Title: Creating%20Television%20News
1Creating Television News
2Creating Television News
- Before the new Millenium, most people got their
news from TV, radio and newspapers. - Today, about half of the general population gets
their news from the Internet. - From 2007 to 2008, this number jumped 10!
3Blogs
- Blogs -- short for web logs -- are viewed
by about 30 of Internet users and all major news
organizations. The writers of blogs use their web
sites to post news they uncover, photos and
videos, personal reactions to events, rumors, and
even their own personal diaries.
4Blogs
- The more valued blogs are often the source of
leads that the mainstream media develop into
major stories. - Here is a list of the major blogs used today
- Major Blogs and News Sources
- TV News also frequently source both Youtube and
Myspace in news stories!
5Blogs
- This means that today, anyone can be a
journalist.. Good or Bad! - We want you to be good, responsible journalists
and report news in a fair, impartial manner!
6ENG and EFP
- ENG (electronic newsgathering) is a part of EFP
(electronic field production) - Electronic Field Production (EFP) includes many
other types of field productions, including
commercials, music videos, on-location dramatic
productions, and various types of sports
coverage. - EFP work generally provides the opportunity to
insure maximum audio and video quality.
7ENG and EFP
- In ENG work the primary goal is to get the story.
- In 90 of news work there will be time to insure
audio and video quality, which is what the news
director and producer will expect.
8The Influence of Broadcast News
- We can see just how important broadcast news are
to governments simply by looking at their
attempts to control it. - Whenever a country experiences a coup or
takeover, the media is the first thing that is
controlled. - Oppressive governments, like Cuba or China
control the media and their messages. - This is called PROPAGANDA
- TV anchor Edward R. Murrow, became a journalism
legend by using the medium to bring down an
overzealous Senator Joseph McCarthy who was
spreading fear of Communism to Americans - Youtube Video
9Censorship
- Although censorship is often justified as a way
of protecting values or ideals, history has
repeatedly shown that censorship leads to a
suppression of ideas and often to
political, military or religious control. - Even with its First Amendment to the Constitution
guaranteeing free speech, the United States has a
long history of censorship attempts.
10The Reporters Responsibility
- The FCC expects networks and stations to present
opposing views - especially if they represent
major factions. Not to do so can spark legal
action and station license challenges. - Biased" is a word that you don't want to hear
about your work (especially if you plan to
broaden your employment opportunities), you don't
want to promote your own view on an issue and not
seek opposing views.
11The Reporters Responsibility
- Part of your responsibility as a newsperson is to
bring out the various sides of an issue. - This means you allow each side to state their
views as strongly and convincing as they can. - Not only is it the professional thing to do, but
it will also add interest and controversy to your
news stories.
12The Reporters Responsibility
- Again, here are the
- Basic Dos and Donts For Interviewing
13Who Does What in TV News
- The news producer is the person who is directly
in charge of the newscast. - He or she makes the major minute-by-minute
decisions on both the technical and content
aspects of the newscast. - Larger stations have segment producers in charge
of specific stories or newscast segments. - Some stations will have an executive producer who
is over the producer(s).
14Who Does What in TV News
- The news director is the top person in the News
Department. This person controls the budget,
hires and fires personnel, and has ultimate
responsibility for the station's news.
15Who Does What in TV News
- Much further down the chain of responsibility is
the on-air director for the newscast. This
person's responsibility is to take the plans of
the producer and "call the shots" in the on-air
phase of the broadcast.
16Who Does What in TV News
- As the title suggests, the ENG coordinator starts
with the story assignments made by the assignment
editor and works with reporters, ENG crews,
editors, technicians, and the producer to see
that the stories make it to "air." - ENG coordinators must not only thoroughly know
their studio and location equipment, but also
understand news.
17The Reporters Checklist
- Broadcast news is a highly competitive business
and in the rush to get a story on the air it's
sometimes tempting to guess at facts or use
information from a questionable source. - However, errors in stories not only damage a
station's credibility but they can derail a
reporter's professional future. Here are five
points to keep in mind when writing news stories.
18The Reporters Checklist
- Question those who claim to be a witness to an
event and confirm that they really were in a
position to see what happened. - Use a second source to double-check information
that seems surprising or may be in doubt.
19The Reporters Checklist
- Double-check all names, titles, and places, and,
when necessary, write out the pronunciation of
names phonetically. - When writing the story, carefully check spelling
and grammar do the math on numbers.
20The Reporters Checklist
- Make sure that sound bites selected during
editing accurately reflect what the person meant.
21The Producers Checklist
- Once reporters turn in their stories and a news
producer or director takes over, many decisions
must still be made before the stories are ready
for broadcast. - Among other things, the stories must be reviewed
for balance, lead-ins (story introductions) must
be written, and appropriate graphics must be
prepared to support the stories. - Here are five points that should be considered
before the newscast goes on the air.
22The Producers Checklist
- Review stories for a balance in views, gaps, and
missing information. - Double-check phone numbers by calling them
double-check web addresses by visiting the sites.
(People are known to get very upset if their
telephone number is erroneously given out and
they have noting to do with the issue.)
