Timmermans to lead Reynolds Center for Business Journalism at Cronkite School


June 18, 2021

Jeffrey Timmermans, an accomplished business journalist and educator, has been named the Reynolds Chair in Business Journalism at Arizona State University’s Walter Cronkite School of Journalism and Mass Communication.

Timmermans will direct the Cronkite School's Donald W. Reynolds National Center for Business Journalism, which works with journalists around the world to improve the quality of coverage of business and the economy, as well as teach business journalism courses. Jeffrey Timmermans, an accomplished business journalist and educator, has been named the Reynolds Chair in Business Journalism at Arizona State University’s Walter Cronkite School of Journalism and Mass Communication. Jeffrey Timmermans, who has more than a decade of professional experience as a business journalist in the U.S. and Asia, will direct the Cronkite School's Donald W. Reynolds National Center for Business Journalism, which works with journalists around the world to improve the quality of coverage of business and the economy, as well as teach business journalism courses. Download Full Image

As head of the Reynolds Center and an endowed chair, he will develop strategies to advance business journalism in the digital age, build partnerships across the university and industry and expand training programs for business journalists domestically and abroad.

“I’ve been using Reynolds Center’s materials in my teaching for years, so it’s a tremendous honor to take on this new role,” Timmermans said. “Business and financial news impacts all of us, and business journalists today face a daunting task in helping readers and viewers make sense of it all. The Reynolds Center will continue to be at the forefront of that effort — globally.”

Timmermans currently is associate professor of practice and director of the undergraduate journalism program at the University of Hong Kong, where he teaches economics and business and financial journalism courses for both graduate and undergraduate students.

He has more than a decade of professional experience as a business journalist in the U.S. and Asia. He covered the finance and banking industries for many years, serving as the Tokyo correspondent for The Wall Street Journal, correspondent for the AP-Dow Jones News Service in Tokyo, and correspondent for the International Financing Review in Hong Kong. He also served as senior correspondent and Hong Kong bureau chief for Dow Jones Newswires.

In 2000, Dow Jones Newswires/The Wall Street Journal named Timmermans news editor with responsibility for overseeing equities coverage for the Asia-Pacific region. He was subsequently named managing editor, holding that position until he left in 2007 to become associate director for public relations at Bain & Company, one of the world’s top business consulting firms, where he was responsible for leading and implementing the company’s public relations strategy in Asia.

Timmermans began his journalism career in 1991 as deputy editor of the Gunma Commerce Journal in Japan, where he helped produce the monthly Japanese-language newspaper and was the first non-Japanese employee to work at the publication.

In addition to his faculty position at the University of Hong Kong, Timmermans founded and operates Backslash Media Ltd., an independent Hong Kong-based media consulting firm that provides media training and other services for multinational clients.

“Jeffrey brings to the Reynolds Center deep expertise in business journalism, international experience and an understanding of what business journalists need to do their jobs well,” said interim Dean Kristin Gilger. “On top of all that, he brings a real passion for teaching the next generation of business journalists.”

The Reynolds Center has provided training to tens of thousands of journalists and educators since it was established in 2003 by former CNBC television anchor and reporter Andrew Leckey at the American Press Institute in Virginia. It was moved to the Cronkite School three years later with permanent funding from the Donald W. Reynolds Foundation.

In addition to providing in-person training in the U.S. and abroad, the center offers a range of resources for business journalists at businessjournalism.org and works with other journalism schools to promote the teaching of business journalism.

As director, Timmermans also will place Cronkite School students in business journalism internships, teach in the school’s specialization for students interested in pursuing business journalism careers and oversee the national Barlett & Steele Awards for Investigative Business Journalism, which recognize the best business reporting each year.

Timmermans earned his PhD from the University of Hong Kong in 2016. He also holds a master’s degree in journalism from Columbia University, New York, and a bachelor’s degree from Colgate University, also in New York.

Jamar Younger

Associate Editor, Walter Cronkite School of Journalism and Mass Communication

Valley high schools celebrated at 7th annual ASU Gammage High School Musical Theatre Awards

Queen Creek’s 'Newsies' receives award for best musical


June 18, 2021

One year after the ASU Gammage High School Musical Theatre Awards shifted to a virtual format due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the seventh annual awards ceremony took place May 29 in a hybrid, livestreamed format that included an in-person audience of about 50 patrons.

