Multimedia for sure, especially if any of it focuses on design or advertising. I went to college for journalism with a focus in video production and design, and those skills are very valuable for marketing positions, which is what I currently work in. I also learned a ton about editorial work, which I eventually really fell in love with during college. Turns out, if you write enough, you get good at figuring out what works and what doesn't in writing, which EVERY company needs in QA positions. We were told that 90% of people who get a degree in journalism will end up working in advertising, and that's been true in my personal experience, not just for me but all of my friends too.
If you want to go in to video or creative storytelling, you better already be making videos a ton to build a portfolio. Going on a trip? Bring a camera and make a story from it. If you start building a portfolio of projects now, it's only going to be easier for you in the future. Even with 10 years of experience, I've had almost no luck getting jobs in video production or video journalism. Every company wants someone who can do everything, for very little pay, and putting a ton of energy into multimedia instead of also building out writing and reporting skills basically means that the only route for a career there is to start your own company. I've done that, but it's slow going and nobody wants to pay what video work actually costs if you don't already have an established name in your area.
Anyway, every company wants the skills that you're going to develop if you're going into journalism, especially video, design, and the social work that comes with reporting, you just have a slim chance of working in a field that's considered "journalism" unless you're willing to move somewhere else. All my friends who actually got jobs in the field ended up moving into the middle of nowhere, because local papers are the only ones that still hire, and those jobs are very, very hard to keep for a long time.