It鈥檚 the kind of singular achievement that changes everything.

Senior Nickesha Johnson鈥攁 mother of two and a double major in broadcast journalism and psychology with a minor in human resources management鈥攚as thinking she鈥檇 end up on a practical career path, working in HR for some company somewhere.

Michael Gomez 鈥13, a former broadcast journalism major, was working full time for a non-profit that helps the homeless and was worried about how he would break into his field, partly because he had no internships under his belt.

Anthony Tart 鈥13, a freelance videographer for local news channel NY1, wasn鈥檛 sure if he would fulfill his dream of becoming a sports cameraman.

Now that all three of their names shall henceforth be preceded by the words “Emmy-winning producer,” their phones鈥揳nd e-mail accounts, text message caches, Facebook pages and various other media鈥攁re on fire with offers of congratulations, invitations to swanky parties and other networking opportunities, and potential job offers.

“The Emmy really does change everything,” says Tart, who along with Gomez and Johnson, took home the prize for best broadcast at the 35th College Television Awards, presented in April by the Television Academy, which produces the Primetime Emmy Awards.

Fresh off that win, for which the trio flew out to the Los Angeles red-carpet ceremony, they found out that another production from their Summer Broadcast News Institute (a capstone course for broadcast majors) won the Society of Professional Journalists鈥 Mark of Excellence Award for the regional competition in the category of Best All-Around Television Newscast. (Another alumnus, Russel Midori 鈥13, won in the category of best television feature.)

Barbara Nevins Taylor, their beaming professor from the Department of Television and Radio who has some 22 Emmys of her own, said the pair of awards confirm what the college teaches: 鈥淵ou can achieve success through hard work, focus, and the pursuit of excellence,” she says. “Winning doesn鈥檛 stop here.鈥

She says she encourages all of her students to apply for big awards because it鈥檚 important for them to see how they measure up against their peers. Taylor, in fact, pushed the students to redo portions of their winning broadcast, leaving them burning the midnight oil in editing booths so they could finish on time.

“She鈥檚 a relentless perfectionist,” says Johnson of her professor. “She will come down on you pretty hard when you get it wrong but when you get it right, she鈥檚 really excited. Her tactic worked in our favor.”

The three point out that their winning broadcast was a collaborative effort, with contributions from many people, including the other students in the class who reported segments, graduate teaching assistants who did the camera work, and another graduate student in the Compositional Studies Program who scored original music for the project.

“Adding this to my resume gives me a lot more confidence in applying for journalism jobs,” says Johnson.

Tart, who has interned at the Wendy Williams Show and for Sportsnet New York, says he鈥檚 excited about what鈥檚 to come. “I鈥檝e had some really good opportunities but winning an Emmy gives me a big lift.”

Gomez doesn鈥檛 want to count his eggs before they hatch but he says some possible job opportunities have taken greater shape since the win. He says he wants to ultimately be a producer on a television show.

“I鈥檓 not sure what exactly my future holds but it feels brighter now,” he says.