CCJ Tools

Make Every Word Count

By RJI on July 29, 2006 0 Comments

Reporters and editors everywhere battle and complain over length of stories. Good reporters always gather more interesting and important information than they can use in their stories. Good editors always have more good stories, photographs and graphics than they have space. With space at a premium in newspapers today, you need to make every word count in your stories. However long your editors let you write, you need to hone your ability to organize information and write tight stories that make every word count.

Writing Clearly on Deadline

By RJI on July 29, 2006 0 Comments

Write as you report.
If you're working a story by phone, you're going to have some dead time, maybe a few seconds at a time when you're on hold or waiting for someone to answer, maybe a few minutes while you're waiting for people to return calls. Start putting the information from your last interview into story form.

Find the Inherent Structure

By RJI on July 29, 2006 0 Comments

Krulwich, a correspondent with ABC News, has covered an array of topics ranging from AIDS to Bosnia to the worlds of the papparazzi and hip-hop music.

Story Structures

By RJI on July 29, 2006 0 Comments

The Hour Glass
Writer Roy Clark has identified this structure. It is a hybrid of narrative and inverted pyramid. You begin by telling the news, and then there is a break in the pyramid, and a line that begins a narrative, as in, "it all began when …"

Find a Hook

By RJI on July 29, 2006 0 Comments

Even the best writer can find it hard to get a reader's interest when the story seems foreign to the reader. Is there a hook, some common ground or relatively unknown link, that might get someone interested in a subject?

Give Background and History

By RJI on July 29, 2006 0 Comments

What background would a newcomer who is affected by the story need to know so that they might care about it? For example, on the issue of Medicare.

Connect the Story to Deeper Themes

By RJI on July 29, 2006 0 Comments

"The best stories reach us on some elemental level. They talk about a mother's love for her children, a husband's pride in his country…There's something very important that's always going on in a very simple way in good stories." NBC correspondent John Larson

The Many Sides of a Story

By RJI on July 29, 2006 0 Comments

It may be more interesting if there are three or four, rather than only two. In most stories there usually are more than two sides. Is the abortion debate, for example, really reflected in the arguments of the organized pro-life and pro-choice movements?

Develop Characters

By RJI on July 29, 2006 0 Comments

The people are cardboard, names and faces fit into a journalistic template, the investigating officer, the pro-life protester, the conservative Republican, the liberal Democrat.

Digging for Sources

By RJI on July 29, 2006 0 Comments

Here's an example of rethinking sources that some reporters in Washington have used:

Before Reporting, Ask These Three Questions

By RJI on July 29, 2006 0 Comments

For each story, before you start your reporting, when you are just conceptualizing coverage, begin this way:

Help with Federal FOIA

By RJI on July 29, 2006 0 Comments

The link below will take you to a website where you can fill in a Freedom of Information Act request letter and print it out.

http://www.rcfp.org/foi_letter/generate.php

The Watchdog as Prosecutor

By RJI on July 29, 2006 0 Comments

Though all reporting involves investigation, what we have come to understand as investigative journalism adds a moral dimension. It engages the public to come to judgment about the disclosure and implies that the news organization considers it important - worthy of special effort. In that sense, investigative reporting involves not simply casting light on a subject, but usually making a more prosecutorial case that some- thing is wrong.

Faux Investigations

By RJI on July 29, 2006 0 Comments

In the ebb and flow of the watchdog role over the last two centuries, we are reaching a moment of diminution by dilution. The celebrity of Woodward and Bernstein was followed by the success of 60 Minutes, in which correspondents Mike Wallace, Morley Safer, Harry Reasoner and Ed Bradley became stars in their own reports. People tuned in to see who Mike, Morley, Harry, and Ed would catch this week.

Reporting on Investigations

By RJI on July 29, 2006 0 Comments

This form of watchdog reporting is a more recent development and has become increasingly common. The reporting develops from the discovery or leak of information from an official investigation already under way or in preparation by others, usually government agencies. It is a staple of journalism in Washington, a city where the government often talks to itself through the press.

Interpretative Investigative Reporting

By RJI on July 29, 2006 0 Comments

Interpretative reporting often involves the same original enterprise skills but takes the interpretation to a different level. The fundamental difference between the two is that original investigative reporting uncovers information not before gathered by others in order to inform the public of events or circumstances that might affect their lives.

Original Investigative Reporting

By RJI on July 29, 2006 0 Comments

Probably the best-known type of watchdog reporting, original investigative reporting involves reporters themselves uncovering and documenting activities that have been previously unknown to the public. This is the kind of investigative reporting that often results in official public investigations about the subject or activity exposed, a classic example of the press pushing public institutions on behalf of the public.

The History of the Watchdog Mission

By RJI on July 29, 2006 0 Comments

Journalism's watchdog role has long been seen as critical to its mission of informing the public. When print periodicals first emerged in England in the 17th century out of the coffeehouse salon culture, they saw their role as investigatory. The Parliament Scout, which began publication in 1643, did more than publish rumors or reprint official words, it made an effort to search out and discover the news.

The Watchdog Misunderstood

By RJI on July 29, 2006 0 Comments

As firmly as journalists believe in it, the watchdog principle is often misunderstood. At the turn of the century, Chicago journalist and humorist Finley Peter Dunne translated the watchdog principle to mean "comfort the afflicted and afflict the comfortable." Dunne was half kidding, but the maxim has stuck.

Reporting Tips from Pulitzer Winners

By RJI on July 29, 2006 0 Comments

Bob Woodward of the Washington Post says to fulfill the watchdog principle responsibly, he tries to keep an open mind and see where the facts take him. "You might start a story thinking you are going to look at how the city health department administers vaccines, but ... find that the story's really about the city's mismanagement in general.... Look at as much as you can in every direction." To do so, "Some of the things I do are build a chronology, try to talk to everybody and interview them repeatedly."