First-year student Cally Gudroe awarded prestigious Guy P. Gannett Journalism Scholarship

Just two months into her first semester at the Īį°®³Ō¹Ļ, Cally Gudroe (Communications and Media Arts, ā28) is already making her mark as a young journalist, having been recognized with one of Maineās most prestigious journalism scholarships.
Gudroe is a 2024 recipient of the Guy P. Gannett Journalism Scholarship from the Maine Community Foundation (MCF). The Gannett Scholarship provides support for students majoring in journalism or a related field and helps pay tuition for undergraduate or graduate studies.
This year, to 21 students from Maine, and Gudroeās selection reflects both her talent and commitment to community-focused storytelling.
Guy P. Gannett, a champion of local journalism, built his career on the belief that small communities deserve compelling news coverage just as much as larger cities. Gudroe embodies that same spirit. In high school, she co-founded her schoolās first-ever newspaper with friends, realizing the importance of sharing stories that might otherwise go untold.
āWe knew our school needed a newspaper, so we went to an administrator and built it together,ā said Gudroe of Dexter, Maine. That early experience cemented her passion for journalism, which was further fueled by a multimedia production class at a local technical school.
And Gudroeās drive hasnāt slowed since arriving at UNE: mere weeks into her college career, she is completing paid work in UNEās Community News Fellows program, where she reports for , an online outlet founded by publisher and storied local reporter Liz Gotthelf to fill the gap in local news coverage in York County.
Gudroe recently published her first article, a piece on .
āCommunity news matters because it focuses on the stories that are local and personal to the people who live there,ā Gudroe said. āLarger outlets sometimes miss these important stories when they prioritize broader topics.ā
Gudroeās journalism pursuits extend beyond the newsroom. She recently participated in a groundbreaking project at UNEās new Norāeaster Production Studio, where she served as an assistant director during an interview with Oscar-nominated filmmaker Rick Goldsmith. The experience was especially meaningful for her, she said, as she worked alongside an all-woman crew.
āBeing in a setting that was not only professional but also welcoming and woman-led felt really empowering,ā she said. āThe journalism field has a history of misogyny, and being part of this experience felt like we were setting a new standard at UNE for what women in journalism can achieve.ā
Gudroe reflected on the foundational experiences that led her to UNE, including her time as a high school tri-varsity athlete, plus her love for history, sports broadcasting, and community reporting.
She said those experiences are shaping her ambitions for the future, which will hopefully include global travel ā in fact, she chose UNE in part for its one-of-a-kind global education experiences, where 32% of undergraduates study abroad for a semester or take a travel course.
āI love Maine; itās home,ā she reflected. āBut I also have a travelerās heart.ā
That said, she remains deeply connected to her home state.
āIāve lived in Maine my whole life, and I love it here,ā Gudroe said. āIād like to explore and see whatās out there, but if my career brings me back to Maine, Iād be happy with that, too.ā