news reporting and writing writing for different media gerry doyle

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News Reporting and Writing Writing for Different Media Gerry Doyle

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News Reporting and Writing Writing for Different Media Gerry Doyle. Writing for different media. “Writing, when properly managed, is but a different name for a conversation.” Laurence Stern, 18 th century clergyman and novelist. Print. Advantages: - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: News Reporting and Writing Writing for Different Media Gerry Doyle

News Reporting and WritingWriting for Different Media

Gerry Doyle

Page 2: News Reporting and Writing Writing for Different Media Gerry Doyle

Writing for different media

“Writing, when properly managed, is but a different name for a conversation.”

Laurence Stern, 18th century clergyman and novelist

Page 3: News Reporting and Writing Writing for Different Media Gerry Doyle

Print

Advantages: Can provide more depth, context and

detail. Readers can process at their own pace.Disadvantages: Space is limited. Emotion can be lost.

Page 4: News Reporting and Writing Writing for Different Media Gerry Doyle

Broadcast

Advantages: Emotional appeal, realism and

immediacy.

Disadvantages: Time limits and depth.

Page 5: News Reporting and Writing Writing for Different Media Gerry Doyle

What the critics say

Broadcast journalism, critics say, treats news as entertainment. It avoids complex issues and sensationalizes conflicts, crimes, car chases.

Print journalism, critics say, isn’t entertaining enough and fails to connect with ordinary people.

Page 6: News Reporting and Writing Writing for Different Media Gerry Doyle

What we do know

Watching or listening to a news broadcast generally requires less intellectual effort than reading a story.

Reading a news story in print is a one-dimensional experience.

Page 7: News Reporting and Writing Writing for Different Media Gerry Doyle

And finally … digital

Advantages: Immediacy like broadcast. Interactivity: can provide additional

information with links, video and audio. Can be both brief AND in-depth.

Page 8: News Reporting and Writing Writing for Different Media Gerry Doyle

Digital

Disadvantages: Technology is changing at a rapid pace:

requires constant learning.

Technology can be seductive – raises genuine quality concerns. You can make your mistakes “disappear.”

Page 9: News Reporting and Writing Writing for Different Media Gerry Doyle

The nature of broadcast

As a rule, most broadcast news stories are brief; stories are measured by time.

A typical TV news story may have just four sentences and last less than a minute.

Broadcast scripts: 150-180 words spoken per minute.

Page 10: News Reporting and Writing Writing for Different Media Gerry Doyle

The nature of broadcast

Broadcast newswriting must be concise, and remain shallow. The writing must be fast-paced, but superficial.

Broadcast news writers must quickly boil ideas down to the most essential thoughts.

Page 11: News Reporting and Writing Writing for Different Media Gerry Doyle

In other words …

“That’s the way it is. … for more information, consult your local newspaper.” ~ Walter Cronkite, late U.S. new broadcaster

Page 12: News Reporting and Writing Writing for Different Media Gerry Doyle

Writing for broadcast

Speaking out loud is not the same as reading: our brains receive the information differently.

Differences in style and syntax.

A story with compelling video or audio is considered more newsworthy than one without it.

Page 13: News Reporting and Writing Writing for Different Media Gerry Doyle

Broadcast guidelines

Don’t write in the inverted pyramid form. Broadcast scripts must finish strong.

Use present tense as often as possible. Wrong: The government said North Korea

was a threat. Correct: The government SAYS North Korea

IS a threat.

Page 14: News Reporting and Writing Writing for Different Media Gerry Doyle

Broadcast guidelines

Use a friendlier, more conversational tone. Write like you’re talking to family & friends.

Keep it short. Simple. Easy to follow. One thought per sentence.

Page 15: News Reporting and Writing Writing for Different Media Gerry Doyle

Broadcast guidelines

Contractions are acceptable, even for hard news stories. (“You’d think that professors would have a clue …”)

Attributions and quotes are treated differently. Psychology differs by medium. Attribution comes first in broadcast.

Page 16: News Reporting and Writing Writing for Different Media Gerry Doyle

Broadcast guidelines

Add phonetic pronunciation wherever possible.

Numbers: Round them off and spell them out. Broadcast: “Eighteen thousand Hong

Kong dollars.” Print and digital: HK$18,000.

Page 17: News Reporting and Writing Writing for Different Media Gerry Doyle

Broadcast guidelines

Use punctuation to help – not hinder – the delivery.

Avoid abbreviations and symbols.And finally … It’s not about you.

Page 18: News Reporting and Writing Writing for Different Media Gerry Doyle

Keep writing concise

For example, consider this passage for print: The Japanese foreign minister today traveled to

Beijing in an effort to repair and, he hopes, improve relations with the Chinese after the Japanese prime minister’s fifth consecutive recent visit to the Yasukuni shrine caused angry outbursts from the many Chinese who recall the history of Japanese atrocities on the mainland during the Sino-Japanese war.

Page 19: News Reporting and Writing Writing for Different Media Gerry Doyle

Keep writing concise

For broadcast, you can tighten to this:

The Japanese foreign minister today traveled to China to repair relations between the two countries. The journey comes after Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi’s fifth visit to the Yasukuni shrine, and more angry outbursts from the Chinese.

