the United States was $34,850 in May 2008, with the middle 50 percent earning between $25,760 and $52,160, and the bottom and top 10 percent earning less than $20,180 and more than $77,480, respectively. Median annual wages for reporters and correspondents were $33,430 in "newspaper, periodical, book, and directory publishing" and $37,710 in "radio and television broadcasting.
In Spain, the average is around 30.000 euros, but it changes because of the type of journalism.
What do you have to study to become a journalist?
-Primary school
-Secondary school
-Human and social bacalaureate
-The journalism university
You cand find some universities there.

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