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Make your Life Prime Time

by Maria Celeste Arraras

Find the work you love by María Celeste Arrarás


Read about María Celeste Arrarás’ experience as a member of the Women@NBCU
advisory board and as a woman at NBC Universal in our series where we hear
from employees across the company.

I remember the day Telemundo announced I would be joining the network. It
was the same day the FCC approved NBC Universal’s acquisition of Telemundo.
I always look at that as the best day of my career because of what was to
come. In the seven years that I’ve been with the company, I’ve had more
opportunities than I ever could have imagined — guest-hosting Today,
contributing to NBC’s Dateline and NBC Nightly News, even appearing on NBC’s
soap opera Passions.

Now I have the opportunity to be a part of a new think tank, Women@NBCU.
Advertisers are trying to tap into the fast-growing Hispanic audience,
especially Hispanic women, who are overwhelmingly responsible for making
their family’s purchasing decisions. But they don’t always know the best way
to go about it. That’s why it’s so important to have Telemundo represented.

Interacting with other women at this company is an empowering experience for
me. I’ve learned that when you love what you’re doing and you see that you
have the support of a company that lets you grow, respects your opinion, and
gives you a place of consideration, you can really thrive. I think that
support has prompted me to give above and beyond what is expected.

Along the way there have been situations I have had to confront, both
personally and professionally. Like going through a divorce and figuring out
what is best for your children. I’ve learned how to be successful in my job
without having to sacrifice my relationship with my children, and how
principles and my word are so important in this business. I also realized
that sometimes as young women (and men), we so often pass up career
opportunities because we follow the wishes of others instead of listening to
our own needs. I learned a lot about that from my own mother, who followed
her own mother’s advice instead of paving her own path. I learned from that
and sacrificed many personal situations for a while so that I was able to
achieve my career.

I’ve been lucky and successful as a woman, as a mother, and as a
professional. I think you have to live your life by a certain set of
principles and they have to be your True North. In order to be successful in
every area of your life, you first have to be successful as a human being.
If you’re successful as a human being, you will feel satisfied at the end
with whatever you have and most likely, it will be everything that you dream
of.

"Hispanic Women and Breast Cancer "

by Maria Celeste Arraras


Breast cancer is one of the leading causes of death for Hispanic women. Yet it doesn't seem to face most Hispanic women. Many think "it will not happen to ME." But it does.

I have many dear friends who are cancer survivors and I believe that they're all alive today because they discovered the cancer through a mammography;before it was too late. That's not the case for most Hispanic women.

Studies have shown that 3 out of every 4 Latinas discover they have breast cancer themselves,wether by accidently finding a lump or by finding the lump through a self examination. Sadly, by the time a woman can "feel" a tumor it means that it has grown, that it is in a more advanced stage. That's why mammograms are so vital.

Hispanic women also have such a high mortality rate because,according to research,after finding a lump, many wait AT LEAST a month before seekinghelp. And when you have breast cancer,every day counts. Tumors don't ask for your permission to keep growing. Cancer doesn't need you ok to spread.

Why do Latina women wait so long putting their lives at risk? Mostly because of lack of health insurance but I also believe is because of fear. Fear of what that mammogram will say. Fear that the lump may be a malignous tumor. Thay have the "what you don't know can't hurt you" mentality. But when it comes to breast cancer nothing can be further from the truth.

As part of the research I made for a Today show story about Hispanic women and breast cancer,I visited a Miami clinic with the most advanced technology available. I was shown the xrays of women that had discovered breast cancer through a regular yearly mammogram and the xrays of women that had gotten a mammogram only after discovering a lump. I couldn't believe my eyes. The cancer was noticeably larger in the second group. Machines detect tumors way before we do.

My grandmother died at an old age of breast cancer. Back then there wasn't as much awareness as there is today about the importance of going to the doctor for a yearly exam.

Today I'm lucky to have never lost a friend to breast cancer. My friends and I make it a priority to go get a mammogram once a year. That's how the ones that had cancer were able to catch it time. They survive cancer because were not afraid to discover it. When it comes to breast cancer information is power.
They are my heroes.

5 TIPS TO SUCCEED PROFESIONALLY:

by Maria Celeste Arraras

1-Don't waste your life away gossiping about others-use that time and energy to reach your goals.

2-Never compare yourself to others at work. Concentrate in what you have and where you want to be.

3-Learn everything you can about your field. It will help you be in control of your career.

4-Don't think that there's one and only way to make your dreams come true. Sometimes a side road is the fastest path to reach your goals- so be alert and ready to change course,if needed.

5-Never let your ego make decisions for you. The ego has a distorted sense of reality and it will bring you both personal and professional ruin.

Find the work you love by María Celeste Arrarás

, , , ...

Author: María Celeste Arrarás

Read about María Celeste Arrarás' experience as a member of the Women@NBCU
advisory board and as a woman at NBC Universal in our series where we hear
from employees across the company.

