1 / 17

Today

Today. Storytelling Exercise Let’s see the WP sites! Lecture on service/inverted pyramid/writing dialogue Discuss stories/Peer edits Marty Marko exercise (maybe). Class in 2 weeks. Write a 200 word bio. Post with a photo of yourself. Include two links. Investigative/Service story due!

makana
Download Presentation

Today

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Today • Storytelling Exercise • Let’s see the WP sites! • Lecture on service/inverted pyramid/writing dialogue • Discuss stories/Peer edits • Marty Marko exercise (maybe)

  2. Class in 2 weeks • Write a 200 word bio. Post with a photo of yourself. Include two links. • Investigative/Service story due! • Read 5 NYT stories. • Email me your WP site.

  3. Investigative Story: due next class • Between 600 and 1000 words. • Format is up to you and may be a combo news/list (but doesn’t have to be). • Must include art or multimedia • Must have a source list with names, titles and contact info. • Needs at least 3 sources. • Must have 5 hyperlinks, 3 tags, SEO headline • Watch out for bias!!!!!

  4. One quick interview tip! • Consider using a combination of open and close ended questions. • Closed ended: Do you like the proposal? • Open ended: What are the strengths of the proposal?

  5. Story Format • You’ve collected your data, now what? • Lots of ways to tell a story • Recommend an inverted pyramid style coupled with a service sidebar. • Service sidebar could be a Q&A or a list with subheads.

  6. Service Sidebar • Your story should include information your reader may find useful. • This is sometimes called service journalism. • Service journalism is action journalism. It should move your readers to do something with the information

  7. Story format • Inverted pyramid puts all the most important info at the top. • Who what where when where why how? • Maybe also: So what? And What’s next?

  8. First, write your lede. The lede is important because it helps people decide if they’re going to keep reading. • Your lede tells people what the story is about. • (Always attribute opinion.)

  9. After the lede • Follow the lede with information you weren’t able to include. • Weave in your quotes and additional details.

  10. Does your story begin with a solid straight news lead, one that meets all five of our criteria? • Is the story free of unattributed opinion? • Are the paragraphs arranged by order of importance? With background material generally relegated to the bottom? • Are there adequate quotes? from clearly identified sources? Punctuated properly? • Do the transitions work between each paragraph?

  11. Inverted Pyramid • The most important (and most recent) information goes on top. • Progressing through the story, the information gets less important and older. • Sprinkle in a key quotations from your sources. • Most important info, supporting info, background info.

  12. Example • http://www.nytimes.com/2013/02/12/world/europe/pope-benedict-xvi-says-he-will-retire.html?hp&_r=0&pagewanted=print

  13. Writing Dialogue • Each speaker gets his or her own paragraph; a return and indent. This mimics real conversation, indicating pauses and so forth. • Attributions (“He said, “She said” and variations) should be used, but not too much • They can be used at the start of quotes, in the middle, or at the end. When attributions are overused, they get in the way; the key is that the reader should always know who’s speaking. • For interior dialogue, use italics.

  14. When I was eight, my father dragged me into my bedroom after I lit a folded pile of his shirts on fire. I sat on the edge of the bed, not looking up, my hands folded mannerly in my lap.            “What’s wrong with you?” he asked.            “Nothing,” I said.            “You lit my shirts on fire? Where’d you learn that?”            “Daycare.”            “What? Daycare? You learned how to light shirts on fire at daycare?”            I froze and looked up the ceiling, trying to backtrack. I actually learned how to light matches by watching him light his pipe, but I couldn’t tell him that.            “A kid brought matches one day. I told him matches were bad.”            “I’m calling your daycare.”            “No,” I said. Okay, I screamed it, and he scowled at me.            “Tell me the truth.”            I took a deep breath and let is slide out: “I hate your shirts, Dad.”

  15. More on dialogue • http://www.nytimes.com/2012/12/30/fashion/modern-love-three-mothers-one-bond.html?pagewanted=all&_r=0

  16. Beware • Do not use this format: I then asked Fat Joey if he thinks the Army Corps of Engineers should build new jetties. Find a way into your quotes that adds to the story. Fat Joey doesn’t think the Army Corps of Engineers should build new jetties. “Jetties are too expensive. Plus, they’re a major liability for the city.”

  17. Don’t Double Up • Make sure your quote set up isn’t redundant with your quote content. • DON’T: Fat Joey doesn’t think the Army Corps of Engineers should build new jetties. “Jetties are a terrible idea.”

More Related