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Title: Newspaper


1
Newspaper
  • By
  • MONA, NOUF, WESAM, ETAAB

2
Presentation outline
  • 1. newspaper brief history.
  • 2. Types of news paper
  • 3. Head lines
  • types of head lines and
    examples.
  • Differences between head lines

3
Newspaper history
  • For centuries, civilizations have used
    print media to spread news and information to the
    masses. The Roman Acta Diurna, appearing around
    59 B.C, is the earliest recorded newspaper.
    Julius Caesar, wanting to inform the public about
    important social and political happenings,
    ordered upcoming events posted in major cities.
    Written on large white boards and displayed in
    popular places like the Baths, the Acta kept
    citizens informed about government scandals,
    military campaigns, trials and executions. In 8th
    century China, the first newspapers appeared as
    hand-written newsheets in Beijing.

4
Newspaper history
  • The printing press, invented by Johann
    Gutenberg in 1447, ushered in the era of the
    modern newspaper. Gutenbergs machine enabled the
    free exchange of ideas and the spread of
    knowledge -- themes that would define Renaissance
    Europe. During this era, newsletters supplied a
    growing merchant class with news relevant to
    trade and commerce. Manuscript newssheets were
    being circulated in German cities by the late
    15th century. These pamphlets were often highly
    sensationalized one reported on the abuse that
    Germans in Transylvania were suffering at the
    hands of Vlad TsepesDrakul, also known as Count
    Dracula. In 1556 the Venetian government
    published Notizie scritte, for which readers paid
    a small coin, or gazetta.

5
Newspaper history
  • In the first half of the 17th century,
    newspapers began to appear as regular and
    frequent publications. The first modern
    newspapers were products of western European
    countries like Germany (publishing Relation in
    1605), France (Gazette in 1631), Belgium (Nieuwe
    Tijdingen in 1616) and England (the London
    Gazette, founded in 1665, is still published as a
    court journal). These periodicals consisted
    mainly of news items from Europe, and
    occasionally included information from America or
    Asia. They rarely covered domestic issues
    instead English papers reported on French
    military blunders while French papers covered the
    latest British royal scandal.

6
Newspaper history
  • No sooner had newspapers adapted to
    radio than they were forced to re-evaluate
    themselves in light of a new and more powerful
    medium television. Between 1940 and 1990,
    newspaper circulation in America dropped from one
    newspaper for every two adults to one for every
    three adults. Despite this sharp decline,
    televisions omnipresence did not render the
    newspaper obsolete. Some newspapers, like USA
    Today, responded to the technological
    advancements by using color and by utilizing the
    short, quick and to the point stories that are
    usually featured on television.
  • The technological revolution of today is
    creating new challenges and opportunities for
    traditional media. Never before has so much
    information been so accessible to so many

7
Types of newspaper
  • Newspapers can be divided into two sorts
    broadsheets, and tabloids.
  • Broadsheet newspapers are the large ones (e.g.
    The Times and The Daily Telegraph)
  • Tabloid newspapers are the small ones (e.g. The
    Sun andThe Daily Mirror).
  • You may have discovered the following things
  • Newspaper writing is in columns .
  • Newspaper stories are often called articles or
    reports
  • All articles' titles are called headlines .

8
Types of newspaper
  • 4. Many articles have pictures to go with them
    the writing under a picture is called a caption
  • 5. Articles are often split into sections by
    subheadings often these are just one word.
  • 6. Articles often include interviews with
    people involved in the incident.

9
TYPES OF NEWSPAPER ARTICLES
  • Most of the articles you see in The Dispatch are
    news articles. News articles focus only on the
    facts ltETHgt they don't contain anyone's opinion
    There are several types of news articles.
  • A local news article focuses on what's going on
    in your neighborhood. An example of a local news
    story would be an article on a city council
    meeting.
  • A national news article focuses on what's
    happening in the United States. An example of a
    national news article would be an article on the
    U.S. Senate passing a new bill.
  • An international news article focuses on news
    that's happening outside the United States. A
    story on an influenza outbreak in Chile would be
    considered an international news story.

10
TYPES OF NEWSPAPER ARTICLES
  • A feature article is an article that is about
    "softer" news. A feature may be a profile of a
    person who does a lot of volunteer work in the
    community or a movie preview. Feature articles
    are not considered news stories.
  • An editorial is an article that contains the
    writer's opinion. Editorials are usually run all
    together on a specific page of the paper and
    focus on current events. Editorials are not
    considered news stories.
  • A column is an article written by the same person
    on a regular basis. A columnist (the writer of
    the column) writes about subjects of interest to
    him/her, current events or community happenings.
    Columns are not considered news stories.

