Current location - Plastic Surgery and Aesthetics Network - Wedding supplies - Is it really hard to find a job as a broadcast host?
Is it really hard to find a job as a broadcast host?
Whether you can find a job depends first on how your major is and how your other abilities are, which has little to do with your major. I have too many classmates who, for various reasons, don't want to work in broadcasting and hosting after graduation. Some went to the advertising industry, some went to the real estate industry, some went to state-owned enterprises, and some went to museums and art galleries as commentators. Employment is a process of re-learning, but many of them have done well in their jobs by virtue of their advantages in broadcasting professional expression.

Let's take another look. Broadcasting is a major. Radio and television hosts, wedding hosts, dubbing (especially commercial dubbing, excluding film and television dubbing), many people in every industry are doing it, but not many of them are doing it well, so if you learn your major well, you can't find a job in any industry. Nowadays, network dubbing is so developed that many people, who have never learned broadcasting, rely on self-study and groping to support their families and even earn hundreds of thousands a year. Of course, there is still a way to go from network dubbing to high-end dubbing, and more needs to be paid.