Where Americans get news
TV is still No. 1.
Internet
growing
fast.
Print
newspapers
losing
ground.
Radio 4th
and up
slightly.
Where young Americans get news
Your news
1. Write down your definition of news.
2. Write down a sentence or two about a news
story you remember reading, viewing or
hearing in the last few days. What made it
memorable?
WHAT IS
NEWS?
With your audience in mind,
use these questions to
assess the newsworthiness
of a story.
Definitions of news
“News is the first rough draft of history,”
– Phil Graham,
Washington Post publisher
Definitions of news
“News is anything
that makes a
reader say, ‘Gee
whiz,’”
– William
Randolph Hearst,
American
newspaper tycoon
Definitions of news
“News is
anything that will
make people
talk.”
– Charles Dana,
editor of The New
York Sun
MetropolitanMuseumofArt,NewYork
Definitions of news
“News is what
somebody
somewhere wants
to suppress. All the
rest is advertising.”
– Lord Northcliffe,
British newspaper
tycoon
Definitions of news
“When a dog
bites a man, that
is not news. But
when a man bites
a dog, that is
news.”
– Charles Dana,
New York Sun
editor
Definitions of news
“When a dog
bites a man, that
is not news. But
when a man bites
a dog, that is
news.”
– Charles Dana,
New York Sun
editor
Definitions of news
“News: stories
about events that
have just
happened and
should be told to
readers right
away”– Writing
and Reporting
News
Definitions of news
“News is
information that
is important or
interesting for a
large number of
people.”–
Writing and
Reporting News
News depends on the audience
Students at the National Management College
Audience determines news
Adult Yangon residents
Audience determines news
Younger Yangon residents
Different geography, different audiences
Shan
Herald
ByWagnerT.Cassimiro"Aranha"
Different geography, different audiences
For a
national,
not
regional,
audience
How is the audience different?
How is the audience different?
8 questions to ask in search of news
1. Is it unusual?
2. Does it impact many
people?
3. Are prominent people
involved?
4. Is it timely?
5. Is it about a conflict?
6. Is it local?
7. Is it useful?
8. Is it interesting or
entertaining?
Photo by sskennel
From page 18 of textbook
8 questions to ask in search of news
1. Is it unusual?
2. Does it impact many
people?
3. Are prominent people
involved?
4. Is it timely?
5. Is it about a conflict?
6. Is it local?
7. Is it useful?
8. Is it interesting or
entertaining?
Photo by sskennel
From page 18 of textbook
1. Is it unusual?
8 questions to ask in search of news
1. Is it unusual?
2. Does it impact many
people?
3. Are prominent people
involved?
4. Is it timely?
5. Is it about a conflict?
6. Is it local?
7. Is it useful?
8. Is it interesting or
entertaining?
Photo by sskennel
From page 18 of textbook
2. Does it impact many people?
8 questions to ask in search of news
1. Is it unusual?
2. Does it impact many
people?
3. Are prominent people
involved?
4. Is it timely?
5. Is it about a conflict?
6. Is it local?
7. Is it useful?
8. Is it interesting or
entertaining?
Photo by sskennel
From page 18 of textbook
3. Are prominent people involved?
“I don’t know all the
acronyms that NGO
workers know. But
that’s a good thing
when it comes to the
average Joe watching
TV in America.” –
Actor Matt Dillon
From Coconuts Yangon
NAMES
make
NEWS
3. Are prominent people involved?
8 questions to ask in search of news
1. Is it unusual?
2. Does it impact many
people?
3. Are prominent people
involved?
4. Is it timely?
5. Is it about a conflict?
6. Is it local?
7. Is it useful?
8. Is it interesting or
entertaining?
Photo by sskennel
From page 18 of textbook
4. Is it timely?
“News is
anything you
know now that
you did
not know 15
minutes
ago – or 15
seconds ago.”
Mario Garcia,
news-design
expert 8 minutes after the bombing!
8 questions to ask in search of news
1. Is it unusual?
2. Does it impact many
people?
