Covering speeches
Speeches: Before, during and after
• Before o o
Research the speaker.
Request an advance copy of speech.
• During o o o
Get a good seat.
Estimate the size of the audience.
Monitor the mood of the crowd.
o Take along a tape recorder.
Covering speeches
Speeches: Before, during and after
• After o o o
Create a compelling lead.
Avoid topic leads.
Include minimal background/ biographical data.
o o o
Highlight speaker’s key points.
Convey tone of speech.
Beware of false or libelous comments.
Covering speeches
• Speech story checklist
• Speaker’s name
• Relevant credentials
• Reason for speech
• Time, day and location
• Description of audience
• Quotes
• Comments
• Responses
• Speaker’s fee
More on speeches
How to cover it:
• Take copious notes
• Make observations
• Listen for the new, important or unusual
(audiences don’t care about old news!)
• Listen for summaries
• Keep asking questions !
More on speeches
• The reporter must answer the following questions before writing a speech story:
• What is the key point? The answer to this question becomes the lead to the story.
• What are the other major points? All of them should be rated.
• Which quotations are the best? The reporter must look for quotations that best illustrate the speaker’s points and also make the story readable.
More on speeches
• Is any of this news? Reporters who have done their homework will know if the speaker has given the same speech before.
• When is the deadline? If there is time, the reporter can ask more questions. Or if the speaker has made charges, the reporter can obtain an opinion from the other side. In most speech stories, reporters simply write a brief story on what the speaker said. If there is time to interview the other side, the reporter must start the research again to find the best possible rebuttal.
More on speeches
• When is the deadline? If there is time, the reporter can ask more questions. Or if the speaker has made charges, the reporter can obtain an opinion from the other side. In most speech stories, reporters simply write a brief story on what the speaker said. If there is time to interview the other side, the reporter must start the research again to find the best possible rebuttal.
Attributions
Nine guidelines for wording and positioning attributions
• Use full name 1 st time.
• Put nouns before verbs.
• Attribution follows quote when quote is one sentence.
• Attribution at end of
1 st sentence if multisentence quote.
• Can start quote with attribution.
Writing obituaries
Death is news
• Obituaries are read more closely by more people than any other part of the paper.
o o o
They tell stories.
They touch hearts.
They honor and inspire.
o
What’s the difference?
Death notice — brief announcement with o basic facts.
Obituary — longer announcement and provides more history and detail.
When the death IS the news
MIAMI (AP) - Washington Redskins safety Sean Taylor has died, a day after he was shot in the leg, said family friend Richard Sharpstein.
He said Taylor's father called him around 5:30 a.m. to tell him the news.
"His father called and said he was with Christ and he cried and thanked me," said Sharpstein, Taylor's former lawyer. "It's a tremendously sad and unnecessary event. He was a wonderful, humble, talented young man, and had a huge life in front of him. Obviously God had other plans."
He said he did not know exactly when Taylor died.
Doctors had been encouraged late Monday night when Taylor squeezed a nurse's hand. But Sharpstein said he was told Taylor never regained consciousness after being transported to the hospital and that he wasn't sure how he had squeezed the nurse's hand.
"Maybe he was trying to say goodbye or something," Sharpstein said.
The 24-year-old Redskins safety was shot early Monday in his home in the upper leg, damaging an artery and causing significant blood loss.
Writing obituaries
Watch your language
• Addresses
• Cause of death
• Past personal problems
• Flowery phrases o o o o o
Other terminology
Funerals are scheduled .
Masses are celebrated .
People die unexpectedly .
People die after surgery.
A man is survived by his wife.
Writing obituaries
• You MUST get it right – errors in obituaries are traumatic for everyone involved. Double- and triple-check names, facts, survivors, etc.
• Be positive, but not mawkish. “Spotlight” obits are a way to highlight a local life; try to give the reader a tiny bit of insight into why this person is worth knowing about.
Writing obituaries
Obituary checklist
• Use full names.
• Find a phrase that best summarizes this person.
• State age simply unless asked to omit.
• Avoid details in mentioning cause of death.
• Include birth date and birth place.
Writing obituaries
Obituary checklist
• List education, military • Include name and service, honors and career achievements.
• Name survivors in phone number for funeral home.
immediate family.
Writing obituaries
Writing a standard news obituary
• Emphasize person’s • If natural cause of death, significance in lead.
• Lead should include o o o focus on personal history.
Name.
Major accomplishment or occupation.
Day, location and o If unusual cause of death, details should precede the background info.
• More prominent get cause of death.
more quotes.
Writing obituaries
The feature obituary
• Looser, friendlier style.
• Create an illusion of intimacy.
• Omit attributions.
Writing obituaries
Talking with families about the deceased
• Don’t be squeamish.
• Be willing to listen.
• If you’re not sure what • If it will be a long obituary, to say, use a script.
• Be supportive.
gather as much detail as possible.
• Avoid the awkwardly obvious.
News briefs
• Boil all the facts down to the absolute minimum
• Lead should be especially concise and tothe-point
• Keep attribution to a minimum (use “police said” or “a spokesman for X said” instead of full names/titles, where possible
News briefs
• Ditch direct quotes unless they’re utterly perfect
• Tell readers what they need to know (e.g., the time of a PTA meeting, the phone number for a police tip line)
• Always use the inverted pyramid – no room for anything else
News briefs
NEW YORK -Three senior fire officials responsible for inspecting the condemned skyscraper where two firefighters died were stripped of their commands and reassigned
Monday, and the New York Fire Department ordered intensive inspections of buildings under demolition.
According to Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg (I), a preliminary investigation indicated that careless smoking by construction workers started the deadly Aug. 18 fire at the former
Deutsche Bank building, which was being dismantled and cleaned of toxic debris after suffering heavy damage in the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks.
Two firefighters died of cardiac arrest while trying to battle that blaze.
After the fire, the department acknowledged that it did not have a plan in place to fight fire at the tower and that it had not inspected the building's standpipe system, which connects fire hoses to its water supply, in more than a year, even though it should have done so every 15 days. Inspectors found pieces of the standpipe disconnected in the tower's basement.
A deputy chief, a battalion chief and a captain at the firehouse in charge of inspections at the tower were being reassigned to headquarters, Commissioner Nicholas Scoppetta said.
News briefs
WHITE PLAINS, N.Y. -- A federal inspector found an armed guard asleep at a gate inside the Indian Point nuclear power facility, but officials said
Monday that there was no security breach.
The inspector spent two minutes trying to rouse the unidentified guard Sunday afternoon before the guard woke up, a spokesman for the Nuclear Regulatory
Commission said.
The guard was alone on the second of three security rings around the two plants, about 35 miles north of New
York City.
LEXINGTON, Ky.
-The sole survivor from the airliner that crashed after taking off from the wrong runway at
Blue Grass Airport, killing 49 people, is suing the company that designed the runway and taxiway lights.
James Polehinke, the co-pilot of
Comair Flight 5191, filed suit against
Avcon Inc. of Orlando.
The National Transportation Safety
Board determined last month that the pilots' failure to notice clues that they were turning onto the wrong runway was the primary cause of the crash.