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The News Story Deconstructed, Part 2

Learn about the key distinctions between news and feature stories, including their structure, storytelling style, and the issues they address.

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The News Story Deconstructed, Part 2

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  1. The News Story Deconstructed, Part 2

  2. How else is a feature story different from a news story? • Though newsy, not rigidly tied to the news. • It usually touches on a bigger issue than just the obvious. • It has a different structure. • The storytelling is generally more creative.

  3. This is the news… “Huge Washington mudslide kills three and dams river”

  4. This is a feature… “In Ocean of Mud, a Plea: Leave Me, Save My Wife”

  5. News vs Feature • http://hotair.com/archives/2014/10/22/breaking-gunman-shoots-soldier-near-canadian-parliament-shots-fired-inside-parliament-hill/ • http://www.cnn.com

  6. The parts of a feature or second-day story • Headline • Lede • Nut graph • Body, which includes elaboration, reaction quotes that support the sides of the story--if there are sides. • Ending, conclusion, kicker

  7. Story lede, sometimes called soft or story lede Story ledes can be one paragraph or a few Unlike the “just the facts” news lede, the soft lede is often descriptive and teases the reader Doesn’t have the “ws” Often focuses on a person that is an example of the larger point of the story Most magazine articles use story ledes

  8. Nut graph, sometimes called billboard • Nut graph is a paragraph (or two) that explains what the story is about. • It contains the facts • Most of the rest of the story supports and amplifies what you’ve written in the nut graph • If you write a strong, clear nut graph, your story will be easier to organize.

  9. Rick Alexander, a master carpenter in Tampa, Florida, has given up searching for a job after months of effort. The disappointment, he said, has become unbearable.“When you were in high school and kept asking the head cheerleader out for a date and she kept saying ‘no,’ at some point you stopped asking her,” he said. “It becomes a ‘why bother’ scenario.” Story or soft lede

  10. Story lede: Rick Alexander, a master carpenter in Tampa, Florida, has given up searching for a job after months of effort. The disappointment, he said, has become unbearable.“When you were in high school and kept asking the head cheerleader out for a date and she kept saying ‘no,’ at some point you stopped asking her,” he said. “It becomes a ‘why bother’ scenario.”Transition: Alexander is one of a growing number of hidden casualties of the Great Recession. Nut graph: Every month millions of Americans are left out of the unemployment rate. The official jobless rate was reported on Tuesday to have risen to 9.7 percent in March. But to be included in that measure, which is calculated by the Bureau of Labor Statistics, a worker must have actively looked for a job at some point in the preceding four weeks. For an increasing number of people in this country who would prefer to be working, that is not the case. Headline: Out of Work, Too Down to Search Subhed: Millions of Americans Left Off Jobless Rolls

  11. Reminder: parts of a feature story • Headline • Lede • Nut graph • Body, which includes elaboration, reaction quotes that support the sides of the story--if there are sides. • Ending, conclusion, kicker

  12. How can you get comfortable writing features? • Read lots of good feature stories. • Pay attention to the format, particularly the nut graphs. • Write, write, write.

  13. Write a draft of a 250 to 300-word follow up feature based on one of these news stories. Due Tuesday • Ebola • The two-year anniversary of Hurricane Sandy • A new study on the high cost of Halloween: http://www.theatlantic.com/business/archive/2014/10/wait-americans-spend-how-much-on-halloween/381631/

  14. Feature Story Tips • Follow feature story format exactly • Understand completely and correctly what the news is • Make sure the “news” is included in your nut graph • Quote two or three interesting people who care about the issue. • One point per paragraph, supported by a quote

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