Print Jurnalism Notes
Print Jurnalism Notes
Print Jurnalism Notes
Print Journalism
Course Content
Unit I [News]
1. What is Journalism?
2. Journalism as Fourth Estate
3. Who is a Journalist?
4. Role and responsibilities of a Journalist
5. What is News?
6. Elements of News
7. News Values -Timeliness, Proximity, Size, Importance, Conflict, Human interest,
Novelty
8. Types of News
9. News Sources: types; credibility and protection
10. News versus Information, Hard vs. Soft News
11. Difference between article, news, feature, and backgrounder, editorial.
Unit IV [Reporter]
1. Reporters: Qualities and Responsibilities
2. Set up and functions of a city reporting room in a daily and bureau
3. Reporting staff: News Bureau, Bureau Chief, Chief Reporter, Correspondent,
Stringers, and freelancer.
4. Reporting for different beats
UNIT-1
What is Journalism?
Access to information is essential to the health of democracy for at least two reasons.
First, it ensures that citizens make responsible, informed choices rather than acting out
of ignorance or misinformation. Second, information serves a "checking function" by
ensuring that elected representatives uphold their oaths of office and carry out the
wishes of those who elected them.
In the United States, the media is often called the fourth branch of government (or
"fourth estate"). That's because it monitors the political process in order to ensure that
political players don't abuse the democratic process.
Others call the media the fourth branch of government because it plays such an
important role in the fortunes of political candidates and issues. This is where the role
of the media can become controversial. News reporting is supposed to be objective,
but journalists are people, with feelings, opinions and preconceived ideas.
Who is a Journalist
Journalists work in many areas of life, finding and presenting information. However,
for the purposes of this manual we define journalists principally as men and women
who present that information as news to the audiences of newspapers, magazines,
radio or television stations or the Internet.
Within these different media, there are specialist tasks for journalists. In large
organisations, the journalists may specialise in only one task. In small organisations,
each journalist may have to do many different tasks. Here are some of the jobs
journalists do:
Sub-editors take the stories written by reporters and put them into a form which suits
the special needs of their particular newspaper, magazine, bulletin or web page. Sub-
editors do not usually gather information themselves. Their job is to concentrate on
how the story can best be presented to their audience. They are often called subs. The
person in charge of them is called the chief sub-editor, usually shortened to chief sub.
Photojournalists use photographs to tell the news. .i .photojournalists; They either
cover events with a reporter, taking photographs to illustrate the written story, or
attend news events on their own, presenting both the pictures and a story or caption.
The editor is usually the person who makes the final decision about what is included
in the newspaper, magazine or news bulletins. He or she is responsible for all the
content and all the journalists. Editors may have deputies and assistants to help them.
The news editor is the person in charge of the news journalists. In small
organisations, the news editor may make all the decisions about what stories to cover
and who will do the work. In larger organisations, the news editor may have a deputy,
often called the chief of staff, whose special job is to assign reporters to the stories
selected.
Feature writers work for newspapers and magazines, writing longer stories which
usually give background to the news. In small organisations the reporters themselves
will write feature articles. The person in charge of features is usually called the
features editor. Larger radio or television stations may have specialist staff
producing current affairs programs - the broadcasting equivalent of the feature article.
The person in charge of producing a particular current affairs program is usually
called the producer and the person in charge of all the programs in that series is
called the executive producer or EP.
There are many other jobs which can be done by journalists. It is a career with many
opportunities.
A journalist only accepts suggestions and instructions from the editorial hierarchy of
his newspaper, as long as the dispositions are not against the professional law, against
the national Italian journalist's work contract (CNLG) and the Ethic Code (Carta dei
Doveri). A journalist cannot discriminate against people on grounds of race, religion,
mental and physical conditions or political opinions.
Circumstances that are not extenuating, references that are not insulting or denigratory
concerning people and their privacy are only accepted when they are relevant to the
public interest. A journalist respects the right of secrecy of every person and he may
not publish news about someone's private life, unless they are transparent and relevant
to the public interest, however, he must always make known his own identity and
profession when he gathers such news.
The names of the relatives of people involved in such daily events cannot be
published unless they are relevant public's interest; they can be neither made known in
case of danger to people's safety, nor can they publish other elements, that can expose
people's identity (photos, images). The names of victims of sexual violence can be
neither published, nor can a journalist give details that can lead to their identification
unless it is required by the victims themselves for relevant general interest.
A journalist has to proceed with great caution when publishing names or elements that
can lead to the identification of members of a legal team or of the police, when they
ma provoke the risk of incolumnity for themselves or their families.
