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Beyond Breaking News Profiles, reviews, investigative reports, columns—the opportunities are endless!
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Beyond Breaking News Profiles, reviews, investigative reports, columns—the opportunities are endless!

Dec 23, 2015

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Gilbert Benson
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Page 1: Beyond Breaking News Profiles, reviews, investigative reports, columns—the opportunities are endless!

Beyond Breaking News

Profiles, reviews, investigative reports, columns—the

opportunities are endless!

Page 2: Beyond Breaking News Profiles, reviews, investigative reports, columns—the opportunities are endless!

The World of Features

News stories usually focus on events that are timely and public: government, crime, disasters; they tell you what happened.

Feature stories often focus on issues that are less timely, more personal: trends, relationships, entertainment; they offer you advice, explore ideas, make you laugh and cry.

Page 3: Beyond Breaking News Profiles, reviews, investigative reports, columns—the opportunities are endless!

Fashion, Food, Fitness and Fun

At most publications, features fall into the following categories: Lifestyles: goals, relationships, jobs, fashion, fitness Health: dieting tips, exercise advice, medical news Science and Technology: environmental issues,

computers, TVs Entertainment: movies, concerts, art galleries, etc. Food: how to cook it, buy it, bake it, even grow it Homes and gardens: experts tell us how to dig it,

weed it, repair, rewire and redecorate

Page 4: Beyond Breaking News Profiles, reviews, investigative reports, columns—the opportunities are endless!

“Hard” News, “Soft” News??

Hard News: serious, timely events like murder. War. A fire in a nursing home.

Soft News: Lighter, less urgent, less somber topics, like how to buy a puppy. Cookie recipes.

Hard and Soft News are relative terms that describe both the topic and treatment of a story.

Page 5: Beyond Breaking News Profiles, reviews, investigative reports, columns—the opportunities are endless!

10 Popular Types of Feature Stories

Personality Profile Color Story Backgrounder Trend Story Reaction Piece Flashback How-To Consumer Guide

Page 6: Beyond Breaking News Profiles, reviews, investigative reports, columns—the opportunities are endless!

Personality Profile

Readers love reading about famous people. Unusual people. Heroic and idiotic people. They want to know how newsmakers think,

act and look. A successful profile, then, combines quotes,

facts, and descriptions to reveal your subject’s true nature.

Page 7: Beyond Breaking News Profiles, reviews, investigative reports, columns—the opportunities are endless!

Color Story

“Color,” in this case, means flavor or mood. It’s the type of piece you write when you’re asked to attend an event – a parade, a strike, a funeral, a disaster – and convey the experience by interviewing participants and describing the sights and sounds.

Page 8: Beyond Breaking News Profiles, reviews, investigative reports, columns—the opportunities are endless!

Backgrounder

Also called an analysis piece. Through research and interviews, you focus on an issue or event in the news, explaining how it happened, why it matters – and what comes next. It’s like teaching a crash course on a complex topic for readers in a hurry.

Page 9: Beyond Breaking News Profiles, reviews, investigative reports, columns—the opportunities are endless!

Trend Story

This type of feature is often more engaging than a backgrounder on a social problem. Trend stories keep readers plugged in to the people, places, things and ideas affecting today’s culture – the latest/hottest/coolest/oddest – from fads and fashions to lifestyle and entertainment.

Page 10: Beyond Breaking News Profiles, reviews, investigative reports, columns—the opportunities are endless!

Reaction Piece

When news breaks, or a dramatic issue confronts your community, a reaction story provides a sampling of opinions from experts, victims, even ordinary folks. For controversial topics, it provides a way for key players to tell their side of the story.

Page 11: Beyond Breaking News Profiles, reviews, investigative reports, columns—the opportunities are endless!

Flashback

Commemorative stories usually run on the anniversary of an historic event – Sept. 11, for example, or the 100th anniversary of City Hall – combining facts, photos and interviews to explain why it was important then, and why it still matters now.

Page 12: Beyond Breaking News Profiles, reviews, investigative reports, columns—the opportunities are endless!

How-To

This popular, interactive format teachers readers how to do something: Play poker. Buy a house. Invest money. It often works best presented as an easy-to-follow checklist, diagram, or step-by-step sequence of tips.

Page 13: Beyond Breaking News Profiles, reviews, investigative reports, columns—the opportunities are endless!

Consumer Guide

Readers want to know where to find the tastiest pizza. The hottest jazz. The cheapest shoes. And they expect you (the instant expert) to tell them. Almost everything we do, buy or eat can be rated in a way that advises readers what’s good, bad and ugly.

Page 14: Beyond Breaking News Profiles, reviews, investigative reports, columns—the opportunities are endless!

Generating Story Ideas

Your publications archives Your competitors TV, magazines, newspapers, Web sites News releases Reader suggestions Brainstorming

Page 15: Beyond Breaking News Profiles, reviews, investigative reports, columns—the opportunities are endless!

How to Tell if Your Idea is a Good One

Where did your idea come from? Is the idea original? Does the idea surprise you? Does the idea have movement to it? Is there a STORY there? Is there tension? Is the story true? Do YOU like the story?

Page 16: Beyond Breaking News Profiles, reviews, investigative reports, columns—the opportunities are endless!

Feature Style

Syntax and Phrasing Voice and Tense Detail and Description Other Dramatic Techniques

Page 17: Beyond Breaking News Profiles, reviews, investigative reports, columns—the opportunities are endless!

Syntax and Phrasing

The rules loosen up when you write feature stories. You can use slang or contradictions; phrase for dramatic

effect, even write sentence fragments. Ten seconds. Count it: One. Two. Three. Four. Five. Six.

Seven. Eight. Nine. Ten. Ten seconds was roughly how long it lasted. Nobody had a stopwatch, nothing can be proven definitively, but that’s the consensus. The tornado that swooped through Kansas at 6:09 p.m. April 20 took some 10 seconds to do what it did. Ten seconds is barely a flicker. It’s a long, deep breath, it’s no time at all. It’s an eternity.

Julia Keller, Chicago Tribune

Page 18: Beyond Breaking News Profiles, reviews, investigative reports, columns—the opportunities are endless!

Voice and Tense

News stories are written in past tense. But features are often written in present tense, as if you’re right there, witnessing the events, and their happening now:

Let’s begin with his pickup truck. It’s green, it runs, its windshield wipers don’t squeak. Those are the nicest things you could say about it. Otherwise, it’s probably noteworthy only for what it contains in the cab, namely a world. Peter Bacho’s world. A quick look-around will give you clues to everything you need to know about the man. Immediately, you might notice his world needs vacuuming. The ashtray overflows with cigarette butts and ashes…

Alex Tizon, The Seattle Times

Page 19: Beyond Breaking News Profiles, reviews, investigative reports, columns—the opportunities are endless!

Detail and Description

Features attain a you-are-there immediacy by carefully detailing people’s actions and appearances, as done below:

He’s in the back seat of the family Volvo, headed to school. His mom and dad are talking up front, but he’s not listening. He is still waking up. His light blond hair is uncombed as usual; a micro-pebble of sleep dust clings to the lashes of his right eye. Through headphones, a man is singing into his brain.

Page 20: Beyond Breaking News Profiles, reviews, investigative reports, columns—the opportunities are endless!

Other Dramatic Techniques

In journalism, everything you write must be true.

You can present facts in dramatic ways For instance, hook readers by telling

stories chronologically