1 00:00:06,074 --> 00:00:08,685 The voice is calm and confident. 2 00:00:10,808 --> 00:00:14,227 But what Triple J listeners across the country don't know 3 00:00:14,820 --> 00:00:19,456 Is that this newsreader can't see one word of the script she's delivering. 4 00:00:19,456 --> 00:00:26,455 Twenty four year old Nas Campanella is blind. 5 00:00:26,455 --> 00:00:28,998 Not only that, she can't read Braille. 6 00:00:28,998 --> 00:00:35,913 So Nas Campanella presents 3 minute news bulletins on the hour by listening to an audio translation of copy 7 00:00:35,913 --> 00:00:37,920 through her headphones 8 00:00:37,920 --> 00:00:40,800 [Screen reader] The New South Wales policeman who blew the whistle.. 9 00:00:40,800 --> 00:00:42,761 and then repeating what she hears.. 10 00:00:42,761 --> 00:00:47,549 "Senior New South Wales policeman who blew the whistle on allegations of a coverup of 11 00:00:47,549 --> 00:00:54,522 "child sexual abuse has admitted he lied to colleagues because he was suspicious of their motives." 12 00:00:54,522 --> 00:00:57,159 I am reading about a second or two behind. 13 00:00:57,159 --> 00:01:03,299 It's hard because the speech program has an American accent 14 00:01:03,299 --> 00:01:07,161 and it's a sort of computerised voice 15 00:01:07,161 --> 00:01:09,464 so there's that to contend with 16 00:01:09,464 --> 00:01:13,758 and it pronounces things, sort of incorrectly most of the time. 17 00:01:13,758 --> 00:01:17,529 She doesn't just present the bulletins but produces them as well. 18 00:01:17,529 --> 00:01:21,600 Operating the panel with the help of strategically placed velcro dots 19 00:01:21,600 --> 00:01:25,162 while listening to four different streams of audio. 20 00:01:25,162 --> 00:01:29,599 In the headphones I can hear myself. 21 00:01:29,599 --> 00:01:33,999 I can hear the speech program telling me what to say. 22 00:01:33,999 --> 00:01:43,240 I can hear the audio grab that I have to play on air. 23 00:01:43,240 --> 00:01:51,632 and then on top of that I can hear a clock telling me how much time I've got left to go 24 00:01:51,632 --> 00:01:55,440 It's fine usually during bulletin but at the end of the day 25 00:01:55,440 --> 00:01:58,546 after reading five or six bulletins in a row 26 00:01:58,546 --> 00:02:04,465 my ears are a bit kind of sore and it's all a bit much, so. 27 00:02:04,465 --> 00:02:06,633 What about you're brain? 28 00:02:06,633 --> 00:02:08,880 No the brain learns to deal with it. 29 00:02:08,880 --> 00:02:11,047 Well I think it's quite remarkable 30 00:02:11,047 --> 00:02:14,359 Heather Forbes is responsible for hiring and training 31 00:02:14,359 --> 00:02:16,600 ABC cadet journalists. 32 00:02:16,600 --> 00:02:21,320 Her brain can process that information in a nanosecond 33 00:02:21,320 --> 00:02:25,361 and if a sighted person tries to do it 34 00:02:25,361 --> 00:02:29,381 you just cant. I don't know how she does it because I've tried it myself 35 00:02:29,381 --> 00:02:31,842 and I just couldn't do it. 36 00:02:31,842 --> 00:02:35,001 Nas Campanella lost her sight at 6 months of age 37 00:02:35,001 --> 00:02:39,049 when blood vessels burst at the back of her eyes, damaging the retinas. 38 00:02:39,049 --> 00:02:43,520 It was due to a genetic condition that also affected her younger brother 39 00:02:43,520 --> 00:02:46,762 Ben, but his sight was salvaged thanks to laser surgery 40 00:02:46,762 --> 00:02:49,630 which wasn't available to Nas. 41 00:02:49,630 --> 00:02:51,381 I think it's been a little bit traumatic 42 00:02:51,381 --> 00:02:53,382 for Mum and Dad, especially early on because, 43 00:02:53,382 --> 00:02:56,884 I guess they never really met someone with a vision impairment. 