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The Language of News Chapter 5

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Bob Schieffer, American Journalist The Language of News Understand the meaning of the words you use and use them properly. ... Avoid Slang Snap! – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Language of News Chapter 5


1
The Language of NewsChapter 5
  • I always thought writing was the foundation
  • and the basis for journalism in the same way
    being able to draw is the foundation for art.--
    Bob Schieffer, American Journalist

2
The Language of News
  • Understand the meaning of the words you use and
    use them properly.
  • Learning what words mean and using them
    appropriately are basic skills a journalist must
    possess. Look up the word in a dictionary or
    style book if you are not sure if you are using
    it correctly. Use a different word if you are
    not sure.
  • People expect more of journalists, who must
    master the English language.
  • When news organizations hire a new reporter, they
    look for someone who understands and respects the
    language, knows spelling and grammar, possesses
    an extensive vocabulary and writes in a clear and
    interesting manner.

3
Attention to Detail!
  • While even careful writers can make mistakes, if
    the errors are not caught and become too
    numerous, they can damage a news organizations
    credibility and force it to print or broadcast
    embarrassing corrections.
  • The importance of precise writingthe correct
    choice of words can make a sentence forceful and
    interesting imprecision creates confusion and
    misunderstanding.
  • Use strong, descriptive verbs to help readers or
    listeners envision the events described in the
    stories.
  • With your words you can paint a vivid picture for
    readers and listeners.

4
Avoid clichés like the plague!
  • Be careful with adjectives and adverbs since they
    tend to be less forceful, specific and objective
    than nouns and verbs. Most adjectives and
    adverbs waste space by stating the obvious, and
    they may unintentionally inject a reporters
    opinion into the story. (See examples page 99)
  • Also avoid clichésthese are words or phrases
    that writers have heard and copied over and over.
    Only time will tell is the worst cliché, often
    used by inexperienced or lazy writers to end a
    story. (see full page of clichés on page 101)

5
Avoid Slang Snap!
  • Also try to avoid slangfeature stories and
    personality profiles sometimes employ slang
    effectively, but it is inappropriate in straight
    news stories because it is too informal and can
    be annoying.
  • Also, slang may baffle or confuse readers who are
    not of the right age or ethnic group to get the
    slang reference.
  • Technical language and jargon should also be
    avoided. Most jargon is abstract, wordy,
    repetitious and confusing.
  • Many sources reporters routinely use such as
    doctors, lawyers, business people, technical
    reports and police and court records, speak in
    jargon.
  • Journalists must translate that jargon into plain
    English for a mass audience. Instead of
    perpetrator use suspect instead of affiant
    use arresting officer.

6
Euphemisms, Platitudesand Gush-- Oh My!
  • Also avoid
  • Euphemisms vague expressions used in place of
    harsher, more offensive terms. Examples saying
    that a woman is expecting rather than
    pregnant. Passed away instead of died.
    Collateral damage for civilian victims.
    Harvesting deer or buffalo instead of hunting
    (and killing) them. Faith-based groups for
    religious groups/churches.
  • Platitudes these are dull, trite, obvious
    remarks that state the obvious. (see examples
    page 105).
  • Gush writing with exaggerated enthusiasm. News
    stories should report useful information. They
    should not hype, praise or advocatethe sources
    you quote or paraphrase can do that, but the
    reporter should not. (examples, page 106)

7
Keep I and me out of news stories
  • Avoid first-person references (using I and me
    in news stories).
  • Journalists should remain neutral bystanders.
    They should not mention themselves in news
    stories. Journalists should not use the words
    I, me, we, or us, except in a direct
    quote from someone interviewed for the story.
  • Avoid excessive punctuation such as exclamation
    points, dashes and parenthesis. Exclamation
    points are rarely necessary. Parentheses
    interrupt the flow of ideas and force people to
    pause and try to figure out some additional bit
    of information.
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