3. Are prominent people
involved?
4. Is it timely?
5. Is it about a conflict?
6. Is it local?
7. Is it useful?
8. Is it interesting or
entertaining?
Photo by sskennel
From page 18 of textbook
5. Is it about a conflict?
8 questions to ask in search of news
1. Is it unusual?
2. Does it impact many
people?
3. Are prominent people
involved?
4. Is it timely?
5. Is it about a conflict?
6. Is it local?
7. Is it useful?
8. Is it interesting or
entertaining?
Photo by sskennel
From page 18 of textbook
6. Is it local?
What if
the cruise
ship had
sunk on
the Hlaing
River in
Yangon?
HATCH them.
MATCH them.
DISPATCH
them.
6. Is it local?
HATCH them.
6. Is it local?
MATCH them.
6. Is it local?
DISPATCH
them.
6. Is it local?
8 questions to ask in search of news
1. Is it unusual?
2. Does it impact many
people?
3. Are prominent people
involved?
4. Is it timely?
5. Is it about a conflict?
6. Is it local?
7. Is it useful?
8. Is it interesting or
entertaining?
Photo by sskennel
From page 18 of textbook
7. Is it useful?
NEWS
you can
USE
8 questions to ask in search of news
1. Is it unusual?
2. Does it impact many
people?
3. Are prominent people
involved?
4. Is it timely?
5. Is it about a conflict?
6. Is it local?
7. Is it useful?
8. Is it interesting or
entertaining?
Photo by sskennel
From page 18 of textbook
8. Is it interesting or entertaining?
• Often,
sports
news.
• Also,
well-
written
stories
• “Human
interest”
• “Soft
news”
8. Is it interesting or entertaining?
• Often,
sports
news.
• Also,
well-
written
stories
• “Human
interest
• “Soft
news”
“Hey,
MARTHA” test
8. Is it interesting or entertaining?
ByBenGarney
Hard news vs. soft news
Hard or breaking news
Timely stories about events that have just
happened or are about to happen.
Examples:
• Crime
• Accidents
• Disasters
• Government reports
• Parliament passes a law
• One company buys another
• Results of a badminton match Photo by Steven Taschuk
If it
BLEEDS,
it
LEADS.
Hard news
Hard news vs. soft news
Soft news or features
News that entertains or informs with an
emphasis on human interest and novelty and
less so on immediacy. Often, inspires warm and
fuzzy feelings.
Examples:
• Animals
• Children
• Celebrities
• Humor
• Holidays Photo by Nathan
Hard news or soft news?
Hard news or soft news?
Hard news or soft news?
Hard news or soft news?
Hard news or soft news?
Hard news or soft news?
Your turn!
News judgment is the
ability to determine which
stories are most
interesting and important
to readers.
News judgment is a
muscle that you must use
to develop.
PhotobyEneasDeTroya
8 questions to ask in search of news
1. Is it unusual?
2. Does it impact many
people?
3. Are prominent people
involved?
4. Is it timely?
5. Is it about a conflict?
6. Is it local?
7. Is it useful?
8. Is it interesting or
entertaining?
Photo by sskennel
From page 18 of textbook
Your turn!
A story that tells parents
about the elimination
of school fees for high
school students relies
most heavily on which
element of news?
a. Impact
b. Timeliness
c. Prominence
Your turn!
A story that tells parents
about the elimination
of school fees for high
school students relies
most heavily on which
element of news?
a. Impact
b. Timeliness
c. Prominence
Your turn!
Last week, a football player in Thailand suffered a
concussion, and he will be unable to play for the rest of
the season. The Myanmar Times ran a paragraph about
him. Now, a football player in Yangon has suffered the
same injury with the same result, and the paper is
devoting a full page to him and his injury.
What element of news is causing this different
treatment?
a. Useful
b. Local
c. Conflict
Your turn!