Reporting Duties- Before journalists can write about a subject, they must first gather
information. They usually conduct several interviews with people involved in or
having knowledge of the subject. They may also go to the scene of an event, such as a
crime or an accident, to interview witnesses or law enforcement officers and to
document what they see. In addition, they often search public records or other
databases to find information and statistics to back up their stories. Researching a
story is often similar to conducting an investigation, and journalists must sometimes
ask difficult questions. They may have to invest a lot of time tracking down
information and people relevant to the story.
Working with People- Even though a news article bears a single journalist's by line,
the process requires significant collaboration. How good a journalist's story is often
depends on how adept he is at communicating and working with others. For example,
journalists take instruction from their editors regarding what angle to approach when
writing a story, how long the story should be and whom to interview. They also need
strong people and communication skills so they can persuade sources to talk to them.
Journalists frequently approach people they don't know, whether when reporting from
the scene or calling to request an interview. If they're uncomfortable around strangers,
they'll make others uncomfortable as well, making it less likely that people will want
to be interviewed.
Ethical Responsibilities- Some aspects of a journalist's job are not subject to any
kind of law but are just as important. Journalists must strive to present an accurate, well-
balanced explanation of the stories they cover. For example, they have an obligation to
present all sides of an issue, and to conduct extensive research and talk to several
sources knowledgeable about the subject. If they present only popular opinion, or if
they conduct minimal research without fully exploring the subject, they
don't give readers and viewers the information they need to understand the
implications of the event or issue. Journalists must also be honest with the people they
interview, telling them before talking to them what the article is about and that they
plan to quote them in the piece.
What is News?
The Standard Newscast in India employs the technique of reading out the news in a
formal manner from script (on electronic teleprompter), interrupted with an
occasional still, a map or a moving pictures.
→News is an event or incident which has an audience interest in it to gather
information or to make opinion about the matter.
Elements of news
1. Where did it happen?- News is identified with where it has occurred e.g. national,
international, space etc.
2. Relevance- Relevance means the importance of news.
3. Immediacy -News is about what is happening now. News is only news while it is
new.
4. Interest -The most interesting element in news is often people, not just famous
people but people in general and what they do. People, just like gossip, give news
some feeling: curiosity, envy, admiration, malice or affection. People whose actions
and decisions influence and shape our existence.
News Value
What is news? The cliché is, when dog bites man, it's not news. When man bites dog,
that's news. Critics say, why is the newspaper always full of bad news? Because bad
news is unusual, and no one wants to read about ordinary events.
• Impact. Impact is determined by the number of people affected, the number of boats
that sink, the number of cars wrecked, etc. The more people affected, the more boats
sunk, the bigger the impact of the story.
• Proximity. The closer your audience is to the event, the greater its news value. If a
train hits a bus in Bangladesh, it may receive three column inches behind the sports
section. If a train hits a bus on Niles Canyon Road, the Argus will play it on page one.
• Timeliness. "New" is a big part of news. If it happened just before deadline, it's
bigger news than if it happened last week. Even "big" stories last only a week or so.
News, like fish, is better fresh.
• Conflict. War, politics and crime are the most common news events of all. If
everyone got along, there wouldn't be much news.
• Relevance. How does the story affect the reader? If there's no effect at all, maybe
there's no news.
• Usefulness. How can I use this information? Home, business and leisure news
sections have sprouted in newspapers in an attempt to give readers news they can
really use.
• Human interest. A story may be weak on the other news values, but be interesting
anyway. It can be as simple as an interview with a fascinating person who does
unusual things. If people are talking about it, it's news, even if it doesn't meet the
criteria of our other news values.
Types of News
→Emergencies-The emergency services deal with the high points of human drama –
fires, sea or mountain rescues. Wherever human life is at risk there is a story.
→Crime
Rise crime rates offer a steady source of news although journalists are perfectly aware
of the fear of crime in society. Crime stories have many phases, from the actual
incident, to the police raid, arrest and eventual appearance in court. In television
interesting crimes are usually reconstructed using actors. TV news broadcasters need
to the reconstruction based entirely on known evidence and are not supposed to let
any kind of fiction to creep in to make a true incident more dramatic. :
→Government- Every action of government –locally or nationally –has an influence
on a potential audience and whatever affects an audience is news. Most stories which
start at government level are reported from the point of view of people affected,
which always make them more interesting. :
→Planning and Developments- Building developments are news which is emerging
before your eyes. Big projects like Metro, shopping malls, housing schemes make big
news.