23The Producers Checklist
- Check graphics for accuracy.
- Make sure the lead-ins to stories and related
news promos accurately reflect the content and
nature of the stories. - Step back and view the overall newscast and make
sure that the most important stories of the day
have been covered and that they accurately
reflect the most current information and
developments.
2412 Factors of Newsworthiness
- Timeliness
- News is what's new. An afternoon raid on a rock
cocaine house may warrant a live ENG report
during the 6 p.m. news. However, tomorrow, unless
there are major new developments, the same story
will probably not be important enough to mention.
2512 Factors of Newsworthiness
- Proximity
- If 15 people are killed in your hometown, your
local TV station will undoubtedly consider it
news. But if 15 people are killed in Manzanillo,
Montserrat, Moyobambaor, or some other distant
place you've never heard of, it will probably
pass without notice. But there are exceptions.
2612 Factors of Newsworthiness
- Exceptional quality
- One exception centers on how the people died. If
the people in Manzanillo were killed because of
a bus or car accident, this would not be nearly
as newsworthy as if they died from an earthquake
or stings from "killer bees," feared insects that
have now invaded the United States. - Exceptional quality refers to how uncommon an
event is. A man getting a job as a music
conductor is not newsunless that man is blind.
2712 Factors of Newsworthiness
- Possible future impact
- The killer bee example illustrates another news
element possible future impact. The fact that
the killer bees are now in the United States and
may eventually be a threat to people watching the
news makes the story much more newsworthy. - A mundane burglary of an office in the Watergate
Hotel in Washington, DC, was hardly news until
two reporters named Woodward and Bernstein saw
the implications and the possible future impact.
Eventually, the story behind this seemingly
common burglary brought down a U.S. President.
2812 Factors of Newsworthiness
- Prominence
- The 15 deaths in Manzanillo might also go by
unnoticed by the local media unless someone
prominent was on the buspossibly a movie star or
a well-known politician. If a U.S. Supreme Court
Justice gets married, it's news if John Smith,
your next-door neighbor, gets married, it
probably isn't.
2912 Factors of Newsworthiness
- Conflict
- Conflict in its many forms has long held the
interest of observers. The conflict may be
physical or emotional. It can be open, overt
conflict, such as a civil uprising against police
authority, or it may be ideological conflict
between political candidates. - The conflict could be as simple as a person
standing on his principles and spending a year
fighting city hall over a parking citation. In
addition to "people against people" conflict,
there can be conflict with wild animals, nature,
the environment, or even the frontier of space.
3012 Factors of Newsworthiness
- The number of people involved or affected
- The more people involved in a news event, be it a
demonstration or a tragic accident, the more
newsworthy the story is. Likewise, the number of
people affected by the event, whether it's a new
health threat or a new tax ruling, the more
newsworthy the story is.
3112 Factors of Newsworthiness
- Consequence
- The fact that a car hit a utility pole isn't
news, unless, as a consequence, power is lost
throughout a city for several hours. The fact
that a computer virus found its way into a
computer system might not be news until it
bankrupts a business, shuts down a telephone
system, or endangers lives by destroying crucial
medical data at a hospital.
3212 Factors of Newsworthiness
- Human interest
- Human-interest stories are generally soft news.
Examples would be a baby beauty contest, a person
whose pet happens to be a nine-foot boa
constrictor, or a man who makes a cart so that
his two-legged dog can move around again. - On a slow news day even a story of fire fighters
getting a cat out of a tree might make a suitable
story. Human-interest angles can be found in most
hard news stories. A flood will undoubtedly have
many human-interest angles a lost child reunited
with its parents after two days, a boy who lost
his dog, or families returning to their
mud-filled homes.
3312 Factors of Newsworthiness
- Pathos
- The fact that people like to hear about the
misfortunes of others can't be denied. Seeing or
hearing about such things commonly elicits
feelings of pity, sorrow, sympathy, and
compassion. Some call these stories "tear
jerkers." - Examples are the elderly woman who just lost her
life savings to a con artist, or the blind man
whose seeing-eye dog was poisoned. - This category isn't just limited to people. How
about horses that were found neglected and
starving, or the dog that sits at the curb
expectantly waiting for its master to return from
work each day, even though the man was killed in
an accident weeks ago.
3412 Factors of Newsworthiness
- Shock value
- An explosion in a factory has less shock value if
it was caused by gas leak than if it was caused
by a terrorist. The story of a six year-old boy
who shot his mother with a revolver found in a
bedside drawer has more shock (and therefore
news) value than if same woman died of a heart
attack. - Both shock value and the titillation factor are
well known to the tabloid press. The lure of
these two factors is also related to some stories
getting inordinate attention, such as the sordid
details of a politician's or evangelist's
affairwhich brings us to the final point.
3512 Factors of Newsworthiness
- Titillation component
- This factor primarily involves sex and is
commonly featuredsome would say exploitedduring
rating periods. - This category includes everything from the new
fashions in women's swim wear to an in-depth
series on legal prostitution in the state of
Nevada.