Last week, a football player in Thailand suffered a
concussion, and he will be unable to play for the rest of
the season. The Myanmar Times ran a paragraph about
him. Now, a football player in Yangon has suffered the
same injury with the same result, and the paper is
devoting a full page to him and his injury.
What element of news is causing this different
treatment?
a. Useful
b. Local
c. Conflict
Your turn!
Burma says it has found a rare, white elephant in
the jungles of the western Ayeyarwaddy region.
The story is newsworthy
because it is:
a. Useful
b. Unusual
c. Impact
Your turn!
Burma says it has found a rare, white elephant in
the jungles of the western Ayeyarwaddy region.
The story is newsworthy
because it is:
a. Useful
b. Unusual
c. Impact
Your turn!
Two celebrities, vocal stars Lynn Lynn and Chit
Thu Wai, get married in Yangon.
The story is newsworthy
because it has
a. Usefulness
b. Conflict
c. Prominence
Your turn!
Two celebrities, vocal stars Lynn Lynn and Chit
Thu Wai, get married in Yangon.
The story is newsworthy
because it is:
a. Usefulness
b. Conflict
c. Prominence
Your turn!
Myanmar and Bangladesh disagree on where
nearly 1,000 people rescued in May from boats off
the Myanmar coast are from.
The story is newsworthy
because it has:
a. Usefulness
b. Conflict
c. Prominence
Your turn!
Myanmar and Bangladesh disagree on where
nearly 1,000 people rescued in May from boats off
the Myanmar coast are from.
The story is newsworthy
because it has:
a. Usefulness
b. Conflict
c. Prominence
Your turn!
Myanmar President U Thein Sein promises to set a
minimum wage for workers before the election.
The story is newsworthy
because it is:
a. Useful
b. Unusual
c. Timely
Your turn!
Myanmar President Thein Sein promises to set a
minimum wage for workers before the election.
The story is newsworthy
because it is:
a. Useful
b. Conflict
c. Timely
Your turn!
Four people died in a landslide following heavy rain
in the ruby-mining town of Mogok.
The story is newsworthy
because it is:
a. Useful
b. Prominent
c. Timely
Your turn!
Four people died in a landslide following heavy rain
in the ruby-mining town of Mogok.
The story is newsworthy
because it is:
a. Useful
b. Prominent
c. Timely
Your turn!
The Irrawaddy does a feature story on the few
dozen photojournalists in Burma and the dangers
they face.
The story is newsworthy
because it is:
a. Useful
b. Interesting
c. Timely
Your turn!
The Irrawaddy does a feature story on the few
dozen photojournalists in Burma and the dangers
they face.
The story is newsworthy
because it is:
a. Useful
b. Interesting
c. Timely
How news judgments get made
Every day in newsrooms worldwide, editors make
news judgments about what runs on the front page.
Here’s how those decisions get made at:
Hold your own news meeting
• Pick your top 3 stories
based on these elements:
1. Unusual
2. Impact
3. Prominence
4. Timeliness
5. Conflict
6. Local
7. Useful
8. Interesting or
entertaining
1. Thousands of migrants
missing in the Andaman Sea.
2. Strong monsoon forecast for
Yangon in June
3. Villages along the Chindwin
River are disappearing due to
illegal gold mining
4. Disabled Myanmar soldiers
will be entitled to four kinds of
pensions
5. Parliament approves a $138
million loan for a bridge to be
built between Yangon and
Dala
6. Parliament delays 5% tax on
top-up cards for cell phones
in Myanmar
Homework for June 15
• Read Chapter 3 in the text: Basic Story Structure
• Read the news: BBC Burmese Facebook and Irrawaddy
Facebook
• Study for quiz on June 15 on Chapter 4, lectures from this
week and the news from this week.
• Study for vocabulary quiz on June 22 using text and/or
Quizlet. On Quizlet, search “Reporting and Writing
News: A Basic Handbook”
• OPTIONAL: Be a Reporter Game on Newsu.org:
http://www.newsu.org/courses/be-reporter-game Free, but
requires registration.

