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Don't mess with the news
NEWS is the bread and butter of any media organisation that promotes itself as a news outlet. At least it should be.
Then
again, what exactly is news? Is it a happening or event that is new?
Many new things happen every day but never make the newspapers. Is it
an event, incident or quote that is new AND has a direct bearing on the
constituency where it occurred or was said?
What
is news in the US is trash in Bhutan, and vice-versa. How many borders
must events or opinions cross before local news become regional news,
and then national news and even global news?
Scholars
of journalism have argued long and hard over the definition of news.
Indeed, it is a topic of intense discussion.
Thankfully,
the forum for this topic is in academia and not in newsrooms, though
editors are quite often besieged by staff and public as to what kind of
news should be given more prominence.
Certainly,
you won't find me delving into this subject. Like you, I have an
instinctive knowledge of what makes the news (though past colleagues
may argue this) and don't really try to define what it is.
Suffice
to say, news is something that is "new". A hard news article tells
readers the impact of something that happened or what somebody said
just this minute, one hour ago, this morning, yesterday.
Quite
often, news is something that happened a long time ago, maybe days or
weeks. It's just that the public didn't know about it. But it still
counts as "news" because as far as the ignorant public (and journalist)
is concerned, it's news to them.
Generally
speaking, however, once it goes past yesterday, it tends not to be news
anymore. Some may argue that with the advent of the Internet, even
"yesterday" is old news. But in places where newspapers are still the
prime source of news, and there are still many such places, "yesterday"
is still within the strike zone.
A hard news story doesn't mess around with words.
Check this out.
--
New York's subways and buses were brought to a halt on Tuesday by the
city's first mass transit strike in 25 years by a union that faces a $1
million-a-day fine for every day of the work stoppage --
This
no-nonsense, get the facts out of the way intro from Reuters above
provides readers with a vivid picture of what is happening to the city
of New York, who is making it an issue and what the consequences are
for all parties. All in one tidy paragraph.
This
"intro" holds close to the formula Reuters journalists, indeed all
journalists for that matter, are ingrained with. You can learn to write
like this too. “Great copy, every time, on time – secrets
to how top pros write news, in 6 easy steps”, my ebook
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