→Conflict and Controversy- News is about change –events that shape our society
and alter the way we live. Conflict is the essence of drama, and anything that is both
true and dramatic makes news. This can be physical clashes in the streets or a conflict
of ideals –a row at local council or in a national government or a political party.
→Pressure and Lobby Groups- They either want change or are opposed to it, so
their demands usually make news, reaction to government policy, events or
developments can make an effective follow up to a story.
→Industry and business- Employment and the state of business is a major factor in
most people’s lives. These can affect jobs, pensions, savings, prosperity and welfare
so developments in industry make big news.
→Health and Medicine- Health makes news: outbreaks of agricultural diseases,
rationing of drugs, epidemics or a new kind of life saving operation.
→Sport- Covering national and international sport event like 20-20 matches, US
open, Football league etc. a local station tends to support its local teams but at the
same time being fair to the opponents.
→Seasonal news- Seasonal news includes Christmas shopping, Diwali sales, Holi
etc.
→Special Local interest - No two areas are the same. Each will throw up stories
peculiar to its own geography and make-up.
→Weather - Regular weather updates are one of the main features in the local news
and form a regular part of the schedule of 24/7 radio and TV news channels.
→Animals - Animal’s stories can make news and create interest in the audience.
→But the first question an editor will ask is: Does it affect our audience, and how and
why and what does it mean for them?
What Is News? On the surface, defining news is a simple task. News is an account of
what is happening around us. It may involve current events, public figures
or ongoing projects or issues. But newspapers publish more than just the news of
the day. They also provide background analysis, opinions, and human-interest stories.
Hard news- This is the term journalists use to refer to “news of the day.” Hard news
is a chronicle of current events/incidents and is the most common news style on the
front page of your typical newspaper. Hard news gives readers the information they
need. If the federal government announces a new youth initiative, it’s hard news the
next day. Examples of hard news stories include reports on crime, court cases,
government announcements, house fires, awards ceremonies, plane crashes,
international events, etc. Hard news reporting uses clean and uncluttered writing. It
may start with a summary lead that describes what happened, where, when, to/by
whom, and why (the journalist's 5 W's). The lead must be brief and simple, and the
purpose of the rest of the story is to elaborate on it.
Soft News- This is a term for news that is not necessarily time-sensitive. Soft news
includes profiles of people, programs, or organizations. Feature stories take a step
back from the headlines to explore an issue in depth. Written in the soft news style,
they are an effective way to write about complex issues too large for the terse style of
a hard news item. A good feature might be about the people in your community and
their struggles, victories and defeats, or maybe about a trip someone took to Africa as
a part of a school project. A feature usually focuses on a certain angle, explores it
through background research and interviews with the people involved, and then draws
conclusions from that information. For an example, look at street kids. A hard news
story must clinically report the relevant statistics: how many there are, where they are,
and what they’re doing. It usually relies on a time-sensitive hook – for example, the
release of a new study, a demonstration by street youth or the untimely death of a
young person on the streets. A feature on street youth is not limited in such a manner.
It might be written over a longer period of time, and allows the unique and detailed
stories of street kids’ individual lives to be expressed
Editorial- Different newspapers are owned by different groups having their own
leanings in a broad political system. The owners can have thinking on social and
political issues that are similar to those in government or can be aligned to other
groups and forces that are in opposition. The opinions and thinking of the owners gets
reflected in the editorial of a newspaper.
Editorial has not always been there in newspapers, and before it became an integral
part of newspapers, news and views published in any newspaper seemed to contain
the viewpoint of the newspapers owners. It meant that a particular newspaper reported
news in such a manner that it became clear which political party or social group it was
aligned to or leaned towards. To make newspapers more objective and to separate the
news items from being colored because of political leanings of the owners, editorial
started to appear in all newspapers. News articles became objective, and anyone could
read articles without thinking about the leanings of the newspaper towards the
government or the opposition.
We are living in the age of information and pay to read news articles and not the
opinions of the editorial staff on every event or personality. This is why editorial is
limited to just one page of the newspaper while the rest of the newspaper carries
articles of all hues without any comments or opinions of the editorial staff.
Article- All news stories or events that are covered by the correspondents are
presented in the form of articles with a catchy headline to arouse the interest of the
readers. If the story is about a natural disaster, a court case, or an important meet
taking place to discuss some important social or environmental issues, the article
necessarily has timeliness about it as it is time bound and has to carry facts and
information that is fresh and has taken place just now. The news item should not
appear stale.