What Is News - JNL-1102, Reporting and Writing I, Professor Austin, National Management College, Yangon, Myanmar

  • 2.
    Where Americans getnews TV is still No. 1. Internet growing fast. Print newspapers losing ground. Radio 4th and up slightly.
  • 3.
  • 4.
    Your news 1. Writedown your definition of news. 2. Write down a sentence or two about a news story you remember reading, viewing or hearing in the last few days. What made it memorable?
  • 5.
    WHAT IS NEWS? With youraudience in mind, use these questions to assess the newsworthiness of a story.
  • 6.
    Definitions of news “Newsis the first rough draft of history,” – Phil Graham, Washington Post publisher
  • 7.
    Definitions of news “Newsis anything that makes a reader say, ‘Gee whiz,’” – William Randolph Hearst, American newspaper tycoon
  • 8.
    Definitions of news “Newsis anything that will make people talk.” – Charles Dana, editor of The New York Sun MetropolitanMuseumofArt,NewYork
  • 9.
    Definitions of news “Newsis what somebody somewhere wants to suppress. All the rest is advertising.” – Lord Northcliffe, British newspaper tycoon
  • 10.
    Definitions of news “Whena dog bites a man, that is not news. But when a man bites a dog, that is news.” – Charles Dana, New York Sun editor
  • 11.
    Definitions of news “Whena dog bites a man, that is not news. But when a man bites a dog, that is news.” – Charles Dana, New York Sun editor
  • 12.
    Definitions of news “News:stories about events that have just happened and should be told to readers right away”– Writing and Reporting News
  • 13.
    Definitions of news “Newsis information that is important or interesting for a large number of people.”– Writing and Reporting News
  • 14.
    News depends onthe audience Students at the National Management College
  • 15.
  • 16.
  • 17.
    Different geography, differentaudiences Shan Herald ByWagnerT.Cassimiro"Aranha"
  • 18.
    Different geography, differentaudiences For a national, not regional, audience
  • 19.
    How is theaudience different?
  • 20.
    How is theaudience different?
  • 21.
    8 questions toask in search of news 1. Is it unusual? 2. Does it impact many people? 3. Are prominent people involved? 4. Is it timely? 5. Is it about a conflict? 6. Is it local? 7. Is it useful? 8. Is it interesting or entertaining? Photo by sskennel From page 18 of textbook
  • 22.
    8 questions toask in search of news 1. Is it unusual? 2. Does it impact many people? 3. Are prominent people involved? 4. Is it timely? 5. Is it about a conflict? 6. Is it local? 7. Is it useful? 8. Is it interesting or entertaining? Photo by sskennel From page 18 of textbook
  • 23.
    1. Is itunusual?
  • 24.
    8 questions toask in search of news 1. Is it unusual? 2. Does it impact many people? 3. Are prominent people involved? 4. Is it timely? 5. Is it about a conflict? 6. Is it local? 7. Is it useful? 8. Is it interesting or entertaining? Photo by sskennel From page 18 of textbook
  • 25.
    2. Does itimpact many people?
  • 26.
    8 questions toask in search of news 1. Is it unusual? 2. Does it impact many people? 3. Are prominent people involved? 4. Is it timely? 5. Is it about a conflict? 6. Is it local? 7. Is it useful? 8. Is it interesting or entertaining? Photo by sskennel From page 18 of textbook
  • 27.
    3. Are prominentpeople involved? “I don’t know all the acronyms that NGO workers know. But that’s a good thing when it comes to the average Joe watching TV in America.” – Actor Matt Dillon From Coconuts Yangon
  • 28.
  • 29.
    8 questions toask in search of news 1. Is it unusual? 2. Does it impact many people? 3. Are prominent people involved? 4. Is it timely? 5. Is it about a conflict? 6. Is it local? 7. Is it useful? 8. Is it interesting or entertaining? Photo by sskennel From page 18 of textbook
  • 30.
    4. Is ittimely? “News is anything you know now that you did not know 15 minutes ago – or 15 seconds ago.” Mario Garcia, news-design expert 8 minutes after the bombing!
