Before she was chasing breaking news, University of 海角社区 senior Alexa Kennedy was hauling lobster traps off the coast of 海角社区, starting at just 8 years old on her family鈥檚 commercial boat in Steuben.
Long days on the water taught her how to read conditions, anticipate problems and adjust quickly when things didn鈥檛 go as planned. Often, no one else was around to help.
Those instincts carried over into her reporting.
鈥淎 lot of waiting,鈥 Kennedy said. 鈥淚 have to anticipate because things won鈥檛 always go as planned. I have to be prepared to take that challenge on and do a lot of fast-paced, quick thinking under pressure.鈥
At U海角社区, a learner-centered university focused on real-world experience, Kennedy has translated that lobsterman grit into a professional edge.
She recently landed a while completing her undergraduate degree as a political science major with minors in legal studies, international affairs and journalism.

鈥淯海角社区 has been very good for me,鈥 said Kennedy, who transferred to U海角社区 from Endicott College in Massachusetts. 鈥淚 came to U海角社区 because I missed my home and there鈥檚 a lot of real and down-to-earth people who share my experience of having to work on top of school.鈥
Born and raised in Steuben, Kennedy has worked on her family鈥檚 commercial lobster boat alongside her brother since elementary school. Today, she balances that maritime heritage with the demands of reporting, often shifting between early mornings on the water and tight newsroom deadlines.
While she now works in a newsroom, her deep-rooted Downeast 海角社区 perspective remains central to her storytelling. She still returns to the family boat whenever she can.
鈥淚n the summer, I try to come down once a week to go out on the boat with my brother and one of his best buddies who is also his new sternman,鈥 Kennedy said. 鈥淓ven though he is taking over my job on the deck and assisting with the process of catching lobsters, I still love to help. Because I get homesick, I could never stop being a fisherman.鈥
The same independence she developed on the water continues to guide her work in the field, where she often operates as a one-person reporting crew.
鈥淭he biggest challenge I鈥檝e had in the newsroom is battling the equipment because I鈥檓 new to the camera and the editing software,鈥 Kennedy said. 鈥淥ne time I turned my camera to do an interview, and my audio levels weren鈥檛 working, so I had to mess around with the camera and figure it out myself. I was trying to fix this crisis while also trying to interview someone.鈥
Her days reflect the pace and unpredictability of modern journalism.
鈥淚 get my story in the morning and sometimes they fall through and I鈥檝e got to pivot at the last minute, but usually they鈥檒l be fine and I鈥檝e got to figure out setting up interviews,鈥 Kennedy said. 鈥淚 then have to go out and do those interviews, gather B-roll, come back and write it, do my voiceover and edit it all together by 5:45 p.m.鈥
Story by Alexa Rose Perocillo, news intern.
Contact: Marcus Wolf, 207.581.3721; marcus.wolf@maine.edu