Another characteristic of a news article is that it should not have any judgment or
remarks from the author or the creator of the story as it is based upon real life facts
and situations. In fact, a simple article does not need concluding remarks from the
writer, and it should be just reporting the facts as they are without being biased or
judgmental.
There are also feature articles that carry information on any event that are still fresh in
the memories of the readers.
News- The Standard Newscast in India employs the technique of reading out the news
in a formal manner from script (on electronic teleprompter), interrupted with an
occasional still, a map or a moving pictures.
→News is an event or incident which has an audience interest in it to gather
information or to make opinion about the matter.
Feature
A feature story is not meant to report the latest breaking news, but rather an in-depth
look at a subject.
- Feature articles range from the news feature that provides sidebar background
to a current event hard news story, to a relatively timeless story that has
natural human interest.
- Features generally are longer than hard-news articles because the feature
penetrates deeper into its subject, expanding on the details rather than trying to
concentrate on a few important key points.
- In hard news stories, often referred to as inverted pyramid style, the reporter
makes the point, sets the tone, and frames the issue in the first paragraph or
two.
- In a feature story, on the other hand, the writer has the time and space to
develop the theme, but sometimes postpones the main point until the end. The
whole story does not have to be encapsulated in the lead.
Backgrounder
It is a press conference or interview in which a government official explains to
reporters the background of an action or policy. It is a type of story that explains and
updates the news. Thus, as compared to a proper news story, it is a part of it, i.e it can
be a supplement to various articles and news stories need to be updated and written on
various occasions. While backgrounder serves as an important source of news and
further pursuing on it for details, it is different from article, news and editorial in the
sense that it is not a proper form of writing. Its main purpose is to update and inform.
UNIT-2
Various types of leads/intros A lead (or an intro) is the beginning paragraph for a
story. It is the hardest part to write as it sets the tone and introduces the reader to the
rest of the story. A good lead paints a vivid picture of the story with a few words. Not
many reporters can produce sharp, original leads. Writers of little talent and scant
judgment load their leads with official sources, official titles, official phrases, even
official quotes, and produce long-winding, cumbersome and dull leads. If the lead is
not effective, the reader may skip the story. It should be appropriate for the story. The
lead must be accurate, short and crisp. The lead should reflect the mood of the story.
Straight lead (or Summary lead) A good lead incorporates the inverted pyramid
style with the most important facts first. It tells readers what they want to know in a
creative manner. If the reader only read the lead, he or she would have a solid grasp of
the story.
Descriptive lead A descriptive lead describes how an event happened rather than
simply telling what the event is about.
Quotation lead Quotes frequently are the essential documentation for a lead and
should be used immediately after a paraphrase that summarises them. Here
paraphrasing the verbatim quotation permits the removal of unnecessary words. But if
a verbatim quotation itself is very important or interesting, it can be the lead itself.
This lead would add an element of interest such as drama, pathos, humour,
astonishment, or some other factor that will reach out to the reader.
Question lead Many editors dislike question lead on the basis that people read
newspapers to get answers, and not to be asked questions. But if the question is
provocative, it may be used as a lead.
Personal lead It involves the use of the first person singular in the lead. Normally
such a use is discouraged except for a columnist or such privileged writers.
'You' lead (or Direct Address lead) The `You' lead is intended to make a personal
appeal to the reader involved in a complicated situation. The second-person approach
reaches out to involve the reader and capture his/her attention.
Contrast lead To vary monotony, a saga can be split into two sentences -- the first of
which refers to the humble beginning and the second to the hero's latest triumph.
Blind identification lead If the person concerned is not well known in the
community, his/her name is less important than other salient facts that identify the
person. eg. "a 80-year-old woman" instead of her name.
Anecdotal lead The anecdotal lead is used when the anecdote is bright and applicable
and not too wasteful of space. It brings the reader quickly into a news situation that
might not attract his attention if it were routinely written.
Gags (or funny) lead - a journalist who writes a funny story put up the saddest face
in a newsroom. Journalistic humour requires the skilled and practice
Literary allusion lead Paralleling the construction of a nursery rhyme or part of a well-
known literary creation can add to variety.
Functions of Headlines:-
(1) Enticing the readers: - The main aim of a headline is to attract reader’s
attention.
(2) Indexing/Grading: - Headlines grade the news symbolically by highlighting
the importance or prominence given to certain stories.
(3) Gist of the story: - Headlines summarises the story for the readers.
(4) Visual appeal:- Headlines help in making the newspapers more attractive.