  • 31.
    8 questions toask in search of news 1. Is it unusual? 2. Does it impact many people? 3. Are prominent people involved? 4. Is it timely? 5. Is it about a conflict? 6. Is it local? 7. Is it useful? 8. Is it interesting or entertaining? Photo by sskennel From page 18 of textbook
  • 32.
    5. Is itabout a conflict?
  • 33.
    8 questions toask in search of news 1. Is it unusual? 2. Does it impact many people? 3. Are prominent people involved? 4. Is it timely? 5. Is it about a conflict? 6. Is it local? 7. Is it useful? 8. Is it interesting or entertaining? Photo by sskennel From page 18 of textbook
  • 34.
    6. Is itlocal? What if the cruise ship had sunk on the Hlaing River in Yangon?
  • 35.
  • 36.
  • 37.
  • 38.
  • 39.
    8 questions toask in search of news 1. Is it unusual? 2. Does it impact many people? 3. Are prominent people involved? 4. Is it timely? 5. Is it about a conflict? 6. Is it local? 7. Is it useful? 8. Is it interesting or entertaining? Photo by sskennel From page 18 of textbook
  • 40.
    7. Is ituseful?
  • 41.
  • 42.
    8 questions toask in search of news 1. Is it unusual? 2. Does it impact many people? 3. Are prominent people involved? 4. Is it timely? 5. Is it about a conflict? 6. Is it local? 7. Is it useful? 8. Is it interesting or entertaining? Photo by sskennel From page 18 of textbook
  • 43.
    8. Is itinteresting or entertaining? • Often, sports news. • Also, well- written stories • “Human interest” • “Soft news”
  • 44.
    8. Is itinteresting or entertaining? • Often, sports news. • Also, well- written stories • “Human interest • “Soft news”
  • 45.
    “Hey, MARTHA” test 8. Isit interesting or entertaining? ByBenGarney
  • 46.
    Hard news vs.soft news Hard or breaking news Timely stories about events that have just happened or are about to happen. Examples: • Crime • Accidents • Disasters • Government reports • Parliament passes a law • One company buys another • Results of a badminton match Photo by Steven Taschuk
  • 47.
  • 48.
    Hard news vs.soft news Soft news or features News that entertains or informs with an emphasis on human interest and novelty and less so on immediacy. Often, inspires warm and fuzzy feelings. Examples: • Animals • Children • Celebrities • Humor • Holidays Photo by Nathan
  • 49.
    Hard news orsoft news?
  • 50.
    Hard news orsoft news?
  • 51.
    Hard news orsoft news?
  • 52.
    Hard news orsoft news?
  • 53.
    Hard news orsoft news?
  • 54.
    Hard news orsoft news?
  • 55.
    Your turn! News judgmentis the ability to determine which stories are most interesting and important to readers. News judgment is a muscle that you must use to develop. PhotobyEneasDeTroya
  • 56.
    8 questions toask in search of news 1. Is it unusual? 2. Does it impact many people? 3. Are prominent people involved? 4. Is it timely? 5. Is it about a conflict? 6. Is it local? 7. Is it useful? 8. Is it interesting or entertaining? Photo by sskennel From page 18 of textbook
  • 57.
    Your turn! A storythat tells parents about the elimination of school fees for high school students relies most heavily on which element of news? a. Impact b. Timeliness c. Prominence
  • 58.
    Your turn! A storythat tells parents about the elimination of school fees for high school students relies most heavily on which element of news? a. Impact b. Timeliness c. Prominence
  • 59.
    Your turn! Last week,a football player in Thailand suffered a concussion, and he will be unable to play for the rest of the season. The Myanmar Times ran a paragraph about him. Now, a football player in Yangon has suffered the same injury with the same result, and the paper is devoting a full page to him and his injury. What element of news is causing this different treatment? a. Useful b. Local c. Conflict
  • 60.
