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Published byLeslie Clare Porter Modified over 6 years ago
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Profiles
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Profiles An entertaining, informative piece on a person (or occasionally a group) Depends on how well you can coax the subject into revealing details of their private life Also should talk with their friends, colleagues, relatives, critics
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Profiles Get them to tell lots of stories (anecdotes)
The anecdotes make the reader relate to subject Have strong opening and closing
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Mas about features Focus structure/the Wall Street Journal approach
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Mas about features Focus structure/the Wall Street Journal approach
By focusing on one individual, it makes complex issues and numbers meaningful
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“A single death is a tragedy. A million deaths is a statistic.”
Joseph Stalin
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How it looks Focus on individual > transition to larger issue > report on larger issue > return to opening focus
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Even more about features
Add foreshadowing
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Even more about features
Add foreshadowing Goal is to ensure readers continue reading
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Even more about features
Add foreshadowing Goal is to ensure readers continue reading Can be done in a single sentence or developed during several grafs
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Bret Hostetler, a 16-year old aspiring actor from Sarasota, knew if he aced the audition, his life would never be the same Like millions of teenagers, Hostetler wants to find success in Hollywood and beyond. According to the Screen Actors Guild…
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Yes, there’s more! Add the “so-what”
Tell the readers why they should care that about the individual you’re focusing on
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Yes, there’s more! Add the “so-what”
Tell the readers why they should care that about the individual you’re focusing on This is the “Impact” from ICNPPIE
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Yes, there’s more So if doing a story about migraine headaches: lede with individual’s struggle > foreshadow something in their life that’s changed > talk about how many people have migraines in America > talk about how much this costs America > finish with individual’s problem you foreshadowed (for example: yes, they had to quit their job)
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13 weeks of journalism: a review
Why study journalism?
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13 weeks of journalism: a review
First Amendment Most/least media free nations History of journalism… starting with Luke and through to today’s on-line world
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13 weeks of journalism: a review
What is news? Know your audience I Can Never Prepare Pancakes In England Never be dull Accuracy/fairness/objectivity
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13 weeks of journalism: a review
Interviewing Starts with great notes Notebook/recorder/computer Preparation During interview On the record/off the record/on background
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13 weeks of journalism: a review
Types of interviews Use of quotes Attribution
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13 weeks of journalism: a review
Inverted pyramid journalism Five Ws (and an H)
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13 weeks of journalism: a review
Ledes
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Writing great ledes Collect all your facts Sum it up, boil it down
Prioritize the five Ws (and an H) Rethink, revise, rewrite Is it clear? Is it active? Is it wordy? Is it compelling? Is it news??????
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13 weeks of journalism: a review
Other types of ledes
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13 weeks of journalism: a review
After the lede Briefs Brites Nut graf Story structure: Martini glass, Kabob, WSJ Features and profiles
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Assignment 11/19 Pages 18-27 Would it be a nice day for a quiz?
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