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A single course changed the trajectory of Rich Bodee鈥檚 life. Bodee 鈥16 transferred to Dominican prepared to study economics. But just one semester in, his newfound passion for storytelling and uncovering truths鈥攁cquired through an Introduction to Journalism elective鈥攐utweighed his zeal for financial forecasts.

He changed his major to journalism and never looked back. 

鈥淚 fell in love with the idea that one story, even one sentence, could change someone鈥檚 entire perspective,鈥 Bodee shared. 鈥淚 wanted the chance to tell stories that matter to people and shine a light on difficult topics.鈥

He began honing his reporting skills at the Dominican Star student newspaper, buoyed by 鈥渇antastic鈥 professors and opportunities to meet journalism heavyweights like Marvin Kalb and Georgie Anne Geyer on campus, he says. Just four years after graduation, Bodee, a reporter with 13 WREX News in Rockford, accepted his first Regional Edward R. Murrow Award for coverage of a violent 2020 protest. A year later, Bodee鈥檚 work as an investigative reporter for ABC57 in South Bend, Indiana, earned him a second Murrow Award for shining a light on police and prosecutorial misconduct in the city of Elkhart. It鈥檚 a series of which he is especially proud, he says.

As a morning news anchor for the station, Bodee also took home an Emmy Award for his coverage of a severe winter storm.

Today, Bodee鈥攖he grandson of alumna Claire Cusack Cronin 鈥49 and great-grandnephew of Sr. Thomasine Cusack 鈥28, longtime professor of economics鈥攊s a news writer for Chicago-based cable network NewsNation. He focuses on international news coverage and producing segments for NewsNation Live with Marni Hughes and NewsNation Prime with Natasha Zouves.

鈥淚 don鈥檛 know what is going to happen day-to-day鈥攚hich is what I love,鈥 he said.

one of his news reports.