In 2015, the awarded just 11 grants for Innovation in Journalism Education, one of which was given to the at the University of Nevada, Reno. Using these grant funds, the university launched a bilingual journalism project named . The project first aimed to provide 2016 election coverage to English and Spanish speaking residents, an important goal when considering over .

鈥淸The Reynolds School of Journalism] received the grant and started community outreach to start listening to the community, to understand how to build a website that would appeal to them,鈥 said Claudia Cruz, managing editor of Noticiero M贸vil.

While the initial goal of Noticiero M贸vil was to report on the 2016 elections, the project has since branched out to cover other topics like community health, 911 calls for Spanish speakers and Nevada state legislation. Student-produced content is hosted on the Noticiero M贸vil website and is typically available in both Spanish and English.

Noticiero M贸vil 2023 spring student interns, Sophie Mastrangioli and Aaron Pi帽a, set up a Minuto M茅dico video shoot with UNR Medical School Professor and local internist, Mariana Franco M.D., at one of the Reynolds School of Journalism's studios.

Content created through Noticiero M贸vil also appears on the websites of partners like the local NPR affiliate , news source and nonpartisan site . The partnership between KUNR, This is Reno and Noticero M贸vil .

鈥淭he KUNR news editor has been coming into our class and sitting with the students and helping them script and organize their audio pieces,鈥 said Cruz. 

Students can intern with KUNR and The Nevada Independent and often go on to work with those outlets after they graduate. Cruz added that staff members at KUNR are often graduates of Noticiero M贸vil themselves and 鈥渨ant to participate and come back.鈥

鈥淥ur goal is to find stories out in the community and complement [KUNR鈥檚] programming,鈥 said Cruz during a recent Brown Bag presentation with the Center for Community News. 鈥淯p until recently, most of the staff members were not bilingual, but because of Noticero M贸vil in part, half of the reporters are alums of Noticero M贸vil and about 5 or 6 out of 8 staffers are bilingual.鈥

In addition to working for KUNR and The Nevada Independent, students who have contributed to Noticiero M贸vil go on to work at places like and the . One Noticiero M贸vil alumnus, J. Diego Zaraz煤a, now serves as the inaugural Spanish-focused Public Relations Specialist for the City of Reno.

Natalie Van Hoozer, an alumna of Noticiero M贸vil and now a KUNR Bilingual Reporter and Community Engagement Coordinator, stood alongside Maria Palma, then Noticiero M贸vil graduate assistant and now KUNR's underserved communities' reporter, during a tabling event at the Northern Nevada Pride Celebration in 2021

Noticiero M贸vil is offered as a course through the Reynolds School of Journalism, but students can also intern or serve as research assistants for the project. Students in majors other than journalism are often recruited to Noticiero M贸vil by Cruz. These students work on graphic design, public relations, photography and video production. One such student is Ashley Martinez, a public relations major who was going to continue an internship elsewhere but was instead recruited for Noticiero M贸vil.

鈥淚 was going to continue my internship, but something that I hadn't really practiced before was how PR might work in Spanish and English. Really, all my experience for my [previous] internship was English-based public relations and marketing, and I hadn't really explored [the Spanish] side at all,鈥 said Martinez. 鈥淚'm not a Spanish major or anything like that, but it's still a skill on my resume that doesn't really go with any practice. And so I saw that opportunity at the Reynolds School of Journalism.鈥

Martinez is involved in the creation of a new Noticiero M贸vil project called No Me Digas, a gossipy pop culture podcast series that will cover subjects like Bad Bunny. Martinez recently designed and promoted a No Me Digas logo vote on social media and has already filmed two segments for the project.

Ultimately, the No Me Digas podcast hopes to inspire interaction with the local community. According to Cruz, No Me Digas will consist of 10 minute-long videotaped podcasts that are 鈥渕ore relevant to 14 to 30 year olds and probably English-dominant Latinx residents of the community of Northern Nevada.鈥

Other students including Sophie Mastrangioli and Aaron Pi帽a are working on Noticiero M贸vil projects like Minuto M茅dico, a series of one-minute videos in which bilingual medical professionals from the University of Nevada, Reno provide public health information. Noticiero M贸vil will provide the content in both English and Spanish, a feature that is a core principle of the project. Martinez notes the importance of appealing to bilingual community members.

鈥淚 think being able to know who these audiences are and what kinds of things they're interested in, how you engage with them, that's going to serve me really, really well in my future career,鈥 said Martinez. 鈥淚 have to take those audiences into consideration and I have to know how to be able to connect with them. It's not a one size fits all type of messaging.鈥