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A Colorful Conversation Ms. Mitton English
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“Feature stories often focus on issues that are less timely, more personal: trends, relationships, entertainment. “News stories tell you what happened; feature stories offer you advice, explore ideas, make you laugh and cry.” –Tim Harrower
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Writing Style: features incorporate literary writing techniques that were previously seen as too colorful for newspaper writing. Realistic, intriguing quotations Vivid imagery & sensory details – show, don’t tell! Alternative perspectives (told through the eyes of characters in the story) Writing style & voice are valued
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Organizational Structure: features don’t use the inverted pyramid style that news stories utilize. Organizational formats can vary More information on this later in this slideshow Topics Covered: lifestyles, health & fitness, food, culture, entertainment & pop culture, homes & gardens grab bag (you never know what topics might come up!)
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Yes – Review your news values: Novelty Conflict Impact Timeliness Prominence Proximity Think of an example of a feature for each news value with the person next to you. We will share in a few minutes!
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Your reporting methods will be the same: Brainstorming, planning, researching, interviewing, writing, coaching, editing, etc. Features might be stand-alone, or they might be part of a bigger package Could accompany, enhance or complement a news story or package
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Simply put, no. Features can take a variety of structures. The reporter is charged with knowing and choosing which structure will work best. Consider the topic, angle, purpose and package of the story.
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Type of FeatureExample Personality ProfileStockers at the local toy store Human-Interest StoryLast-minute/Christmas Eve shoppers Color StoryThe anticipation of waiting in line BackgrounderThe history & evolution of Black Friday Trend StoryOnline shopping – Cyber Monday Reaction PieceHow people feel about the early store hours FlashbackHow your grandmother used to shop for gifts How-To StoryHow to get the best deals on Black Friday Consumer GuideThe best toy buys for the holidays Personal NarrativeA shopper’s all-nighter experience
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Type of FeatureExample Personality Profile Human-Interest Story Color Story Backgrounder Trend Story Reaction Piece Flashback How-To Story Consumer Guide Personal Narrative
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Good question. We’ll cover three basic organizational structures here: The Wall Street Journal Style (aka the Kabob) Chronological Style Topical Style
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AnecdoteNut GrafMeat Anecdote The Wall Street Journal Formula or the circle Starts specific, gets general, ends where it started
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Written in the order that the events occurred order Clear to write, read The LeadNut Graf Chronology of Events Resonating Quote
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By Topic – Issue/Problem The LeadNut Graf Person 1, Person 2, Person 3 Resonating QuoteThe LeadNut Graf Problem 1, Problem 2, Problem 3 Resonating Quote By Topic – Interview Subject
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Features should end with a powerful, humorous, meaningful or significant quotation There is the expectation that readers will finish the story, not just look for key information at the start Don’t let the ending fizzle, it should pack a punch
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Paint a picture for readers – use imagery, dialogue and details. Stay objective! Show readers what is happening, not what you think about it. Ride the line between showing your voice and being a professional journalist. Be clear, concise and consistently good – you want to build your readership! Aim for 10-15 paragraphs. Remember, paragraphs should only be one to two sentences long.
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Tim Harrower’s Inside Reporting: A Practical Guide to the Craft of Journalism First Edition, 2006
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