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Reporters name followed by credentials |
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Location of story, (usually at very beginning of story) ie- PORTLAND -- |
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opening paragraph of a story |
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phrase that tells reader the source of a quote or the source of information used in a story (police department) |
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The big type, written by copy editor that summarizes story |
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black/white pictures shot by photo editor |
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line stating photographers name and organization they work for |
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aka. pullquotes. quotation from story that gives special graphic emphasis |
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contact info. for the reporter to all feedback |
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Front-page element that never changes, the name of the paper (NEW YORK TIMES) |
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daily papers print one edition for street sales and another for home sales (Final edition) |
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Informational graphics like maps, charts, diagrams |
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the subheadline written by copy editors to supplement main headline |
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the story itself, columns measured in inches and usually run for 7 inches then change |
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continued on.... another page, story continues or jumps to separate page |
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aka. caption, info about the photo collected by photographers |
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AKA. promo/skybox. grabs readers attention so they read that story in another section. IE sports (top of page) |
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alerts readers that there is anther story on same topic in another part of the newspaper |
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story written for another publication or national news service, then sent by telegraph wire (old days) nation wide |
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close up of someones face |
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Lead story! top story of the day due to newsworthiness or reader appeal to make headline, |
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One of the last page elements that copy editors produce before sending paper to press, tells "whats inside" |
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small, specially designed title with art used to label special stories (childcare in crisis) |
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What makes a story interesting?? Seven things |
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impact Immediacy Proximity Prominence novelty conflict emotion |
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does the story matter or effect readers? Bigger consequences = bigger story |
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Did it just happen? About to happen? Timeline is crucial |
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How close is this story? Local events matter to local people. Duh |
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Does this story involve a well known celebrity or public figure? Makes readers concerned/curious |
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Is something new, odd, surprising, weird? Readers enjoy the unexpected. |
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Is there a clash of power or battle? Enjoy dramatic confrontation |
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Does this story make us happy? Sad? Mad? We emotionally respond to human interest stories. |
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revolutionized JRN first, why we have inverted pyramid, must transmit most important info first |
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Narrative and chronological in stories |
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next big shift in JRN, mostly technological, leads to structural change |
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Using the eyes and ears of the community to help you report a story; web allows multiple sources, data processing software, real time surveys |
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