Page 20: News Reporting and Writing Writing for Different Media Gerry Doyle

Radio

Radio: “Theatre of the mind.” Radio’s challenge: how to be heard. Radio news writers tools: spoken

words, sounds and the human voice. Keep it simple, think of images.

Page 21: News Reporting and Writing Writing for Different Media Gerry Doyle

Richness of language

The conference hall was without any special decoration, just a large empty space awaiting the delegates. That made their entrance all the more colorful as delegates from the minority regions came in native costumes. The room seemed to glow in a riot of reds and blues and yellows. Long flowing robes, and multi-colored capes and hats. There was almost a festive air to start these serious proceedings. A line of young women carrying large bouquets of flowers kept the celebratory spirit alive and added the rich smell of a spring garden to the chill in the air.

Page 22: News Reporting and Writing Writing for Different Media Gerry Doyle

Radio’s challenge

What are the sources of information?To make your story better than the competition: Watch television for images Make some phone calls – interview!

Page 23: News Reporting and Writing Writing for Different Media Gerry Doyle

Television

Writing has a general structure: An opening scene which may feature the

reporter; A development section where one or more

characters may be introduced; Short selections (sound bites) from

interviews are used to emphasize key points;

A closing narration from the reporter.

Page 24: News Reporting and Writing Writing for Different Media Gerry Doyle

Broadcast: examples

China today launched its first astronaut into space, becoming only the third country in the world to develop its own capacity to explore space with human beings. [27 words, 10 seconds to speak]

Page 25: News Reporting and Writing Writing for Different Media Gerry Doyle

Broadcast: examples

Hurricane Allen is gone with the wind, downgraded to a tropical storm. Its winds greatly reduced, the storm is now moving from the Texas coast toward Mexico. But when Allen swept ashore in Texas from the Gulf, it caused extensive damage, though less than feared.

[45 words, about 18 seconds to speak]

Page 26: News Reporting and Writing Writing for Different Media Gerry Doyle

Broadcast: examples

But what about … Hurricane Allen is gone, now just a tropical

storm. As it moved from the Texas coast to Mexico, Allen left behind extensive damage but much less than originally feared.

[29 words, about 12 seconds to speak

Page 27: News Reporting and Writing Writing for Different Media Gerry Doyle

Beware of traps

Adjectives: They are subjective. (show, don’t tell!) Powerful facts can act as adjectives.

Demonstrations: Get the best possible estimate and

source it.

Page 28: News Reporting and Writing Writing for Different Media Gerry Doyle

Digital

Writing for “scanners”: Write a short summary and then provide

links.

Writing for people who want depth: Documents, transcripts, complete video or

audio of interview. (“Snow Fall”)

Page 29: News Reporting and Writing Writing for Different Media Gerry Doyle

Digital guidelines

One idea per paragraph.

Integrate keywords that “link.”

Writing can be “one on one.”

Page 30: News Reporting and Writing Writing for Different Media Gerry Doyle

Digital guidelines

Create lists with bullet points:Forbes magazine predicted that the five most-visited cities in the world for 2012 would be:

• London• Paris• Bangkok• Singapore• Istanbul

Page 31: News Reporting and Writing Writing for Different Media Gerry Doyle

Online ‘bullets’

Press release text:Nebraska is filled with internationally recognized attractions that draw large crowds of people every year, without fail. In 1996, some of the most popular places were Fort Robinson State Park (355,000 visitors), Scotts Bluff National Monument (132,126 visitors), Arbor Lodge State Historical Park & Museum (100,000), Carhenge (85,598), Stuhr Museum of the Prairie Pioneer (60,002), and Buffalo Bill Range State Historical Park (28,446).

Page 32: News Reporting and Writing Writing for Different Media Gerry Doyle

Online ‘bullets’

Online news story:In 1996, six of the most visited places in Nebraska were:• Fort Robinson State Park• Scotts Bluff National Monument• Arbor Lodge State Historical Park & Museum • Carhenge• Stuhr Museum of the Prairie Pioneer • Buffalo Bill Range State Historical Park

Page 33: News Reporting and Writing Writing for Different Media Gerry Doyle

Carhenge????

Page 34: News Reporting and Writing Writing for Different Media Gerry Doyle

Use, don’t abuse tech

Live-blogging and Twitter are great tools for breaking news.

But no substitute for a proper story or package.

Mobile phone photos & videos can add drama & impact to a story.

But no substitute for quality images

Page 35: News Reporting and Writing Writing for Different Media Gerry Doyle

Use, don’t abuse tech

Accuracy and verification remain the most important values.

Delivering the news quickly is every journalist’s goal.

But explaining what the news means is every journalist’s job.

Page 36: News Reporting and Writing Writing for Different Media Gerry Doyle

Exploiting each medium

Does the story have compelling video? Use video

Strong emotion? Use audio of dramatic/emotional interviews

Lots of complexity? Use text to explain and links for

background

Page 37: News Reporting and Writing Writing for Different Media Gerry Doyle

Think multiple platforms

Stories come alive with voices from characters.

Quotes for print Photos (slideshows) for online Audio for online / radio Video for online / broadcast

Page 38: News Reporting and Writing Writing for Different Media Gerry Doyle

Want to learn more?

Suggested reading: Chapter 10 of “English-Language News Writing,” Pages 235-267