    Your turn! Last week,a football player in Thailand suffered a concussion, and he will be unable to play for the rest of the season. The Myanmar Times ran a paragraph about him. Now, a football player in Yangon has suffered the same injury with the same result, and the paper is devoting a full page to him and his injury. What element of news is causing this different treatment? a. Useful b. Local c. Conflict
  • 61.
    Your turn! Burma saysit has found a rare, white elephant in the jungles of the western Ayeyarwaddy region. The story is newsworthy because it is: a. Useful b. Unusual c. Impact
  • 62.
    Your turn! Burma saysit has found a rare, white elephant in the jungles of the western Ayeyarwaddy region. The story is newsworthy because it is: a. Useful b. Unusual c. Impact
  • 63.
    Your turn! Two celebrities,vocal stars Lynn Lynn and Chit Thu Wai, get married in Yangon. The story is newsworthy because it has a. Usefulness b. Conflict c. Prominence
  • 64.
    Your turn! Two celebrities,vocal stars Lynn Lynn and Chit Thu Wai, get married in Yangon. The story is newsworthy because it is: a. Usefulness b. Conflict c. Prominence
  • 65.
    Your turn! Myanmar andBangladesh disagree on where nearly 1,000 people rescued in May from boats off the Myanmar coast are from. The story is newsworthy because it has: a. Usefulness b. Conflict c. Prominence
  • 66.
    Your turn! Myanmar andBangladesh disagree on where nearly 1,000 people rescued in May from boats off the Myanmar coast are from. The story is newsworthy because it has: a. Usefulness b. Conflict c. Prominence
  • 67.
    Your turn! Myanmar PresidentU Thein Sein promises to set a minimum wage for workers before the election. The story is newsworthy because it is: a. Useful b. Unusual c. Timely
  • 68.
    Your turn! Myanmar PresidentThein Sein promises to set a minimum wage for workers before the election. The story is newsworthy because it is: a. Useful b. Conflict c. Timely
  • 69.
    Your turn! Four peopledied in a landslide following heavy rain in the ruby-mining town of Mogok. The story is newsworthy because it is: a. Useful b. Prominent c. Timely
  • 70.
    Your turn! Four peopledied in a landslide following heavy rain in the ruby-mining town of Mogok. The story is newsworthy because it is: a. Useful b. Prominent c. Timely
  • 71.
    Your turn! The Irrawaddydoes a feature story on the few dozen photojournalists in Burma and the dangers they face. The story is newsworthy because it is: a. Useful b. Interesting c. Timely
  • 72.
    Your turn! The Irrawaddydoes a feature story on the few dozen photojournalists in Burma and the dangers they face. The story is newsworthy because it is: a. Useful b. Interesting c. Timely
  • 73.
    How news judgmentsget made Every day in newsrooms worldwide, editors make news judgments about what runs on the front page. Here’s how those decisions get made at:
  • 74.
    Hold your ownnews meeting • Pick your top 3 stories based on these elements: 1. Unusual 2. Impact 3. Prominence 4. Timeliness 5. Conflict 6. Local 7. Useful 8. Interesting or entertaining 1. Thousands of migrants missing in the Andaman Sea. 2. Strong monsoon forecast for Yangon in June 3. Villages along the Chindwin River are disappearing due to illegal gold mining 4. Disabled Myanmar soldiers will be entitled to four kinds of pensions 5. Parliament approves a $138 million loan for a bridge to be built between Yangon and Dala 6. Parliament delays 5% tax on top-up cards for cell phones in Myanmar
  • 75.
    Homework for June15 • Read Chapter 3 in the text: Basic Story Structure • Read the news: BBC Burmese Facebook and Irrawaddy Facebook • Study for quiz on June 15 on Chapter 4, lectures from this week and the news from this week. • Study for vocabulary quiz on June 22 using text and/or Quizlet. On Quizlet, search “Reporting and Writing News: A Basic Handbook” • OPTIONAL: Be a Reporter Game on Newsu.org: http://www.newsu.org/courses/be-reporter-game Free, but requires registration.