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Meet Paul Voakes

Former Chair, Department of Journalism 鈥 Amateur Jazz Musician

When Mardi Gras rolls around, Paul Voakes grabs his tenor saxophone and joins a party band. His horn brings a New Orleans vibe to the music. Musical performance is a new experience for him. He鈥檚 a longtime fan of the saxophone鈥攅specially in jazz鈥攂ut just started lessons two years ago. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a struggle,鈥 he admits, 鈥渂ut I need to be a student of something all the time in my life.鈥

Just as learning and improvisation are key to Voakes鈥 jazz, they are key to his journalism. As a reporter and editor for the San Jose Mercury News in the 1980s, he often followed new information in different directions in his stories. Like jazz, it was a bit of a performance, with tight deadlines and an audience of hundreds of thousands.

As a child, Voakes loved being the first person to learn something new and tell others about it. As a college freshman, he planned to become an actor, but his curiosity and knack for writing drew him to journalism.

鈥淛ournalism is like jazz鈥攊mprovisation and performance.鈥

- Paul Voakes

Next, as a professor, he remained a student, eagerly adopting the industry鈥檚 new tools while applying journalism fundamentals such as accuracy and ethics to new media platforms.

In a recent ethics class, for instance, he explained the rules of publishing people鈥檚 pictures. His students brought up the case of a college football player who sued a video game manufacturer for using his image without permission.  The students鈥 debate over whether athletes should be paid when their images are used was Voakes鈥 favorite discussion of the semester.

鈥淭he great thing about teaching is that I get to work with intelligent, young, media-savvy people,鈥 he says. 鈥淚鈥檓 never sure what direction any class will take us. Quite often my students end up teaching me as much as I teach them.鈥

Paul Voakes retired in December 2017.

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