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In-depth reporting in-depth reporting – reporting that uses extensive research and interviews to provide a detailed account of a significant story. In-depth stories require extensive research, many interviews and dozens of sources.
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Watergate – The term applied to the whole series of events that developed from the break-in at the Democratic Party headquarters at the Washington apartment complex.
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news brief format – a condensation of a lengthy story into a sentence or two (usually used to summarize routine stories when space is needed.)
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investigative reporting –
a type of in-depth reporting that seeks to uncover and expose something hidden. In many cases, what is revealed is illegal activity or information that has been purposefully kept from public.
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nut graph – a paragraph within the introduction to a story that foreshadows the rest of the story; a sort of internal lead.
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Emphasizing in-depth reporting means BETTER REPORTING.
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To stress the significance of an in-depth story to your readers, incorporate a LOCAL ANGLE!
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When writing longer pieces, you need to stop thinking of leads and start thinking of INTRODUCTIONS.
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In-depth stories need endings – they can’t just stop.
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The essential elements of thorough, in-depth reporting:
Research Organization Time Good writing
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In-depth journalism both GRABS YOUR ATTENTION
And STIMULATES YOUR THINKING
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In-depth expands your deadline coverage to take A LONGER, MORE COMPREHENSIVE LOOK AT TOPICS IN THE NEWS.
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Five factors necessary for in-depth reporting:
1. SPACE 2. DEADLINE 3. RESEARCH 4. STAFF 5. PLANNING
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Differences between a “research paper” and an in-depth journalism story:
1. TOPIC CHOICE IS BASED ON READERS’ INTERESTS, NOT YOUR OWN PERSONAL INTEREST. 2. RESEARCH FOCUSES FAR MORE ON INTERVIEW EXPERTISE THAN ON LIBRARY SOURCES.
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3. WRITING STYLE IS JOURNALISTIC.
4. PRESENTATION IS MORE THAN WORDS ON A PAGE; GRAPHICS, SIDEBARS, ETC. ARE PART OF AN IN-DEPTH COVERAGE.
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news peg -- news event from which stories grow that do not focus on the breaking news.
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Three options for presenting an in-depth story:
1. Run it as one long story. 2. Divide the story into a series published over several editions of the paper. 3. Package the in-depth into a spread -- several stories on two or more pages of the same issue.
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Types of in-depth stories:
1. Investigative story -- Reporting that reveals a problem of a legal or ethical nature that in the journalist’s judgment, the public needs to know about.
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2. Trend story -- Story that reports on the details that support a perceived change in newsworthy social behavior.
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3. Interpretive or analytical story -- Process of examining a news-related topic by breaking it into parts and looking at them closely; story that tries to explain the meaning of the news as well as report the event itself.
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