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Broadcast Newswriting: An Overview

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NBC, CBS, CNN (N-B-C, C-B-S, C-N-N) AM (A-M, as in time); PM (P-M, as ... Accomplishes the same task as a headline. For consumer, it is the 'point of purchase. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Broadcast Newswriting: An Overview


1
Broadcast NewswritingAn Overview
2
Some reminders
  • Read copy aloud. Always.
  • For time
  • To test for conversational tone
  • To test for clarity remember, audience can not
    rewind or reread.
  • Listen for sound of words tongue twisters

3
News story structure is different than essay or
prose structure
  • Print
  • Move away from inverted pyramid
  • Still largely basis of writing, especially for
    hard news
  • With inverted pyramid, most important information
    comes first.
  • Continue with facts of less importance
  • Designed by copy editors
  • Easier to trim

4
Broadcast story structure
  • Dont generally use inverted pyramid
  • Dont build in descending order of fact
  • HOLD VIEWER ATTENTION THROUGHOUT.
  • In longer stories, include a summary.
  • Or, leave the viewer with something to think
    about.
  • Summary statement may not be there to conclude
    but instead t let audience know story is ongoing

5
Broadcast writers DO
  • Use conversational tone
  • Less formal than print more formal than most
    casual conversation.
  • GOAL
  • Tell a story to a friend
  • Friend knows less about the story or the
    situation than you do.
  • Want to inform subtly impress
  • Use common words, but use them well.
  • Put yourself in the place of the viewer/listener.

6
Broadcast Writing
  • If use uncommon words or use words wrong, it is
    distracting for the audience. Loses their
    attention.
  • Less formal than print
  • More formal than how we generally speak to one
    another
  • Still concerned about
  • Rules of grammar.
  • Sentence construction
  • One way flow must be universally understood.

7
Broadcast Writing
  • rules
  • Include contractions
  • Exceptions
  • For emphasis use BOTH WORDS
  • Some contractions are difficult to say (thatll,
    itll, therere) and both words (that will, it
    will, there are) are easier to say.
  • Be careful with contractions that sound like
    plurals (The plans giving her reason to hope.)

8
Broadcast Writing
  • Use short, declarative sentences
  • Related to conversational tone
  • Dont mean use only See Jane run sentences
  • Rather make structure clear
  • SUBJECT VERB OBJECT
  • Keep the subject and verb close together.
  • BAD Police this morning arrested a suspect.
  • BETTER This morning, police arrested a suspect.

9
Broadcast Writing
  • Use Active Voice
  • ACTIVE someone doing something
  • The governor gave a speech
  • The governor spoke about the budget.
  • PASSIVE Something being done to someone or
    something
  • A speech was given by the governor
  • The budget was the topic of a speech by the
    governor.
  • Youll rarely go wrong with active voice

10
Broadcast Writing
  • Use active voice
  • How?
  • Who is the actor? Be sure to include the actor.
    This is the SUBJECT.
  • What happened? What is the action? This is the
    VERB.
  • Was any thing acted upon? Influenced? This is
    the OBJECT?

11
Broadcast Writing
  • Use active voice
  • Worst kind of passive voice that where NO ACTOR
    is named
  • Less interesting
  • The gunman was arrested.
  • Mistakes were made.

12
Broadcast Writing
  • Use present tense (and future tense, when
    appropriate).
  • Generally Use present tense.
  • Generally, we want todays news, not yesterdays
  • There are times when what happened clearly was in
    the past or has not occurred.
  • Here it would be silly to use present.
  • Stay with the same tense in a single sentence.

13
Broadcast Writing
  • TODAY
  • You are communicating TODAYs news.
  • Avoid yesterday in the opening sentence.
  • If something happened in the past, what makes it
    news today? That is your focus.
  • Has anything new happened?
  • Freshen the story

14
Broadcast Writing
  • Dealing with days of the week
  • Use yesterday or tomorrow (but not in first
    sentence) if the event is one day in the past or
    future.
  • If want more flexibility, use the day of the week
    instead.
  • Use the day of the week if more than one day
    distant.
  • If more than one week ago or more than one week
    from now use the date.

