news reporting & writing week 3:lead writing kevin voigt

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News Reporting & Writing Week 3:Lead writing Kevin Voigt

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Page 1: News Reporting & Writing Week 3:Lead writing Kevin Voigt

News Reporting & WritingWeek 3:Lead writingKevin Voigt

Page 2: News Reporting & Writing Week 3:Lead writing Kevin Voigt

The 5 “W”s & 1 “H”

Who

What

When

Where

Why

How

Page 3: News Reporting & Writing Week 3:Lead writing Kevin Voigt

News story structure1-2-3-4

• 1. The lead. What is the most important news? How can you write it in the clearest way — and make it interesting too?

• 2. Elaborate on the lead. Two, three, four or five paragraphs that explain, support and amplify lead.

• 3. Key background and context of event, if needed; information that helps readers understand more about the news they are reading.

• 4. More elaboration of the news, in descending order of importance.

Page 4: News Reporting & Writing Week 3:Lead writing Kevin Voigt

Ledes: Hard Vs. SoftHard news lede

Gives readers the basic facts of what happened and where it happened

Entices readers to keep reading to find out the “how” and the “why”

Soft news lede

Gives readers a small, intriguing taste of the story

Page 5: News Reporting & Writing Week 3:Lead writing Kevin Voigt

Elements of a hard lede

What happened or what was said

When the event occurred

Where the event occurred

Who (or what) was the source

Page 6: News Reporting & Writing Week 3:Lead writing Kevin Voigt

Formula for a hard lede

Subject

Verb

Object

Example: “I love you.”

Not: “You are the person that I love.”

Page 7: News Reporting & Writing Week 3:Lead writing Kevin Voigt

Start simple...

Keep it short; less is more

Under 35 words

Just the unadorned facts:

Donald Tsang announced yesterday that he will seek a second term as Hong Kong’s chief executive.

Page 8: News Reporting & Writing Week 3:Lead writing Kevin Voigt

...and build from there

Donald Tsang, wagging a defiant finger at his critics, announced yesterday that he will seek a second term as Hong Kong’s chief executive.

Page 9: News Reporting & Writing Week 3:Lead writing Kevin Voigt

Examples of hard ledesTwo New York City police officers were suspended without pay after a video surfaced showing them striking a handcuffed man this month in the Bronx, officials said Thursday.

A 41-year-old man was found stabbed to death and covered in a pile of clothes in his Midtown apartment on Thursday, the police said.

Google may be in a turbulent confrontation with China, but the company’s online advertising business is picking up speed, helping Google to widen its lead over rivals.

Page 10: News Reporting & Writing Week 3:Lead writing Kevin Voigt

Examples of soft leadsWhen Cyrus Hassankola moved to Dallas a couple of years ago, after successfully going out of business in several locales, he decided to settle down and go out of business permanently.

“On a Sunday morning, not entirely awake, I decided it was a good day for a bagel,” Howard Rose said. “It turned out not to be a good day for handling a knife.”

Why wait until the next story about coagulated fat in sewers comes along when you can read this one now?

Page 11: News Reporting & Writing Week 3:Lead writing Kevin Voigt

Direct LeadDirect Lead

• The direct lead is the workhorse of journalism. To decide what is the most important part of the story, ask two questions:

• 1) What was the most unique or the most important or unusual thing that happened?

• 2) Who was involved: Who did it or said it?

Page 12: News Reporting & Writing Week 3:Lead writing Kevin Voigt

The lead• After answering those, ask one more:

• What words will help me write the strongest, most dramatic lead that my material permits?

• A good lead gives you a roadmap to the rest of your story.

Page 13: News Reporting & Writing Week 3:Lead writing Kevin Voigt

The lead• Other points to remember:

• Attribution can wait, sometimes.

• Avoid long subsidiary clauses or titles.

• Banish jargon and legalese.

• Use a direct structure: S-V-O. Subject, verb and object. (Wong [subject] hit [verb] the man [object].)

• Time element usually goes after verb.

Page 14: News Reporting & Writing Week 3:Lead writing Kevin Voigt

The Lead - Summing Up

• Decide the most important news.

• Use strong, dramatic language -- specific nouns, strong and/or colorful verbs.

• Go to the heart of the event; give time, source, place, but be concise.

• Be accurate and truthful.

Page 15: News Reporting & Writing Week 3:Lead writing Kevin Voigt

The Lead - Length• The Associated Press tells its reporters to

start cutting if their leads run beyond 20 to 25 words. To find places to cut, begin with:

• Unnecessary attribution.

• Compound sentences joined by but and and.

• Exact dates and times unless essential.

• Long titles.

Page 16: News Reporting & Writing Week 3:Lead writing Kevin Voigt

Good direct leads:• Four men convicted of murdering a German

family of four in a frenzied knife attack were executed in China yesterday despite pleas for clemency from the victims’ relatives.

• The what was different. Concrete, dramatic, specific language. Time. S-V-O. structure.

Page 17: News Reporting & Writing Week 3:Lead writing Kevin Voigt

Good direct leads• A LaSalle College physics teacher and a lab

technician tipped off students about questions to appear in an A-level exam this year, a court heard yesterday.

• The who was important. So was attribution. S-V-O. structure.

Page 18: News Reporting & Writing Week 3:Lead writing Kevin Voigt

Good direct leads

• Jewelry tycoon Tse Sui-luen’s rags-to-riches story entered its darkest chapter yesterday when a High Court judge declared the self-made company chairman bankrupt.

• Who was important. Place was important. Imagery (a bit of a cliché, but sometimes it can work). Time element. S-V-O. structure.

Page 19: News Reporting & Writing Week 3:Lead writing Kevin Voigt

Rework leads• The sexual revolution has bypassed Hong

Kong, according to a survey showing many men are still looking for passive, good-looking women and women want a man with a big bank balance.

• Good approach, but what about this:

Page 20: News Reporting & Writing Week 3:Lead writing Kevin Voigt

Reworking leads

• Men want passive beauties for mates while women want guys with deep pockets, a new survey says.

Page 21: News Reporting & Writing Week 3:Lead writing Kevin Voigt

Assignment

• Read student profiles of yourself

• Highlight anything inaccurate in red

• Add correct information in RED CAPS

• Send back to writer and me

• Due no later than 9 p.m. Wednesday