I remember the day Telemundo announced I would be joining the network. It
was the same day the FCC approved NBC Universal's acquisition of Telemundo.
I always look at that as the best day of my career because of what was to
come. In the seven years that I've been with the company, I've had more
opportunities than I ever could have imagined -- guest-hosting Today,
contributing to NBC's Dateline and NBC Nightly News, even appearing on NBC's
soap opera Passions.


Now I have the opportunity to be a part of a new think tank, Women@NBCU.
Advertisers are trying to tap into the fast-growing Hispanic audience,
especially Hispanic women, who are overwhelmingly responsible for making
their family's purchasing decisions. But they don't always know the best way
to go about it. That's why it's so important to have Telemundo represented.

Interacting with other women at this company is an empowering experience for
me. I've learned that when you love what you're doing and you see that you
have the support of a company that lets you grow, respects your opinion, and
gives you a place of consideration, you can really thrive. I think that
support has prompted me to give above and beyond what is expected.

Along the way there have been situations I have had to confront, both
personally and professionally. Like going through a divorce and figuring out
what is best for your children. I've learned how to be successful in my job
without having to sacrifice my relationship with my children, and how
principles and my word are so important in this business.

I also realized that sometimes as young women (and men), we so often pass up career
opportunities because we follow the wishes of others instead of listening to
our own needs.
I learned a lot about that from my own mother, who followed
her own mother's advice instead of paving her own path. I learned from that
and sacrificed many personal situations for a while so that I was able to
achieve my career.

I think you have to live your life by a certain set of
principles and they have to be your True North. In order to be successful in
every area of your life, you first have to be successful as a human being.
If you're successful as a human being, you will feel satisfied at the end
with whatever you have and most likely, it will be everything that you dream
of.



Broadcast journalist

Make Your Life Prime Time: How to Have It All Without Losing Your Soul
by María Celeste Arrarás


Dear Readers:

I was fortunate to grow up in a family with a great passion for excellence. Both my mother and father instilled that in me. They believed that every time you reach a goal you have to raise the bar and go on to the next level. I spent my childhood surrounded by the wonderful academic world because my father was the chancellor of the University of Mayagüez. One time I got a C in school and my father sat me down and said, "In this house, you come in with an A or an F. You have to be either the best of the best or the best of the worst. But never mediocre." And that is one of the most valuable lessons I've ever learned.



After I graduated from college in New Orleans, I went back to Puerto Rico, but at the time there was really no opportunity on the island for new graduates, so I took a job as an advertising copywriter. I figured that advertising deals a lot with the TV industry and that I had a better chance to find an opportunity to make the crossover. And sure enough, that's what happened!



Soon after I began working, I went to an Advertising Awards ceremony where I met an impresario who was about to start a 24-hour news station in Puerto Rico--kind of a CaribbeanCNN. He was looking for hungry and driven young people for on-camera jobs. It was the job I had dreamed about and a great place to learn. This man sent us all over the world to report on every major event at the time. I covered civil wars in Latin America, the Olympics, the presidential elections in the U.S.



After a while I was offered a better-paying job at one of the established local stations. Because it was one of the many that didn't open the door before, I declined. I could have brought up the offer to my boss as a bargaining chip to get a raise, but I didn't. I felt a sense of loyalty. My parents always told me to let my principles guide me.

Eventually my boss heard what I had done and rewarded me by giving me the most coveted assignment at the time-- to cover the beginning of glasnost and perestroika in the Soviet Union. I went to the Soviet Union and came back with a one-hour special that won me the Journalist of the Year award. At the awards ceremony, I met the man who would be named news director of the Univision affiliate in New York three months later. The same week he started, he asked me for a demo tape. That's how I entered the Hispanic television arena.



After a couple of months, a new management cleaned out the staff. The new news director brought a new anchor and new reporters because he wanted his own people. Because of my contract, I had the option to stay as a reporter or cash out and leave. I decided to stay because I knew I could learn from this experienced news director. When I informed him of my decision, he said, "You have two choices. You have a bag of lemons and you'll either get sour or make lemonade." I was so eager for him to trust me and accept me that I went all over New York City until I found a card that had a lemon on the front. I wrote on it, "Let's make lemonade," and I bought him a bag of lemons. It did nothing for him. He would always send his reporters on assignment, not me. He took my office away and sat me in front of a Formica desk looking at a wall.



But finally, I got to do little stories and I put my heart and soul into them. I got noticed by the news director of Univision network. He offered me the job of substitute national anchor and head of the L.A. bureau. A year later the network moved headquarters to Miami and they asked me to come along as the national newscast anchor for the weekend edition. I later became coanchor of "Primer Impacto," an infotainment news magazine with a more flexible format that became the national newscast. The show was a big success, but after almost 10 years, I decided it was time to grow in a different direction, and I joined Telemundo network.



It has been seven years since "Al Rojo Vivo con María Celeste" first aired on Telemundo. As the managing editor of the program, I told everyone from day one that we were going to keep raising the bar while sticking to principles and ethics. And we have. Not long ago, when I had the honor of receiving an Emmy for my career achievements, I dedicated the award to my father. In my acceptance speech, I spoke to him directly and said, "This is definitely an A, Dad."



ALL MY LOVE
November 2009
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