11
TIPS FOR WRITING FEATURES
  • A feature article is an article that is about
    "softer" news. A feature may be a profile of a
    person who does a lot of volunteer work in the
    community or a preview of a movie about to hit
    the theaters. Like news writing, strong feature
    writing is simple, clear and orderly. But, unlike
    news stories, feature stories don't have to be
    written about events that just happened. Instead,
    they focus on human interest, mood, atmosphere,
    emotion, irony and humor. Here are some steps to
    follow to help you write a good feature story
  • 1. Get the reader's attention quickly. Start
    with a well thought-out first paragraph touching
    on some aspect of the person's life that you are
    writing about or the event if it is not a person.
    Good feature stories have a beginning that
    draws in readers, a transition that might repeat
    it in the middle and an ending that refers to the
    beginning.

12
TIPS FOR WRITING FEATURES
  • 2. Organize your story carefully. Feature
    stories can be told in narrative fashion or by
    sliding from event to event even though not in
    chronological order. Use careful transitions to
    maintain the flow of the story if you're not
    going to follow chronological order.
  • 3. Use short paragraphs effect and vary the
    lengths of sentences for. Reading sentences
    and paragraphs that are always the same length
    gets boring.
  • 4. Write with strong verbs and nouns, but go
    easy on adjectives. Try to draw a picture of
    your subject or event through your writing. Read
    the sentences below and think about which paints
    a better picture for your reader The man was
    tall. The man's head almost brushed against the
    eight foot ceiling in the room. The ship sank in
    1900. The ship sank just as the first
    intercontinental railroad was nearing completion.

13
TIPS FOR WRITING FEATURES
  • 5. Don't be afraid to use offbeat quotes. Not
    profanity, but rather witty things the person may
    say in response to a question about their
    success, life or family.
  • 6. Write tightly. You do not need to tell the
    reader everything you know on a subject or event.
    Tell only the most important things. It's better
    to write shorter than longer. A good feature can
    be done in 500-750 words

14
Features
  • Feature articles are nonfiction articles that
    intend to inform, teach, or amuse the reader on a
    topic. The topic centers around human interests.
    Feature stories may include conventions found in
    fiction such as dialogue, plot and character. A
    feature article is an umbrella term that includes
    many literary structures personality sketches,
    essays, how-to's, interviews and many others.The
    following are examples of feature articles
  • Column A short newspaper or magazine piece that
    deals specifically with a particular field of
    interest, or broadly with an issue or
    circumstance of far-reaching scope. They appear
    with bylines on a regular basis (daily, weekly,
    etc.). They may be written exclusively for one
    newspaper or magazine they may be marketed by a
    syndicate, or they may be self-syndicated by the
    author.

15
  • Essay A short, literary, nonfiction composition
    (usually prose) in which a writer develops a
    theme or expresses an idea.
  • Evergreen A timeless article that editors can
    hold for months and publish when needed. They
    need little or no updating.
  • Exposè These articles use in-depth reporting
    with heavy research and documentation. Used to
    expose corruption in business, politics or
    celebrities. Also called the investigative
    article.
  • Filler Short non-fiction items, usually just
    under 300 words used to fill in space on a page
    of a magazine or newspaper
  • How-to How-to articles help people to learn how
    to do something. They provide step-by-step
    information for the reader.
  • Human interest story An article that involves
    local people and events and can be sold to daily
    and some weekly newspapers. Human interest
    elements, such as anecdotes or accounts of
    personal experiences, can support ideas in
    magazine articles as firmly as facts or
    statistics. Also called "true-life" stories.
  • Interview This feature story type article
    includes the text of the conversation between two
    or more people, normally directed by the
    interviewer. Interviews are often edited for
    clarity. One common variation is the
    roundtable--the text of a less organized
    discussion, usually between three or more people.

16
  • Op-Ed Articles that run opposite the editorial
    page. They are a response to current editorials
    and topical subjects. Political op-eds are the
    most common, but they don't have to be limited to
    politics. They must, however, reflect items that
    are current and newsworthy.
  • Personal experience An article in which the
    writer recounts an ordeal, process, or event he
    has undergone.
  • Personality Profile A personal or professional
    portrait--sometimes both-- of a particular
    individual.
  • Seasonal An article written about a holiday,
    season of the year, or timely observance. This
    kind of article must be submitted months in
    advance of the anticipated publication date .
  • Service Article An article about a consumer
    product or service it outlines the
    characteristics of several of the same type of
    commodity. The aim is to help the consumer make
    the best selection possible.
  • Sidebar A short feature that accompanies a news
    story or magazine article. It elaborates on human
    interest aspects of the story, explains one
    important facet of the story in more depth, or
    provides additional factual information--such as
    a list of names and addresses--that would read
    awkwardly in the body of the article. Can be
    found in a box, separated from the main article
    on the side or bottom.
  • Travel literature Travel articles inform and
    enlighten the reader through facts about a
    region's landscape, scenery, people, customs, and
    atmostphere.

