Image: UGA Atmospheric Sciences graduate student Alex Music was recentlynamed a recipient of the 2025 American Association for the Advancement ofScience (AAAS) Mass Media Science & Engineering Fellowship. According tothe AAAS website, “This 10-week summer program places science,engineering, and mathematics students at media organizations nationwide.Fellows use their academic training as they research, write, and reporttoday’s headlines, sharpening their abilities to communicate complexscientific issues to the public. This highly competitive program strengthens the connections between scientists and journalists byplacing advanced undergraduate, graduate, and post-graduate level scientists, engineers, andmathematicians at media organizations nationwide. Fellows work as journalists at mediaorganizations such as National Public Radio, Los Angeles Times, WIRED, Milwaukee JournalSentinel, and NOVA. The Mass Media Fellows use their academic training in the sciences as theyresearch, write and report today's headlines, sharpening their abilities to communicate complexscientific issues to non-specialists. Participants come in knowing the importance of translatingtheir work for the public, but they leave with the tools and the know-how to accomplish thisimportant goal. For 10 weeks during the summer, the AAAS Mass Media Science & Engineering Fellows collaboratewith media professionals at radio and television stations, newspapers, and magazines. As part oftheir job, the scientists and their journalist-hosts strive to make science news easy for the public tounderstand. The program strives to improve public understanding of science by enhancingcoverage of science-related issues in the media. By embedding science students and recent gradsin media outlets, the Fellows learn how to communicate scientific topics in clear and engagingways, better understand how science is covered in the media, and build up a professional networkof scientists and journalists who can work together to share science effectively. In its 50-yearhistory, the program has supported nearly 900 fellows.” Congratulations, Alex!