(5) Identity of Newspapers: - Headlines give the newspaper character and
stability.
(6) Seriousness of News: - Headlines give relative seriousness of the news as
well.
Direct Headline: These are straight forward headlines that state exactly what
they want; they make no attempt whatsoever to be clever.”
Indirect Headline: These headlines are subtle, what could be considered as
link bait. They usually try to generate curiosity by the reader, or offer a double
meaning in their headlines. In others words the classic link bait approach.
News Headline: This is a direct news announcement.
How to Headline: This is exactly as you would expect, it’s a headline that
offers you an article on how to do something.
Question Headline: This category of headlines ask a question that the reader
can relate to, that they can empathize with, something they would like
answered. A classic example is “Who else wants to make a million dollars in
the stock market?”
Command Headline: This headline states what the reader of the article needs
to do. For this headline to work the first word needs to be a strong and
commanding word.
Reason Why Headline: This is basically a list of why something is good or
bad.
Testimonial Headline: In this case the headline is a customer testimonial.
This is done to offer outside proof, otherwise known as social validation.
You’re validating through social proof that your article (or product) is great
and worth the readers time. After all it’s not just you who says so, someone
else is saying it too.
5Ws and 1H of news writing The Five Ws, Five Ws and one H, or the Six Ws are
questions whose answers are considered basic in information-gathering. They are
often mentioned in journalism. They constitute a formula for getting the complete
story on a subject. According to the principle of the Five Ws, a report can only be
considered complete if it answers these questions starting with an interrogative word.
Who is it about?
What happened?
When did it take place?
Where did it take place?
Why did it happen?
How did it happen
Each question should have a factual answer — facts necessary to include for a report
to be considered complete. Importantly, none of these questions can be answered with
a simple "yes or "no".
This concept is very helpful when preparing interview questions or writing factual
news stories. This concept may help you write better news releases too, considering
they should contain news.
Good (The exact, apt, simple, unambiguous words), Bad (redundancies jargons,
verbosities), Ugly of news writing.
News writing is a key skill for journalists, but it helps with other types of writing as
well. That’s because news writing is about telling a story quickly and concisely.
Anyone can learn to do this, with a bit of help. Here’s how you can write the news
and get your story across. The technique also works well for writing press releases.
For good news writing we should follow good elements like:-
1. Exact information
2. Apt information
3. Simple words
4. Unambiguous words- Ambiguity means that what a thing is, is not clear.
Literally, the word refers to a choice between two different things. In the
proper sense it should mean “two different meanings” because “ambi” comes
from the Greek word for “two”.
We see things happen, and then we decide what they mean. If we cannot decide what
is going on, the event is ambiguous. This is an extension of the original use of the
word. Words or sentences that are ambiguous can lead to misunderstandings (people
get the wrong meaning). This can sometimes be serious, but it can also be
funny. Jokes often rely on ambiguity.
We should avoid bad elements like:-
1. Redundancies- Means excessiveness of same words
2. Jargon – Jargon means technical terminologies of particular subjects. We
should avoid them because they are not easy to understand by a layman.
3. Verbosities- It means to talk about things in great detail, listing every facet of
their being. Also to have the ability to speak at great lengths about nothing.
Ugly elements: - these are the elements which we should never use in journalism
writing like sensationalise a news, providing wrong facts, overhyping an issue.
UNIT-3
Interpretative Reporting It is reporting news depth and with care, news refreshed
with background materials to make it comprehensive and meaningful. - Lester
Markel, editor, The Sunday New York Times• It is objective judgment based on
background knowledge of a situation or appraisal of an event which are essential parts
of news. - Lester Markel. It is about telling the reader everything he needs to know
about a given development, and all the essential facts in a way that brings the story to
the readers environment. - Robert Bolorf, executive editor, The Wall Street Journal
It is giving the reading public accurate information as fully as the importance of any
story dictates. - Catledge, editor, The New York Times
News Agencies: - News agencies were created with a single aim to enrich the
newspapers with a wide variety of news events happening around the world. Initially
the agencies were meant to provide the news items only to the newspapers but with
the passage of time, the rapidly developing modern mediums such as the radio,
television and Internet too adapted the services of news agencies.
News agencies working process is totally different from newspapers because news
agencies work as a news providers to different news channels they are not publishing
the news like Times Of India, and Hindustan Times.
Magazines reporting style is also quite different from newspapers because they are
ntot having the same issue of deadline to report a story. They comes weekly or
monthly in which they have ample time to develop a story and do a proper research of
the subject.
