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Editorials

Editorials. No first person; “we” is often used Use lots of facts (but they are only facts if accurate) Don’t forget the passion Use closing graf to tie it together. cheating. Cheating.

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Editorials

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  1. Editorials • No first person; “we” is often used • Use lots of facts (but they are only facts if accurate) • Don’t forget the passion • Use closing graf to tie it together

  2. cheating

  3. Cheating • "LAF Co-Op's stance on cheating is very clear. Cheating on any homework assignment, paper, quiz, or test is not permissible in LAF Co-Ops.  Neither is it beneficial to you, your character, or the other students around you.  Cheating is defined as either misrepresenting work that is not your own or allowing someone else to misrepresent their work.  These incidents will result in disciplinary actions from LAF Co-Op Leadership."

  4. Broadcast news

  5. Broadcast news • It’s waaaaaaay different than print

  6. Broadcast news • It’s waaaaaaay different than print • What is “broadcast”?

  7. Broadcast news • It’s waaaaaaay different than print • What is “broadcast”? To make public by means of radio or television... and YouTube, podcasts, any new media to come where people watch or listen

  8. What’s different? • Brevity... seriously brief

  9. What’s different? • Brevity... seriously brief • A typical news story on TV runs 40 seconds: four or five sentences

  10. What’s different? • Brevity... seriously brief • A typical news story on TV runs 40 seconds: four or five sentences • It would take 28 hours to read a copy of the Washington Post; the average half-hour local news program has fewer words than one typical newspaper page

  11. But!

  12. How to write for broadcast

  13. How to write for broadcast • Still gotta get the facts... you are still a reporter, gather as much info as time allows

  14. How to write for broadcast • Still gotta get the facts... you are still a reporter, gather as much info as time allows • Work more in collaboration than at print

  15. How to write for broadcast • Still gotta get the facts... you are still a reporter, gather as much info as time allows • Work more in collaboration than at print • Fewer defined beats... cover car wreck to pet adoptions in one morning

  16. How to write for broadcast • Still gotta get the facts... you are still a reporter, gather as much info as time allows • Work more in collaboration than at print • Fewer defined beats... cover car wreck to pet adoptions in one morning • Much of the news is crime and tragedies: “if it bleeds, it leads...”

  17. How to write for broadcast • Still gotta get the facts... you are still a reporter, gather as much info as time allows • Work more in collaboration than at print • Fewer defined beats... cover car wreck to pet adoptions in one morning • Much of the news is crime and tragedies: “if it bleeds, it leads...” • Not going to be an expert on any subject, gotta be a super-quick learner

  18. Writing for broadcast • “Think fast, boil down to basics, write as tight as you can...”

  19. Writing for broadcast • “Think fast, boil down to basics, write as tight as you can...” • Use friendly, conversational tone... like, write the way, you know, you talk... dude

  20. Writing for broadcast • “Think fast, boil down to basics, write as tight as you can...” • Use friendly, conversational tone... like, write the way, you know, you talk... dude • Use active voice: simple and direct

  21. Writing for broadcast • “Think fast, boil down to basics, write as tight as you can...” • Use friendly, conversational tone... like, write the way, you know, you talk... dude • Use active voice: simple and direct • Inverted pyramid is out: every word counts and you need an ending

  22. Writing for broadcast • “Think fast, boil down to basics, write as tight as you can...” • Use friendly, conversational tone... like, write the way, you know, you talk... dude • Use active voice: simple and direct • Inverted pyramid is out: every word counts and you need an ending • Use presence tense

  23. Writing for broadcast • Don’t worry about contractions

  24. Writing for broadcast • Don’t worry about contractions • Attribution before quotes

  25. Writing for broadcast • Don’t worry about contractions • Attribution before quotes • Use phonetic pronunciations

  26. Writing for broadcast • Don’t worry about contractions • Attribution before quotes • Use phonetic pronunciations • Avoid abbreviations and symbols

  27. Writing for broadcast • Don’t worry about contractions • Attribution before quotes • Use phonetic pronunciations • Avoid abbreviations and symbols • Round off numbers and spell them out

  28. Radio

  29. Radio • “The hours are long, the pay is low, the stress is relentless...”

  30. Radio • “The hours are long, the pay is low, the stress is relentless...” • Gather lots of audio... 10 minutes to get 10 seconds

  31. Radio • “The hours are long, the pay is low, the stress is relentless...” • Gather lots of audio... 10 minutes to get 10 seconds • Write strong lede, give basic facts, get to recorded audio quotes

  32. Television

  33. Television • It’s live! And you’re talking, without notes, directly into a camera

  34. Television • It’s live! And you’re talking, without notes, directly into a camera • Images rule: “Talking head bad. Video good.”

  35. Television • It’s live! And you’re talking, without notes, directly into a camera • Images rule: “Talking head bad. Video good.” • You write to the video: lead with your strongest shots

  36. Television • It’s live! And you’re talking, without notes, directly into a camera • Images rule: “Talking head bad. Video good.” • You write to the video: lead with your strongest shots • Don’t overload with facts: let the pictures tell the story

  37. Television • It’s live! And you’re talking, without notes, directly into a camera • Images rule: “Talking head bad. Video good.” • You write to the video: lead with your strongest shots • Don’t overload with facts: let the pictures tell the story • Engage emotions

  38. Television • It’s live! And you’re talking, without notes, directly into a camera • Images rule: “Talking head bad. Video good.” • You write to the video: lead with your strongest shots • Don’t overload with facts: let the pictures tell the story • Engage emotions • Look the part

  39. Interviewing on video • Have subject look at you, not at camera!

  40. Interviewing on video • Have subject look at you, not at camera! • Select uncluttered backdrop

  41. Interviewing on video • Have subject look at you, not at camera! • Select uncluttered backdrop • Maintain eye contact with subject

  42. Interviewing on video • Have subject look at you, not at camera! • Select uncluttered backdrop • Maintain eye contact with subject • Keep asking until you get your bite

  43. Interviewing on video • Have subject look at you, not at camera! • Select uncluttered backdrop • Maintain eye contact with subject • Keep asking until you get your bite • Shoot cut-aways of you listening and nodding as subject talks

  44. Terms • Sound bite: recorded comment from news source

  45. Terms • Sound bite: recorded comment from news source • B-roll: video shot at scene used later to illustrate a sound bite or reporter’s audio track

  46. Terms • Sound bite: recorded comment from news source • B-roll: video shot at scene used later to illustrate a sound bite or reporter’s audio track • Stand-up: shot of a reporter at the scene talking into camera

  47. Terms • Sound bite: recorded comment from news source • B-roll: video shot at scene used later to illustrate a sound bite or reporter’s audio track • Stand-up: shot of a reporter at the scene talking into camera • Live shot: a stand-up shot live

  48. Terms • Sound bite: recorded comment from news source • B-roll: video shot at scene used later to illustrate a sound bite or reporter’s audio track • Stand-up: shot of a reporter at the scene talking into camera • Live shot: a stand-up done live

  49. Terms • Package: a complete story prepared by reporter usually combining sound bites, voice-overs and stand-ups

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