44 00:02:56,884 --> 00:03:01,320 Had no idea about what I'd be capable of doing. 45 00:03:01,320 --> 00:03:07,842 Or what services were out there in order to get me through life 46 00:03:07,842 --> 00:03:11,080 but they've always been really supportive. They've never wrapped me up in cotton wool. 47 00:03:11,080 --> 00:03:15,050 I've always had to do everything like, you know my brother or my cousins 48 00:03:15,050 --> 00:03:19,522 Work experience in community radio sparked a passion for broadcasting. 49 00:03:19,522 --> 00:03:23,382 and Nas Campanella went on to graduate with a journalism degree 50 00:03:23,382 --> 00:03:26,599 from the University of Technology in Sydney. 51 00:03:26,599 --> 00:03:31,678 It was difficult to find a job, any job, at all. 52 00:03:31,678 --> 00:03:37,982 Because you know, I looked good on paper in terms of all the voluntary experience I had in the industry 53 00:03:37,982 --> 00:03:42,848 and my resume looked great, the samples of work I had looked great. 54 00:03:42,848 --> 00:03:47,606 But it wasn't until I got to the interview stage when they found out I had a vision impairment 55 00:03:47,606 --> 00:03:52,549 it was like, all of a sudden, they just changed their attitude. 56 00:03:52,549 --> 00:03:55,921 It was a big no basically. 57 00:03:55,921 --> 00:03:57,963 And it was pretty heartbreaking. 58 00:03:57,963 --> 00:04:03,466 In 2011 her luck changed and she beat a field of 700 applicants to win one of 59 00:04:03,466 --> 00:04:07,161 ten cadetships on offer at the ABC. 60 00:04:07,161 --> 00:04:12,300 She had determination and she doesn't take no for an answer. 61 00:04:12,300 --> 00:04:16,881 and she's got curiosity 62 00:04:16,881 --> 00:04:20,078 She can write very well, she's got a beautiful voice 63 00:04:20,078 --> 00:04:22,681 beautiful brodcast voice 64 00:04:22,681 --> 00:04:31,715 and in the end I said to myself "If I was her and I didn't have sight and I wanted to be 65 00:04:31,715 --> 00:04:38,778 a journalist I'd want the cadetship." So there was absolutely no reason to not give her the cadetship. 66 00:04:38,778 --> 00:04:44,078 How did you feel when you got the phone call to tell you had been given a cadetship? 67 00:04:44,078 --> 00:04:49,631 There were tears. Pretty happy. 68 00:04:49,631 --> 00:04:54,198 They were willing to take a chance I guess when no one else was 69 00:04:54,198 --> 00:05:00,206 and they've done everything they possibly could to make it 70 00:05:00,206 --> 00:05:06,919 work and I couldn't have asked for anything more 71 00:05:06,919 --> 00:05:11,383 During her cadetship, Nas Campanella reported in the field, 72 00:05:11,383 --> 00:05:17,037 became proficient at court reporting and spent a year, like all ABC cadets, working in a regional 73 00:05:17,037 --> 00:05:20,771 newsroom, Bega, New South Wales. 74 00:05:20,771 --> 00:05:24,881 Nas Campanella is the first ABC cadet journalist who is blind 75 00:05:24,881 --> 00:05:28,931 and she's breaking new ground in the way she delivers the news. 76 00:05:28,931 --> 00:05:33,297 I just think it's fantastic and I think, you know, she's a great 77 00:05:33,297 --> 00:05:39,001 role model for anyone else out there who wants to be a journalist and 78 00:05:39,001 --> 00:05:43,480 hasn't got their sight. 79 00:05:43,480 --> 00:05:49,600 But Nas Campanella isn't trying to a role model, just the best journalist she can be. 80 00:05:49,600 --> 00:05:55,718 I just like it. At the end of the day I go home and I feel good about my job and I look forward to it the next day. 81 00:05:56,369 --> 00:06:02,707 It's a dream come true really