Our Stories
Toward Infinite possibility
December 16, 2024
Share:
How a KU JMC School mentor helped NFL Sideline Reporter Laura Okmin chase her dreams
Emily Becker
Senior Digital Media Strategist | KU Endowment

 What first drew Laura Okmin to the University of Kansas was the William Allen White School of Journalism and Mass Communications. What became clear when she arrived in Lawrence was that it wasn’t only the prestige of the school but the campus environment that made KU the perfect place for the now over 30-year veteran NFL sideline reporter.  

Okim remembers everything clicking. The building felt right. The campus felt right. The people she was meeting felt right. “It was the J School that got me there and it was the campus that kept me there,” she said.  

At a time when there were few – if any – women in sports media, the faculty she had while a KU student never told her anything but “go follow your dreams.”  

“I think if I had had an advisor who told me, that’s really hard; I don’t think you should do it, I don’t think I had enough confidence back then to say ‘don’t listen to that,” said Okmin. “[Professor Max [Utsler] was wonderful about telling me how hard that was going to be but making that a challenge instead of a roadblock.” 

Now, as the third longest-tenured sideline reporter in NFL history, Okmin is passionate about supporting other women who want to go into sports journalism through her organization, GALvanize. 

“Mentorship means everything to me at this stage of life I’m in,” she said. “And I’m so fortunate that I got to see what that looked like while I was at KU.” 

Supporting faculty and staff who are preparing graduates for a world beyond KU is one of the JMC School’s priorities in the Onward campus fundraising campaign. Learn more about Onward and make a gift to the William Allen White School of Journalism and Mass Communications. 

MORE STORIES

Brian and Beth Ellyn McClendon make $4 million gift to KU Engineering to boost recruitment and retention
The University of Kansas has always meant “home” to Brian McClendon. Now he and his wife, Beth Ellyn, have made a $4 million gift to his alma mater to support professorships and a program that helps ensure collegiate preparedness and success for aspiring Jayhawk engineers.
Wagstaff & Cartmell funds million-dollar scholarship at the University of Kansas School of Law
The University of Kansas School of Law announced that the Kansas City–based law firm Wagstaff & Cartmell has made a $1 million gift to its existing Wagstaff & Cartmell Scholarship Fund. The additional funding will continue to support outstanding law students who demonstrate academic excellence, leadership potential and a commitment to advancing the practice of law.
KU Athletics receives historic $300 million gift from longtime donor and alumnus David Booth 
Longtime donor, investing pioneer and KU alumnus provides fuel for Gateway District’s Phase II and ignites next era of excellence across KU Athletics programs in perpetuity