Reinventing Media

 

Writing a feature story

Page history last edited by staci martin wolfe 2 yrs ago

Final Project PRE-Assignment:

Reporter's notes: Explain why you are curious about this subject. Why would other people care about this story?

 

Complete the storyPlanningForm.doc (only page 1) and email it to Staci and Peggy by midnight, Dec, 4.

 

 

Final Project: Writing a feature story

Write a story about a band, fashion, food, health, pop culture, technology or entertainment. 

 

You must include at least three links, either a photo slideshow, audio sound bites or a video.

Your "reporter's notes" (from the pre-assignment) belong in the sidebar of the story on TNJN.

 

Final story is due posted on TNJN.com Dec. 10 at midnight.

 

 

How to structure your story

  • Outline first – even if it’s rough
  • Present your unifying – universal - idea
  • Provide info
  • Re-engage with unifying, universal idea
  • Provide more info
  • Show rather than tell – anecdotes
  • Loop back to your lede and theme in end

!

Tips

  • Be prepared to suffer – writing good features and profiles takes time and dedication
  • Just do it. Learn to re-write, not write at the last minute
  • Triple check all names, facts, numbers
  • A narrative style with dialogue, characters (hero/heroine, villian, etc.)
  • A universal theme of human interest
  • Touch on the issues of our time such as race, health care, poverty
  • An overarching theme that threads through the story
  • Can be inspired by news but is not a news story
  • A tone of voice.
  • Still have journalistic qualities of balance and non-judgmental tone and backed up by facts

 

Checklist (from Harrower)

How complete is your profile?

 

  • Do readers understand why they should care?
  • What do average readers want to know?
  • What’s the payoff for my subject? Why should he/she submit to the process?
  • Can I provide insight/inside details?
  • Can I watch my subject live/work/play?
  • Is my story full of vivid, memorable details?
  • Do I capture my subject in a real life scene or two?
  • Can I conduct one or two more interviews?
  • Will I keep the interviews conversational? Will my questions be fresh, direct, specific?
  • Will I ask about mundane as well as touchy, intimate matters?
  • Are the quotes spicy and telling?
  • Have I cut out long or predictable quotes?
  • Have I talked with others who understand my subject/sees them with different eyes?
  • Are the turning points in my subject’s life obvious
  • Do I, by the end of my reporting understand what motivates my subject, and will I make that clear to readers?

 

 

Examples:

1. Good graphics and won a pulitzer. Good lede too. - Chicago Tribune: A wicked wind takes aim

!

 

 

Comments (0)

You don't have permission to comment on this page.