http://www.ukresistance.co.uk/2010/02/imagine-journalist/
FEATURES: - Make yourself a great career as a journalist
- Start as a columnist for a local newspaper and end up as an international reporter, heading your own TV show
- Get your own press pass
- Have fun with the full range of journalists’ accessories: notepad, handheld recorder, mic, camera
- Catch your first scoops by bike and end up travelling in style by helicopter!
- Discover the exciting parts of a magazine journalist’s job
- Go out in the field to interview the locals, but also stars, politicians and athletes
- Attend press conferences and stand out amongst other journalists
- Take the best pictures to illustrate your articles
- Organise magazine covers
- Report great news on TV
- As a TV news presenter deliver the right information at the right time
- Record celebrity interviews
- Release radio programmes on air
- Develop your investigative skills
- Become the one who reveals the top news stories!
- Challenge yourself to deliver exclusive scoops
- Explore places for interview and picture opportunities
- Play with your environment as a background for the photoshoot minigame
JOKE ADDITIONAL FEATURES: - Go “freelance” and enjoy the benefits of beard-growing and not having to ever see other people
- Be owed thousands of pounds you probably won’t ever see
- Drink so much free alcohol your insides still hurt even after three years of not touching a drop
- Get insulted every time someone gets sent something and you don’t
- Start as a columnist for a local newspaper and end up as a depressed blogger
- Talk to women, but only because they have to because it’s their job
- Watch your carefully-cultured internet persona disintegrate the first time you meet other industry employees
- Wonder how people so obviously useless get paid three times as much to do less work
- Lie to yourself about products being better than they are on a daily basis
- Develop your plagiarism skills
- Meet people so horrible you fantasise about fighting them and actually killing them
- Never quite be important enough to have the final say on anything