The awards recognize and celebrate Valley high school students and faculty who produce musical theater programs, with competition in 14 performance and technical categories. Each year, the best lead male and female winners continue to the Jimmy Awards in New York City, where they compete with students across the country.
The Best Lead Male and Female winners of the 2021 ASU Gammage High School Musical Theatre Awards stand onstage surrounded by balloons. Tyler Baldwin (center) and Kristiana Corona were the 2021 best lead male and female winners. Download Full Image

Last year’s Jimmys were canceled entirely, leaving an entire class of musical theater students without a celebration of their hard work and closure for what may be the end of their performance careers.

For Desiree Ong, education program manager at ASU Gammage, the challenges of the last year made this year’s ceremony even more special.

“I mean, creatively, the teachers really this year had to change a lot,” Ong said. “Some of them had their performances outside. Some of them had it completely virtual — prerecorded. A couple of them had a smaller audience inside and they livestreamed that out.”

Tyler Baldwin, a recently graduated senior from Queen Creek High School, won the award for best lead male for his performance of Jack Kelly in “Newsies.” He will attend the University of Washington in the fall to study biology, with plans to attend medical school.

Baldwin, who started musical theater just two years ago as a sophomore, said he and his castmates “were really trying to do it justice for the people who graduated last year.”

“I came into ‘Newsies’ with the attitude that I wanted to make it the best show possible,” Baldwin said. “I wanted to ensure that it was one of the best shows that had ever been done at my school. I did my best to make sure that everybody felt great about themselves and everybody was working as hard as possible in preparation for the show so that our rewards were going to be even larger because … there’s a lot of potential for everything. And I was just really grateful that everybody contributed so well, and it’s really satisfying to see it pay off.”

Queen Creek’s “Newsies” also received the award for best musical. For a show with 80 cast members, Baldwin said they were prepared for the worst.

“We were a little bit worried about our show getting shut down for a while because … the first couple of weeks we weren’t even at the school, we were doing it virtually, and then when we came back everybody had to wear masks,” Baldwin said. “Especially when you’re singing, wearing a mask was a little bit difficult. We were lucky to be able to take them off and have the last couple of rehearsals and so that really just … upped the ante for everybody because everybody felt more energized and everybody felt relieved because … it’s been a year since anybody has put on a show.”

Kristiana Corona, a recently graduated senior from Hamilton High School in Chandler, won the award for best lead female for her performance of Ellie Blake in “Freaky Friday.” She will attend Kent State University in Ohio to study musical theater.

Corona, who started musical theater when she was 7 years old, said “there was talk … of if we should even do shows this year or whether the school would allow us to do shows this year.”

She said, aside from the obvious challenges with mask-wearing and audience capacity, the “really big hit” was funding for the shows, as the theater program had already paid for costumes and props for shows that were supposed to happen the previous year.

“I was head of fundraising, so I had to organize a lot of fundraisers to try and make up some of that money,” Corona said.

Despite the uncertainty and adjustments that had to be made for “Freaky Friday” to happen, Corona said it was all worth it when her name was called as the winner of best lead female.

“It was just this feeling of resolve,” Corona said. “During this year, as well, I had also done college auditions for musical theater programs, and that’s a lot of rejection. And so, just the rejection of COVID and everything kind of closing down for a while and not being the same, it kind of felt like it made it all worth it in a way. It kind of felt like all that stuff that happened, happened for a reason, for me to get here.”

“I think it all goes back to the show must go on,” Ong said. “And keeping that mantra going, even if it’s not the format that you were expecting. I think the High School Musical Theatre Awards, in particular — it’s a fun night. It’s a celebration. It targets high school youth. And so, all those things make it a fun event and a meaningful event for the staff because everyone can get behind that cause, celebrate high school musical theater. I’m really proud. I feel like it was a good practice for when we’re back in the theater all together. I think it’s a milestone of where we’ve come from a year ago and how bad COVID was, but now we’re taking baby steps. We had 50 people in the audience, and we’re going to work our way back up so that we’re ready to fully reopen.”

Marketing Assistant, ASU Gammage