Raymond native and Windham High School graduate Katie Eastman recently achieved what many broadcasters spend years striving for, just a few years into her career. Eastman was recently awarded two New England Emmy awards, outstanding video essay and outstanding video journalist, for compilations of stories she filmed as a multimedia journalist for the Boston Herald.
“Winning
an Emmy is something that I always wanted to do,” said Eastman. “I never
thought I would get one so young. I was so excited that this was able to happen.”
The
accomplishment really starts with the stories, said Eastman. Both compilations
included stories from the tragic bombings at the 2013 Boston Marathon. The
first story in her video essay was filmed on the day of the marathon, a mile
away from the finish line. Eastman had been running the marathon with a camera.
“I was planning on telling a very different story than what I ended up
telling,” she said.
Because
they were a mile out, she said, no one knew what was going on, but she captured
the confusion and emotion of the crowd. “It was an incredibly personal story
for me to tell. You’re not used to being the news when you are reporting the
news, but I was the subject of that story,” said Eastman. “I think that’s why
it came across so emotional. When I put that story together, I knew exactly
what I was feeling, so I could convey that emotion into this piece.”
The
other two stories in the video essay were also related to the marathon bombings.
One profiled Pete DiMartino, a survivor whose foot was severely injured, during
the early part of his recovery at Spaulding Rehabilitation Hospital. The third
piece showed Carlos Arredondo interacting with people who had come to say
goodbye to the marathon memorial in Copley Square before it was archived.
The
compilation that won her the outstanding video journalist award featured a
profile of Lee Ann Yanni, who was slated to run her first marathon in Chicago
in October of 2013 when she was injured while watching the Boston Marathon. Eastman
followed Yanni for six months as she learned first to walk, and then to run
again. Eastman was in Chicago with Yanni when she completed 26.2 miles against
all odds. “That was a really incredible moment,” said Eastman of watching Yanni
finish. “It’s the most joy I’ve had in telling a story, because I was with her
for such a long time, and watched her progress,” she said.
The
other stories in the video journalist compilation were not related to the
bombings. One was a story about a blind stonemason, and the other an
11-year-old campaign manager for a school committee campaign in Cambridge.
Both
awards were for categories in which the reporter shoots, writes, and edits
everything on their own, said Eastman. “It’s about people who are out with a
camera by themselves, which is what I like to do because you get full control
and ownership over your work,” she said.
Winning
two regional Emmys in the same year was completely unexpected, said Eastman,
who was nominated last year, but did not win. She went into the evening
thinking it was just great to be nominated, she said. When they announced her
name the second time, she was shocked. “It was very nice, and gratifying just
to know that all the hard work really did pay off,” she said.
Eastman
said she really appreciates that people have taken the time to share their
stories with her. “It’s cool that I was able to get these awards, but when I
think about it, all of these people are way cooler,” she said. Her job doesn’t
really feel like work, she said, and she feels lucky to be doing what she loves.
Eastman
is proud of her accomplishments, knowing that she worked incredibly hard to
tell the stories in the best way she could. She is also looking forward to the
future and what is to come. “I’m excited, and I just can’t wait to see what the
next step is, and what will happen next. Maybe I’ll try for the New York Emmys,
although those might be tough,” she said.
Eastman
began her career at an ABC affiliate in Iowa after graduating from Emerson
College in 2011. While in college, she had interned for the Boston Herald, and
returned to work for them in 2012. Wanting to get back into television, Eastman
recently moved to Albany, New York, to work for Time Warner Cable News.
Eastman
said she loved growing up in a small town, and she tells everyone she meets
about Raymond. “I absolutely love Maine, and I’m incredibly proud of where I’m
from,” she said.