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Despite challenges, Vermont State University student Alek Wolfe keeps his ears on the prize

In 2018, Bellows Free Academy-St. Albans student Alek Wolfe was sitting next to award-winning sports announcer George Commo in the press box of the Collins-Perley Arena in St. Albans. Alek was there to provide commentary for a women鈥檚 high-school hockey game against Rutland. 鈥淚 was in the middle of putting in a stat, and then I heard the crowd ramp up. St. Albans scored, and I called the goal. It was exhilarating,鈥 Alek recalls.
It would be exhilarating for any aspiring broadcaster, but especially so for Alek, who is legally blind. He was diagnosed as an infant with retinopathy of prematurity, a condition that affects some babies who are born before the blood vessels of the retina have fully developed. In Russia, where Alek was born and lived in an orphanage until age 6, medical treatment wasn鈥檛 offered early enough, and today, at age 24, he can only see light or dark.
鈥淲hen I鈥檓 walking outside, I can tell where the sun is, so I use that as a compass,鈥 Alek explains. And when he鈥檚 broadcasting a hockey game, he does it all by sound 鈥 and by putting in a lot of prep time before the puck drops.
鈥淎s far as broadcasting, I have to do a lot more work,鈥 he says. He mostly does color commentary, where he peppers a colleague鈥檚 play-by-play with facts and statistics. 鈥淪o I do a lot of research, and I talk to coaches and players before the game. During the game, I know which sides the teams are on. So if the puck is on the right side of the rink, our team has it. If the puck is on the left, it鈥檚 the other team. And I feed off the crowd. If I catch something, I鈥檒l call it,鈥 he says, adding that he鈥檚 called several plays in real time since that seminal BFA Comets hockey game.
Tuning in to a drive to be on radio
Alek moved to Vermont from Pennsylvania with his adoptive family in 2009, when he was in the third grade, and he completed middle and high school in St. Albans. He says his interest in broadcasting really started to take off when he was at BFA, when he started building a portfolio.
鈥淚 had a small, handheld digital recorder, and I brought that recorder everywhere with me. Hockey games, concerts, you name it,鈥 Alek recalls. He started announcing local basketball games in 2014. In the summer of 2016, after meeting Commo and giving him some work samples, he was invited to join him in the announcing booth for a Vermont Lake Monsters game. 鈥淭he night of the game, I thought I was only going on for an inning or two. I get up there, and then George says, 鈥業 hope you鈥檝e done your homework, because you鈥檒l be here for the whole broadcast.鈥欌
Alek says that night was a turning point, both for him and for his mom, who had been skeptical of his interest. 鈥淚 think that night, she started to understand that I was really serious, and that I wasn鈥檛 joking about this whole radio thing,鈥 he recalls.
But even as he prepares to graduate from Vermont State University 鈥 Lyndon in May with an associate鈥檚 degree in broadcasting, Alek says his mom is still a bit wary, understandably concerned about how her son will fare in a career designed for sighted people.
鈥淲ith my being blind, I think she鈥檚 just nervous about failure,鈥 he says. But, says Alek, 鈥渢he reality of life is that we all have to fail in order to succeed. I just have this drive to be in radio.鈥
When it came to pursuing his dream career, Alek sought out opportunities for job shadows and asked advice from professionals in the business.
When it came to navigating a sighted world, both as a student and as an audio producer, technology became his savior.
In high school, Alek lugged a heavy braille machine and had to rely on a paraeducator to transcribe his assignments. Now, he uses a laptop with a Braille display and a screen reader 鈥 which works for school assignments, but not so much for broadcasting. 鈥淲hen you鈥檙e on the radio, no one wants to hear 鈥榰p arrow, down arrow,鈥欌 Alek says with a laugh. So he found a phone app called Be My Eyes to read his sound board. Every day, Alek says, he鈥檚 figuring out new ways to work better and faster.
And when it came to college, Alek says, 鈥溨泄翰释 has helped me tremendously. That鈥檚 an understatement.鈥
Alek鈥檚 older siblings didn鈥檛 go to college, and his parents鈥 experience with higher education was technical school, where his mom received her training for her career in nursing.
So when Alek had questions, he reached out to Marti Kingsley, who was his 中国竞彩网 Outreach counselor.
鈥淚 first connected with Marti to talk about loans,鈥 Alek recalls. 鈥淪he spent an hour or two with me just talking through all of my options.鈥 This year, he turned to Marti again when something on his bill didn鈥檛 seem right. 鈥淚 asked Marti if she could look into it, and the following day, we had it all straightened out. When I go to her, I know something good鈥檚 going to come out of it.鈥
Alek鈥檚 drive, talent, ingenuity and hard work have already brought him a lot of success. He started his own internet radio station, called The Wolfe Den Network, in 2020, and he runs a popular alternative-music podcast, called 鈥淏ants and Bands,鈥 with fellow Vermont State University student Emily Beckett. While Alek and Emily didn鈥檛 know each other well at the start, their collaboration kicked off with an easy rapport and turned into a solid friendship. 鈥淥ur topics are bullet points, and none of it is scripted. We have over 60 episodes at this point,鈥 says Alek, who says he鈥檚 actually heard his own voice around campus from the phones of passers-by. 鈥淭he podcast has taken off in ways I never could have imagined.鈥
As for next steps, Alek plans to keep building The Wolfe Den Network. 鈥淚 hope to make a business out of it, and to offer another radio station here in Vermont. We don鈥檛 have enough local stations,鈥 he says.
Pursuing his dream with a realistic view
While Alek is determined in pursuit of his dream, he is also a realist in an evolving media economy that hasn鈥檛 been kind to radio. So, over the last few years, he鈥檚 diversified his offerings and his options.
鈥淚鈥檝e always loved music, so during the pandemic, I started collecting DJ鈥檌ng equipment, and I鈥檝e also started producing for some local artists on music streaming platforms,鈥 he says. 鈥淭he truth is that radio doesn鈥檛 pay a lot, so I know I鈥檒l need some other things to keep me going.鈥
Those other gigs have started taking off alongside his broadcasting career. Last year, Alek DJ鈥檇 an event for 150 people at the Middlebury Theater, and he鈥檚 currently making vinyls and selling online merch for a local musician.
鈥淚t鈥檒l be really cool to hold one of those vinyls in my hand and say, 鈥業 did this,鈥欌 Alek says. 鈥淚鈥檓 excited to see where I鈥檓 going.鈥