17
Types of articles
  • Articles can be divided into two main categories
    news and features. Straight news stories deal
    with the timeliness and immediacy of breaking
    news, while feature articles are news stories
    that deal with human interest topics.
  • A NEWS article is an article published in a
    print or Internet news medium such as a
    newspaper, newsletter, news magazine, or
    news-oriented website that discusses current or
    recent news of either general interest (i.e.
    daily newspapers) or on a specific topic (i.e.
    political or trade news magazines, club
    newsletters, or technology news websites).
  • A news article can include accounts of
    eyewitnesses to the happening event. It can
    contain photographs, accounts, statistics,
    graphs, recollections, interviews, polls, debates
    on the topic, etc. Headlines can be used to focus
    the readers attention on a particular (or main)
    part of the article. The writer can also give
    facts and detailed information following answers
    to general questions like who, what, when, where,
    why and how. Quoting references can also be
    helpful. References to people can also be made
    through written accounts of interviews and
    debates confirming the factuality of the writers
    information and the reliability of his source.
    The writer can use redirections to ensure that
    the reader keeps reading the article and also
    draws his attention to other articles. For
    example - phrases like continued on page x
    redirects the reader to page number x where the
    article is continued. Conclusions also are very
    important ingredients for newspaper articles.

18
Types of articlE
  • Other types of articles
  • Academic An academic article is an academic
    paper published in a journal. An academic's
    status is usually dependent on how many articles
    they have had published, and also the number of
    times their articles are cited by other articles.
  • Blog Some styles of blogging are more like
    articles. Other styles are written more like
    entries in a personal journal.
  • Encyclopedia In an encyclopedia or other
    reference work, an article is a primary division
    of content.
  • Marketing An often thin piece of content which
    is designed to draw the reader to a commercial
    website.
  • Usenet Usenet articles are e-mail like messages
    posted to share Usenet newsgroup.
  • Characteristics of well-written articles
  • The piece is a factual account of a newsworthy
    event.
  • The writer is objective and shows all sides to an
    issue.
  • The sources for this news story are identified
    and are reliable.

19
Body
  • Body of feature article
  • Feature articles follow a format appropriate for
    its type. Structures for these types of articles
    may include, but are not limited to15
  • chronological the article may be a narrative of
    some sort.
  • cause and effect the reasons and results of an
    event or process is examined.
  • classification items in an article are grouped
    to help aid understanding
  • compare and contrast two or more items are
    examined side-by-side to see their similarities
    and differences
  • list A simple item-by-item run-down of pieces
    of information.
  • question and answer such as an interview with a
    celebrity or expert.
  • Body of news story
  • For the news story, details and elaboration are
    evident in the body of the news story and flow
    smoothly from the lead.
  • Quotes are used to add interest and support to
    the story.
  • The inverted pyramid is used with most news
    stories

20
Body
  • One difference between a news story and a feature
    article is the conclusion. Endings for hard news
    article occur when all of the information has
    been presented according to the inverted pyramid
    form. By contrast, the feature article needs more
    definite closure . The conclusions for these
    articles may include, but are not limited to
  • a final quote
  • a descriptive scene
  • a play on the title or lead
  • a summary statement

21
The Language of News Stories
  • News writing tends to be
  • impersonal to make it appear objective (to
    distance the reporter from the story) hence
  • written in the third person
  • use of direct speech or indirect speech which is
    attributed to someone other than the reporter.
  • some use of passive verbs but usually only when
    someone who is being quoted wants to distance
    themselves from an issue and to show their
    objectivity about an issue.
  • about something that has taken place so mostly
    written in the past tense

22
The Language of News Stories
  • simple - in fact close to the way we talk - so
    relatively short sentences and words and some use
    of cliches which the whole audience understands.
  • punchy - it must grab the reader's attention so
    often uses
  • short rather than long words
  • active verbs
  • relatively short sentences
  • concrete rather than abstract vocabulary
  • See this Assessment Resource Bank resource on
    Types of Nouns
  • sometimes emotive and colorful vocabulary
  • some use (but not overuse) of adjectives
  • but also relatively formal hence
  • no use of contractions
  • sentences written in full (no elision) or
    eliptical sentences
  • sometimes imagery is used to help create a
    clearer mental picture for the reader.
  • often including the reporter's bi-line and/or a
    date-line

23
Headlines
  • Stylistic features of headlines
  • Alliteration is the repetition of a leading
    consonant sound in a phrase a common example in
    English is " Peter piper picked a peck of pickled
    peppers
  • Assonance is repetition of vowel sounds to create
    internal rhyming within phrases or sentences, and
    together with alliteration and consonance serves
    as one of the building blocks of verse. For
    example, in the phrase "Do you like blue?", the
    "oo" (ou/ue) sound is repeated within the
    sentence and is assonant.
  • Assonance is more a feature of verse than prose.
    It is used in (mainly modern) English-language
    poetry, and is particularly important in Old
    French, Spanish and Celtic languages.

