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USA46Q

Public Affairs Specialist

Writes stories, takes photographs, and produces video content for Army public affairs. Serves as a reporter and photographer for military media products and coordinates with civilian media organizations.

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Recruiter vs. Reality
What they tell you

You'll be the Army's field journalist — writing stories, photographing operations, and producing content that documents military service for internal and external audiences. The journalism portfolio you build is real and transferable. Newspapers, digital media outlets, and government communications offices hire veterans who can write on deadline under pressure. The Army will also give you access to events and stories that civilian journalists can't reach, which is the part of the pitch that's actually true. Use every assignment to build a deliberate portfolio and your post-service job search will be shorter than most.

What it's actually like

You will be a journalist embedded in a bureaucracy that has complicated feelings about journalism. Your job is to produce content — written stories, photographs, video — for the Army's media channels, installation newspapers, and social media, and occasionally to work with credentialed civilian press. The tension between 'tell the Army's story' and 'tell an accurate story' is something you will navigate throughout your career, and how you navigate it will determine what kind of journalist you become. The genuine opportunities in this MOS are real: you will cover real events, access places civilian journalists don't go, and produce content under conditions that build actual skills. The portfolio challenge is that 'Army public affairs' content reads as institutional communication, and civilian editors want to see reporting that demonstrates journalistic judgment, not just production capacity. The soldiers who do well in civilian media after 46Q are the ones who supplement their Army work with genuine independent journalism — freelance pieces, personal documentary projects, community journalism. Your AP Style training, your access, and your deadline-driven workflow are real assets. The initiative to use them is yours.

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Training Pipeline
1
Basic Combat Training10w
Various
2
AIT — Public Affairs Specialist10w
Fort Meade (MD)
Journalism, photography, video, media relations, social media, command messaging. Produces content for military outlets.
On the Outside

What this actually is in the real world

Your skills translate. Here's what civilian employers call this job — and what they pay.

Public Relations Specialists

Strong match
$67,440$40,730$120,220/yr median
Job market: Average (6%)

Training and Development Specialists

Related field
$63,080$37,850$106,620/yr median
Job market: Faster than average (8%)

Management Analysts

Related field
$99,410$59,980$163,760/yr median
Job market: Faster than average (11%)

Salary data from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics program, retrieved Feb 2026. BLS.gov cannot vouch for the data or analyses derived from these data after the data have been retrieved from BLS.gov.

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