Off-the-record Off the record can mean two very different things.
Off-the-record can mean that whatever the journalist is told can be reported so long as
it is not attributed to the person who said it.
Then there’s the other form of off-the-record. That’s when neither the identity of the
source or the information they’ve passed on can be revealed. This is important when
someone needs a reporter to know the context of a story but can’t reveal their identity
or the actual information because it would prejudice them.
The following are the basic qualities of a reporter or rather a good reporter:
Credibility is something that every good reporter should have. In other words, a
reporter must exhibit characters and behaviors that make him or her to be believed
and trusted by people.
1. A good reporter should be courageous and confident. Without courage and
confidence it is difficult for a person to be a good reporter. Timidity on the
part of any reporter will get them nowhere.
2. Curiosity is another very important quality of any good reporter. There is the
need to be curious all the time. The spirit of curiosity helps the reporter get
good stories.
3. A journalist should have a healthy scepticism. This means checking and
rechecking information which is very important because every story is based
on facts and evidence.
4. A reporter should be able to work fast and enthusiastically on any given story.
News writing especially has a lot to do with deadlines. This therefore means
that a good reporter should be able to work under pressure and meet deadlines.
If you can’t soak the pressure then it is going to be hard to work as a reporter.
5. A good reporter should be able to gather facts in a very careful and accurate
way.
6. Reporters should be able to write well. By writing very well I mean writing
clear and well-focused stories that is easy to understand by everyone. Good
spellings, punctuations and grammar are also requirements.
7. Reporters should be able to write very good leads for their news stories and
features.
8. A good reporter should have the habit of self-editing their copy before
submitting it to their editors.
9. There is the need to have wide general knowledge on different issues.
10. A good reporter should have an eye for what is newsworthy and should be
able to produce new stories without being told.
11. Another very important skill a good reporter should have is the skill of
producing stories that are fair and balanced.
12. A good reporter should be skilled at taking notes.
13. A good reporter must be able to analyze and interpret information.
14. Must be good at asking the right questions at the right time.
15. The work of news gathering is quite an unpredictable one. One might never
know when news will break or where it will happen. It is for this reason that a
reporter should be able and willing to work at irregular hours.
16. A reporter should be a good team player and be capable of working with other
reporters, photographers and even editors.
17. A good reporter should be able to take corrections and criticisms in the course
of performing their job.
Set up and functions of a city reporting room in a daily and bureau
A newsroom is the central place where journalists—reporters, editors, and producers,
along with other staffers—work to gather news to be published in a newspaper and/or
an online newspaper or magazine, or broadcast on radio, television, or cable.
Some journalism organizations refer to the newsroom as the city room.
The concept of "newsroom" may also now be employed by some Public Relations
practitioners, as representatives of companies and organizations, with the intent to
influence or create their own "media".
Breaking News Reporters cover events that make the news. A news editor makes
decisions about the importance of breaking stories and assigns reporters to cover the
event. The source of the story could be a press release, breaking news over the wire
service or a tipoff from a contact. Reporters travel to the scene, gather information
and quotes from official sources such as police or fire crews or witnesses, and put
together a story. If they are covering the story for radio or television, they record the
story and interview sources.
Events News reporters cover regular, scheduled events in addition to breaking news.
Sports correspondents, for example, attend games to prepare reports. Reporters
covering local government issues attend official meetings and community events.
Crime reporters go to police stations and courts to keep up to date with ongoing cases
or get leads to follow up.
Background To add depth to news stories, reporters do background research. They
check the accuracy of facts and contact experts or witnesses to obtain more detailed
information. They also confer with the legal team to ensure that sensitive stories are
not breaking any laws. When they write articles, reporters add background to the
original news story and prepare a piece that fits the length or time slot allocated by the
editor.
Investigation Editors may assign individuals or teams of reporters to investigate
issues of public concern, such as allegations of corruption or inefficiency in local
government. Reporters interview people who can provide insight on the issues and
build a story over time.
Presentation Reporters working in radio or television may also be responsible for
presenting all or part of their stories. They may present the story in the studio or do a
live link to a news anchor, giving an overview of the story and introducing the
interviews they recorded on site.
Tabloid Journalism
This type is a hit with some unreliable newspapers and websites even today! In this
style, the journalist tries to sensationalize a particular piece of news by moulding the
story itself. Also famous by the name 'yellow journalism', such form of news is highly
exaggerated and mostly unreliable. A good example of this is when celebrity
controversies are hyped and publicized on a big scale to grab eyeballs.
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