Bloomberg Industry Group announced Tuesday that it will have nine summer interns in its newsroom.
“We’ve assembled an accomplished class of aspiring journalists to join our growing newsroom this summer, from schools all across the country,” said editor in chief Cesca Antonelli in a statement.
Bloomberg Industry Group’s 2025 News interns are:
Benjamin Hernandez is a junior at Yale studying history. He interned with the investigative unit at CBS News New York and reported on the Office of the President for the Yale Daily News. He has also studied finance and economic inequality at the London School of Economics.
Phineas “Finn” Hogan is a junior at Arizona State, where he’s studying journalism and mass communication with a minor in economics. He’s a congressional correspondent with Cronkite News, an affiliate of Arizona PBS, and a contributor to the International Center for Journalists’ Disarming Disinformation project. Finn’s investigation into the CHIPS and Science Act, which made national news, led the federal government to finalize subsidy deals after the election.
Elleiana Green, a junior at Northwestern, is a pre-law student studying journalism and political science. Green was a New York-based digital politics intern with NBC Universal and covered Capitol Hill as a political reporter for Medill News Service. She leads a team of five writers producing weekly briefs on court rulings and legislation for Northwestern’s Black Pre-Law Association.
Quincy Marks is a University of North Carolina senior studying media and journalism, with a concentration in visual storytelling and a minor in public policy. She will be an intern on the video team. As a Wall Street Journal intern last year, Marks produced an election coverage video that amassed more than 2 million views.
Alexia Massoud is a junior at George Washington, where her double major is journalism/mass communications and international affairs with a concentration in international politics. She’s been a metro reporter at the GW Hatchet; an editor and author at The Globe, GW’s Undergraduate Research Journal in International Affairs; a news intern at The Brazilian Report, in Sao Paulo; and a contributing author at Planet Forward, a project of GW’s School of Media and Public Affairs.
Taylor Nichols is a University of Maryland grad student studying data journalism. Nichols is an investigative fellow with the Howard Center for Investigative Journalism, where she’s worked on data-driven investigations into privately funded congressional travel and the transportation of hazardous materials across the country. Her work has been published by Politico, The Baltimore Sun, and WAMU, Washington’s local NPR station.
George “Cole” Reynolds is also a junior at Northwestern, where he’s studying journalism and anthropology. Reynolds was part of the Daily Northwestern investigative team that revealed extensive hazing within the university’s football team. The investigation became a national news story and led to the football coach’s firing and the introduction of state legislation aimed at addressing college hazing.
Elias Schisgall is a senior in social studies at Harvard. He worked as a staff reporter, newsletters editor, and associate managing editor of the Harvard Crimson and is set to graduate in May. Schisgall was also a summer reporting fellow at The Provincetown Independent, where among his features was a history of the Ku Klux Klan on Cape Cod.
Abigail “Abby” Turner is a senior at American, studying journalism and political science. She’s editor-in-chief of AU’s student newspaper, The Eagle, where she’s also been news managing editor, investigations and data editor, and held several reporting positions. She’s also interned at the National Journal and CNN Politics.