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Journalism Today! Chapter 10
Writing Feature Stories
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Feature Stories – Humanizing the News
Feature Vs. News Story Lighter More human Usually funnier Usually not related to any current event Usually not written in inverted pyramid Can be about anything, anybody
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Timelessness Most features are evergreens
“News-Feature” – connected to a specific item of current news; often published as color sidebar
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Creative Style Feature writers have more freedom with language! (voice, tone) More opportunity to be creative, clever, colorful with language (not so boring, dry as news stories)
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Creative Style Still – NO opinion or speculation! Fanciness beware!
Writers (esp. beginners) can kill features if too creative – style/voice/cleverness overpowers the content of the feature itself . . .
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Subject Matter No subject matter limit
Can be historical – throw new light on old subject or review a past event Remote places, remarkable or obscure people Can be written in first person (water-skier example) Above all, subject must interest people!
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The Personality Feature
All people are possible subjects for feature stories Incident, idea, problem, thought, opinion, hobby that will make an interesting reading Students or teachers at school and their special accomplishments
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The Personality Feature
Lots of stories include published quotes about principal, superintendent, class president, etc. But Usually no personality feature Most students probably don’t really know anything about these people “Who is this person anyway?” “What does Mella/Reinke do on the weekends?” If you ask enough questions, you’re bound to get something for a feature story THERE IS NO SUBSTITUTE for the hard work of digging for facts!!!
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Finding subjects . . . Gather ideas from your own experiences or the experiences of relatives/close friends – these are the best places to find ideas for features (the human interest elements) Never stop thinking of ideas for features/evergreens!
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