Vancouver Sun

CBC’s Diana Swain returns to BCIT to offer sage advice to grads

- BY MICHAEL BERNARD

When award-winning CBC investigat­ive journalist Diana Swain was thinking about what she would tell graduating students at the British Columbia Institute of Technology’s convocatio­n ceremony Friday, she hit on the idea of “disinteres­ted advice”: advice untainted by someone’s selfintere­st.

Concerned that she offer the best advice in the few minutes she had, she did the modern-day thing: she put a request out on Twitter. A while later, she checked her phone to find numerous tweets, largely impartial and objective, from people she had never met.

“The responses fell into themes,” she said in an interview. “One of the most common, expressed in different ways, was, ‘Be patient. Try to let life unravel in front of you. Don’t try to manage every moment. ‘

It’s a concept she has struggled with in her own career as a harddrivin­g journalist.

“I don’t enjoy wasting time, “she said. “If nothing, I am not patient. And that has been something I have worked at my whole life, so it is kind of funny to see that is the advice that people are giving because it’s true.

“Be patient. Let your career unfold and enjoy the ride a bit. Don’t make it so much hard work that you only reflect on what is wonderful about it when it is over.”

Swain, who graduated from BCIT’s broadcast journalism program exactly 30 years ago this year, was a young woman in a hurry.

She immersed herself in her craft while going through the two-year diploma program, working for a weekly magazine in the Fraser Valley community of Chilliwack for 10 months, as a reporter at both the community newspaper The Chilliwack Progress and the local radio station CHWK, as well as at another station in Kamloops. She got her first TV job reading the news for CKPG-TV in Prince George.

She moved quickly through numerous opportunit­ies: coanchor of the evening newscast at Winnipeg ’s CKND –TV, and then reporting for CBC’s CBWT in the same city. She was promoted to national CBC reporter after being recognized for her coverage on the devastatin­g 1997 Manitoba flood.

She won the first of three Gemini Awards for Best News Anchor while she was anchoring CBC’s 24 Hours. After a series of increasing­ly higher-profile jobs at CBC, including substituti­ng for Peter Mansbridge on The National, she moved in 2010 to the CBC’s investigat­ive unit. Last year, after receiving numerous other awards, she began hosting a new TV program called The Investigat­ors with Diana Swain.

Swain, whose alma mater has bestowed on her an Honorary Doctorate of Technology and an earlier BCIT award for her contributi­ons to her industry, still believes there is much value in starting one’s career in a smaller community. But she also noted that experienci­ng different places in Canada — both large and small — is critically important to the developmen­t of any career.

“I also think it is imperative for journalist­s to see the country they are reporting on. You are being asked by people in good faith to report on what has happened and to provide context. And that context is always going to be thin if you have no reference point. And so if you have only ever lived in Vancouver, my advice would be ‘move away.’

In her convocatio­n address Friday, she also offered students advice on how to perceive themselves and their education.

“Put aside any insecurity you may have about whether you are ready. You are prepared, and you have a running start. BCIT is an even bigger, and better institutio­n than when I attended here. Its reputation is even stronger, more widely-known, and more admired.”

 ?? CREDIT: SUPPLIED ?? Diana Swain, who graduated from BCIT’s broadcast journalism program 30 years ago, addressing graduates after receiving an Honourary Doctorate of Technology on Friday.
CREDIT: SUPPLIED Diana Swain, who graduated from BCIT’s broadcast journalism program 30 years ago, addressing graduates after receiving an Honourary Doctorate of Technology on Friday.
 ?? CREDIT: SUPPLIED ?? Diana Swain became a national CBC reporter after being recognized for her coverage on the devastatin­g 1997 Manitoba flood.
CREDIT: SUPPLIED Diana Swain became a national CBC reporter after being recognized for her coverage on the devastatin­g 1997 Manitoba flood.

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