University of Denver Autumn 2024

ALUMNI STORIES

Going Places Ashley Forest (MA ’21) had a successful career in broadcasting, but going back to school at University College took her career to new heights as spokesperson for Denver International Airport.

By Heather Hein

Informing the public about what’s going on in the world has been Ashley Forest’s goal since she was a ninth grader taking broadcasting classes in her Memphis, Tennessee, high school. It has led to a dynamic career in communications—from chaotic television newsrooms to a politically charged state attorney general’s office and now, at Denver International Airport, where she tells the public what they need to know about one of the busiest airports in the world. A 2021 graduate of the communications management master’s degree program, Forest is also a leader in diversity, equity and inclusion, serving as DEI ambassador for the airport and on University College’s DEI Steering Committee. Recently, she became an adjunct faculty member at University College, teaching communications classes in two programs. Here's what she has to say about her journey. In my high school, every classroom had a television. My freshman year, I had to do a speech for homecoming on camera—and the broadcasting teacher, who was also a well-known radio host, saw it and said to me, “I want you to be part of the telecommunications program.” I was the first freshman to join the program and did television and radio studies all four years. I had my own radio show in college . I majored in mass communications with an emphasis in broadcast journalism at the University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff—an HBCU—and had a show on the school radio station about campus life. During that time, a shooting of an African American made national headlines, and we began covering it every day, in every segment, even though it was a jazz station. It was my first real taste of hard news—and the

importance of knowing what your audience wants. Television news was great—until it wasn’t. I fell in love with the rush of television—the fast pace and the high level of functioning it took. But after a decade, I had become very desensitized to death and destruction. If I saw a body at the scene of a shooting, I would say, “There’s a body, move the camera,” and not be affected. While working in Las

Vegas, the Route 91 Festival mass shooting—the deadliest in U.S. history—took place. After that, I knew I wanted a sense of a more normal life, a sense of balance. I had been looking at University College for a while. I knew I needed to enhance my knowledge and skills for whatever job came next. I started my master’s in 2020 and, when I became deputy communications director for the Nevada attorney general, I immediately started using everything I was learning— persuasion and rhetorical techniques, strategic thinking and planning. It helped me connect with community members and break things down in a way that people could understand, which was very helpful during the pandemic and the 2020 election. DEI has always been part of my world. As a Black woman who grew up in the South, there have always been times when justice has not prevailed.

54

UNIVERSITY OF DENVER MAGAZINE | AUTUMN 2024

Made with FlippingBook Digital Publishing Software