24
Headlines
  • A cliché (from French, kl?'?e) is a phrase,
    expression, or idea that has been overused to the
    point of losing its intended force or novelty,
    especially when at some time it was considered
    distinctively forceful or novel. The term is most
    likely to be used in a negative context.
  • Cliché" applies also to almost any
    situation, plot device, subject,
    characterization, figure of speech, or objectin
    short, any signthat has become overly familiar
    or commonplace.
  • Because the novelty or frequency of an
    expression's use varies across different times
    and places, whether or not it is a cliché depends
    largely on who uses it, the context in which it
    is used, and who is making the judgment.
  • The meaning of a particular cliché may shift
    over time, often leading to confusion or misuse
  • Quote
  • It is a cliché that most clichés are true, but
    then, like most clichés, that cliché is untrue.

25
Headlines
  • A euphemism is the substitution of an agreeable
    or less offensive expression in place of one that
    may offend or suggest something unpleasant to the
    listener or in the case of doublespeak, to make
    it less troublesome for the speaker.1 It also
    may be a substitution of a description of
    something or someone rather than the name, to
    avoid revealing secret, holy, or sacred names to
    the uninitiated, or to obscure the identity of
    the subject of a conversation from potential
    eavesdroppers. Some euphemisms are intended to be
    funny

26
Headlines
  • Irony is a literary or rhetorical device, in
    which there is an incongruity or discordance
    between what a speaker or a writer says and what
    he or she means, or is generally understood.
  • In modern usage it can also refer to
    particularly striking examples of incongruities
    observed in everyday life between what was
    intended or said and what actually happened.
  • There is some argument about what is or is
    not ironic, but all the different senses of irony
    revolve around the perceived notion of an
    incongruity between what is said and what is
    meant or between an understanding of reality, or
    an expectation of a reality, and what actually
    happens.
  • Irony can be funny, but it does not have to
    be.

27
Types of irony
  • Most modern theories of rhetoric distinguish
    between three types of irony verbal, dramatic
    and situational.
  • Verbal irony is a disparity of expression and
    intention when a speaker says one thing but
    means another, or when a literal meaning is
    contrary to its intended effect.
  • Dramatic (or tragic) irony is a disparity of
    expression and awareness when words and actions
    possess a significance that the listener or
    audience understands, but the speaker or
    character does not.
  • Situational irony is the disparity of intention
    and result when the result of an action is
    contrary to the desired or expected effect.
    Likewise, cosmic irony is disparity between human
    desires and the harsh realities of the outside
    world (or the whims of the gods). By some older
    definitions, situational irony and cosmic irony
    are not irony at all.

28
Headlines
  • METAPHOR The user interface of newspapers has
    been developed and standardized throughout
    centuries. Despite sociological differences,
    publishers and editors from different parts of
    the world can meet to discuss the content, role,
    and technology of newspapers--just as readers
    from different parts of the world can pick up a
    local paper and immediately know how to read it
    if the written language is known. The different
    elements of the newspaper interface are
    collectively known as the "newspaper metaphor".
    It is important to understand how the various
    elements of the newspaper work together before
    trying to transcode them into new media The front
    page is the most distinct feature of the
    newspaper format. It was invented 300 years ago.

29

Headlines
  • pun (or paronomasia) is a phrase that
    deliberately exploits confusion between
    similar-sounding words for humorous or rhetorical
    effect.
  • A pun may also cause confusion between two
    senses of the same written or spoken word, due to
    homophony, homography, homonymy, polysemy, or
    metaphorical usage. Walter Redfern has said "To
    pun is to treat homonyms as synonyms"1. For
    example, in the phrase, "There is nothing punny
    about bad puns", the pun takes place in the
    deliberate confusion of the implied word "funny"
    by the substitution of the word "punny", a
    heterophone of "funny". By definition, puns must
    be deliberate an involuntary substitution of
    similar words is called a malapropism.
  • Puns are a form of word play, and occur in
    all languages, with the exception of Lojban.

30
Headlines
  • Repletion of words in headlines is for emphasis
    and very strong dramatic effect.
  • Example out out out .
  • Shared knowledge, many headlines assume shared
    cultural knowledge and shared general knowledge
    between the headline writer and the reader. This
    include the use of only first names or surnames
    of people are considered so well-known that
    stating their full name, position or title or
    reason for prominence is considered unnecessary.
  • Example kiss for Harry as he meets pop idols.
  • Simile is describing one thing by linking it to
    another
  • Example villagers sick as a parrot.

31
Resources
  • www.wecapedia.com
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