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Online Journalism

Chapter 12. Online Journalism. Anatomy of a News Story. Web/Online When preparing news for web consider… Announce the news as soon as possible Update in increments Tell when there is more to come Promote within the site Provide links to other pages on same site (videos, pics, etc)

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Online Journalism

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  1. Chapter 12 Online Journalism

  2. Anatomy of a News Story • Web/Online • When preparing news for web consider… • Announce the news as soon as possible • Update in increments • Tell when there is more to come • Promote within the site • Provide links to other pages on same site (videos, pics, etc) • Post multimedia • Exclusive audio, video, etc

  3. In Honolulu and Fort Myers, Fla., • A MOJO is a new breed of journalist • Mobile Journalists • Equipped with • Notepads, Cameras, Recorders • Cell phones, Laptops • To file news stories online at a moments notice

  4. Immediacy • Updated news throughout the day • Breaking news should be posted on the web • Delivered to • Cell phones, e-mail, websites • Via RSS Feeds

  5. Interactivity • Ability of others (audience/subscribers) • To post • Blogs • Comments/ Messages • Graphics • Clickable maps • To find locations • What are some ways you interact with news sites? • Does the interaction help retain you as a visitor?

  6. Multimedia • New technology has increased it’s prevalence • Applied to smaller projects • More abundant across the web • Used by more media companies • Newspaper • Magazines • Television • Online

  7. Innovation • The Internet offers more storytelling forms • Breaking news – Inverted Pyramid • Allows content producers to be creative • Long/Short stories • Miniprofiles • Question/Answer • Photo stories • Quizzes • Lists • Games

  8. Reporting for the Web • Plan for full coverage • When reporting get as much information as possible • Audio/video • Copy of documents • Additional info for posting online

  9. Reporting for the Web • Equipment • When preparing for online reporting • Additional tools may include • Tape recorder • Cell phone • Digital camera w/extra batteries • Laptop • These tools will help gather & update content quickly

  10. Reporting for the Web • Time lines • Note down times/dates as stories are covered • Offer audience an account of event details • Disaster story • Crime event/trial

  11. Reporting for the Web • Updates and Follow up stories • Web allows for short, frequent updates • New info posted immediately • Longer more thorough follow ups • Can be prepared for print/broadcast editions • Think ahead, plan for updates and follow-ups

  12. Reporting for the Web • E-mail reporting • Good way to contact had to reach people • Get limited information • Face to face or telephone interviewing • Still preferable

  13. Reporting for the Web • Check Accuracy & Timeliness • When using information from web • Check the following info • Date of information • Reliability of website • Look at extension (.com, .org, .edu, .gov, etc)

  14. Online Readers • Stories reviewed online • Viewed differently than print/broadcast stories • Eye track studies have shown • Web readers first look at text/briefs • People will read online stories in full if interested • Web readers • More likely to finish a story than print readers • Alternative story forms help readers remember facts

  15. Online Readers • Linear vs Nonlinear • Web - Allows access to info in any order • Print & broadcast - Written from beginning to end • Which of these do you find more engaging?

  16. Online Readers • Embedded vs External Links • Links within the text of an article are embedded • Links at the end/side are external

  17. Story Planning • The tools available to online reporting • Require journalists to plan ahead • Multimedia story • Podcast, video, pictures, etc • Hyper links • Tools also determine how information • Will be gathered • Will be presented

  18. Story Planning • Once storytelling format is determined • Think about elements you will use • Timelines • Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ’s) • Interactivity • Lists or Data for full coverage • Miniprofiles • Multimedia • Related Links

  19. Writing Techniques • There is no single way to write for web • Choose the style best for your story • Some guidelines to consider • Write short • Write for readers to scan website • Write to the point • Use common language • Put important info in first two paragraphs

  20. Headlines Blurbs & Briefs • Headlines • Should be brief • Single line • Better than multiple lines • Six to 10 words create better links • Tips • Use strong verbs • Put most important words first • Avoid articles (The, a or an) • Use questions if subject is intereting

  21. Headlines Blurbs & Briefs • Blurbs • Brief summaries written below headlines • Should include 5 W’s • Summary lead can be used • Or nutgraph if different type of lead exists • Blurb writing tips • Write a clear summary • Avoid repeating headline • Address reader when appropriate

  22. Headlines Blurbs & Briefs • Briefs • Longer than a blurb (2-3 paragraphs) • Blurbs and briefs • Offer readers an alternative to reading the full story

  23. Story Structure • Inverted Pyramid • Gets the story out quickly • Favored for web stories • List Format • Breaks up text helps, readers scan web quickly • Q & A Format • Good alternative for web writing • Still needs an introduction

  24. Revise • Cut every word or paragraph • That does not advance the story • Take Risks • Be Flexible • Be Smart • Be Daring

  25. Online Journalism Exercise • Using your blog that you created earlier this semester. • Upload at least 5 stories as full text stories. • Incorporate 2 relevant internal links (non-video) • Incorporate 1 external link (that is different than internals) • Include at least 1 image for each article • Include at least 1 video link for each article • For each article include a blurb at top that is different than the lead • Experiment with elements discussed in class • Include lists, short headlines, etc

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