15
Broadcast Writing
  • Dealing with names.
  • Use the last name only.
  • Exceptions
  • On first reference
  • If there are multiple people with the same last
    name.
  • When referring to children
  • Place titles in front of names
  • Former Midville Mayor Jane Brown says
  • NOT Jane Brown, former mayor of Midville,
    says
  • Question Do you need to say the name of those
    who are keyed in a super?

16
Broadcast Writing
  • Use phonetic (FON-et-ic) spelling of names,
    unusual words.
  • Dont worry if its Davis or Miami
  • Do worry is its Sarmiento (Sahr-me-in-toe) or
    Kazakhstan (Kahz-ahk-stan)
  • If a word has two pronunciations
  • Write Base drum
  • Dont count on spell check.
  • Loose/lose
  • tired/tried
  • defiantly/definitely

17
Broadcast Writers
  • Avoid almost all abbreviations.
  • Generally avoid courtesy titles
  • Guidebook says, dont use Mr. Mrs. Ms.
  • Except
  • Heads of state
  • Their spouses.
  • President, Senator, Mayor are not courtesy
    titles they are earned titles. They should be
    used.

18
Broadcast Writing
  • Acronyms
  • Generally avoid.
  • Exceptions
  • FBI (Write F-B-I)
  • CIA (C-I-A)
  • NBC, CBS, CNN (N-B-C, C-B-S, C-N-N)
  • AM (A-M, as in time) PM (P-M, as in time)
  • For more complex or unknown acronyms, may use
    acronym on second reference.

19
Broadcast Writing
  • In script, keep hyphenated words on the same
    line.
  • Dont use symbols (_at_, , , )

20
Broadcast Writing
  • Numbers
  • 1 9 Write out the word. One, two, three
  • 10 999 Write the numeral.
  • Numbers higher than 999.
  • Use a combination of words and numerals.
  • 37,915,776
  • 37 million915 thousand---776.
  • Phone numbers and years Write the numeral.

21
Broadcast Writing
  • Generally addresses and names arent important,
    unless it plays a pivotal role in story.

22
Broadcast Writing
  • Punctuation
  • Comma standard pause
  • Ellipsis () slightly longer pause
  • Words that the anchor should emphasize are
    underlined.

23
Broadcast Writing
  • Quotes
  • Broadcasters dont usually use long quotes
  • Usually paraphrase (dont change meaning)
  • If long quote ill be used set it off with an
    ellipsis. Tells the anchor, and audience, that
    what is said is a quote.
  • Dont use quote and unquote. Rather use the
    more subtle in the presidents words

24
Broadcast Writing
  • Be careful with pronouns.
  • To whom are we referring?
  • The police officer tackled the fleeing robber.
    Hes a former football player.
  • Be careful with attribution
  • Use attribution before statements.
  • Otherwise it seems that this is coming from the
    anchor or the station.
  • Sally Jones extorted thousands of dollars from
    XYZ bank.
  • According to back officials, Sally Jones
    extorted thousands of dollars from XYZ bank.

25
DO
  • Be clear and concise.
  • Make life easy for the anchor.
  • Write like people talk (to a degree)
  • Be careful with pronouns.
  • Attribute.

26
DONT
  • Forget that you know more about he stories than
    audience members do.
  • Depend on the computer to catch mistakes

27
Story Structure
28
The Lead
  • The first sentence.
  • Most important element.
  • Accomplishes the same task as a headline
  • For consumer, it is the point of purchase. Do
    they stay or do they go?

29
The Lead
  • Grab the audiences attention right away? How?
    What is the essence of the story?
  • Dont make it hard to digest by loading it with
    facts. The lead can be nonfactual.
  • Dont write a lead that sounds cliché, dated, or
    stale.

30
The Lead
  • Use the active voice
  • Use narrative storytelling
  • Use the mom rule
  • If I were sitting at the dinner table to tell
    this story to my mom, what would I say?
  • Short, friendly. Short declarative sentences.

31
Story Structure
  • Preview
  • View
  • Review
  • What is the essence of the story?
  • Is there a narrative that is in line with this
    story?
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