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Feature Writing. The Art of Telling Stories. What ’ s a feature?. Human-interest articles that focus on particular people, places and events (more timeless) Features are told in a less hurried and generally more creative way.
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Feature Writing The Art of Telling Stories
What’s a feature? • Human-interest articles that focus on particular people, places and events (more timeless) • Features are told in a less hurried and generally more creative way. • Features almost never begin with the most important information like inverted pyramid stories. • Features are generally longer than hard news articles and go deeper into its subject, expanding on the details versus few key points.
Typical topics • Society • Health • Food • Entertainment • Individuals • The environment • Economics • Current issues • Politics • Sports • Celebrities
Typical Types • Trends • Human interest • Profiles • How-to • Behind the scenes **There are many more, but these are most popular…**
Types • Trend stories report on changes that happen gradually over time. • It’s often a good idea to personalize the leads of these stories. • Is there a cool new look in women's fall fashions? A website or tech gadget that everyone's going nuts over? An indy band that's attracted a cult following? A show on an obscure cable channel that's suddenly hot? These are the kinds of things that trend stories zero in on
Example: Trend • http://www.latimes.com/business/technology/la-fi-tn-iphone-hangout-0120824,0,2538826.story
Types • Human interest stories in some way tell us more about what it means to be human. They have little impact; sometimes profiles can be human interest stories. • Discusses issues through the experiences of another
Example: Human Interest • http://www.umm.edu/heart/heart_advice_women.htm • http://empoweringwomenradio.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/magazine-feature-article-examples-500.jpg
Types • Profiles tell the story of a person or persons. Very common; reveals an individual’s character or lifestyle • Exposes different facets of the subject so readers will feel they know person
Example: Profile • http://www.parade.com/news/2012/08/26-conversation-with-the-romneys.html
Types • How-to(s): These articles help people learn by telling them how to do something. • The writer learns about the topic thorough education, experience, research or interviews with experts.
Example: How-to • http://www.edmunds.com/how-to/recycle-your-used-motor-oil.html
Types • Behind the scenes: Inside views of unusual occupations, issues and events give readers a feeling of penetrating the inner circle or being a mouse in the corner. • Readers like feeling privy to unusual details and well kept secrets about procedures or activities they might not ordinarily be exposed to or allowed to participate in.
Example: Behind the Scenes • http://www.vogue.com/culture/article/behind-the-scenes-a-closer-look-at-the-actors-artists-and-writers-who-played-the-personalities-in-edith-whartons-world/#1
Related terms • A sidebar accompanies a hard news story and is written in a feature style. • A followup runs a day or more after the main news story and reports on results of earlier developments. • A nutgraph (also spelled nutgraf) is the paragraph that explains, in a nutshell, the point of a story. Not all features have a nutgraph.
Story Format • Not the inverted pyramid…. • The information in a feature is organized differently from hard news stories. • Sometimes a writer uses several paragraphs of copy at the outset to engage the reader before getting into the main elements of the story.
Story Format • After the title and opening paragraph(nutgraph) grab the reader, narrative hooks/leads are used to persuade the reader to continue reading. • A writer can choose to tell the story out of order to engage reader’s interest…. • Flashbacks • Story-within-a-story
Story Format • See outline hand out
Types of Leads **Typically longer than hard news** • Description • Direct address • Shocking statement • Narrative • Quotation • Question
What do high school readers want? • They want interesting, real stories about people they know. They also like controversy and interesting issues.
Do high school students get this kind of writing very often? • Not very often. Most papers and yearbooks ignore thousands of story-telling chances every year.
Typical high school writing • Exhibit A: Laura Orr has been named Student of the Month. Laura is a senior and last week was named the most valuable player on the state championship volleyball team. Her favorite activities include water skiing, tennis, reading and watching movies.
Typical high school writing • Exhibit B: In a teenager’s life, one thing is always true: The need for money is the same. Some teens can get money by working in stores or by doing odd jobs, but perhaps the most popular way to earn fast money is through baby sitting . . .
Typical high school writing • Exhibit C: February is Black History Month, and the school will again participate in a wide variety of activities commemorating the many contributions blacks have made to the United States and the world.
How do you write compelling features? • Abandon the inverted pyramid and use features leads and style.
Feature writing hint #1 • Focus on a single person for your lead. • Tell the story through one person’s eyes; this requires good reporting.
Feature writing hint #2 • Focus on an incident or anecdote. • Retell a specific moment or scene for your lead. Show, don’t tell.
Feature writing hint #3 • Try a startling statement or dialogue or other devices.
Feature writing hint #4 • Describe a setting as a way of establishing the theme of a piece
Improved feature leads • Exhibit A: Laura Orr never set out to be the All-American girl. It just turned out that way. She plays volleyball because it clears her mind, she said. She’s not sure why she’s so good at it. “I enjoy it so I work at it a little hard, I guess,” she said. Her parents have always stressed academics, so it’s no surprise she’s an honor roll student. “They’ve never really pushed me, but I understand their expectations,” she said. (focus on an individual, somewhat of a startling statement)
Improved feature leads • Exhibit B: It took only a second. • Sophomore Clyde Zeigler turned his back on Josh long enough for the mischievous 8-year-old to open the backyard gates, allowing the three black Labradors to escape into the neighborhood. • “I really panicked,” Clyde said. “The last thing Mr. Nelson, Josh’s father, told me was to make certain the dogs didn’t get out of the yard, and just like that they were gone. I chased them down for an hour. • Welcome to the wonderful world of baby-sitting. (startling statement combined with an anecdote)
Improved feature leads • Exhibit C: History teacher and coach Dennis Sims remembers his high school days all too well, and the memories aren’t good ones. • “Although I lived only a mile from school, I was forced to attend an all-black school,” he said. “We weren’t allowed to mingle with the white kids even though I’d played with many of them all my life.” • He said remembers how members of his family were denied basic rights such as voting and recalls the night a band of thugs lynched a young black man for talking to a white girl. • “ I grew up in a segregated community that treated us harshly,” he said. “Thank God that’s all changed.” • As evidence, the school will again participate in February’s Black History Month, and Sims will be in charge of the annual event. (focus on an individual combined with an anecdote)
Body of the story • The billboard or so-what graph • This comes after the feature lead. (Feature leads can be several paragraphs.) • It tells what the story is about.
Billboard example • In the black sand in front of his bare feet a shirtless man named Jaidev is tidying up a capital P, as in Phoenix. Squatting on his heels, he carefully removes what looks like a giant aluminum cookie cutter, then flicks away stray bits of sand with a stick. • Next he dusts the sand with graphite powder and covers it with a box made of molded clay and sand. Molten pig iron is poured in through a hole. When the iron cools, the box comes off, revealing a 200-pound masterpiece entitled “Phoenix Sanitary Sewer.” • To his government, Jaidev is a small but vital part of India’s drive to increase exports and earn foreign exchange. To some of his competitors in the U.S., however, he is part of a network engaged in unfair competition. U.S. foundries claim India is dumping manhole covers.
Feature body • Keep related material together • Divide piece into sections. Each section tells a different part of the story. • End stories in memorable ways. Often it’s a good to use a quote. This is called a clincher.