You can follow Media Helping Media on Twitter @helpingmedia on our Posterous blog, on our Facebook page, and on our LinkedIn group

Media Helping Media

free training resources and support

Buy Adobe Creative Suite 5.5 Web Premium Student and Teacher for Mac OEM
Cheap Nuance Dragon Dictate for Mac
Buy Autodesk 3ds Max 2011
Cheap Steinberg Cubase 5
Buy Adobe Creative Suite 5 Master Collection Student and Teacher
Buy Mudbox 2012
viagra for women
buy viagra in australia
Buy Augmentin Online
Buy Actos Online
buy viagra cheap
Buy Altace Online

About MHM

Media Helping Media logoHelping journalists where the media is still developing

MHM Social Networks

Media Helping Media page on Facebook  Media Helping Media on Twitter      Storify
Media Helping Media's blog on Posterous  Media Helping Media on Tumblr  Media Helping Media on Flickr  Media Helping Media on YouTube  Media Helping Media on Slideshare

Latest comments

Google Adverts

Reproducing MHM content

Creative Commons License
Creative Commons License

Search this site

Currently on the site

We have 36 guests online

Facebook page

@helpingmedia on Twitter

Google Adverts

Free training resources

MHM
Pyramid journalism story construction
Training - Advanced journalism
Written by The News Manual   
Sunday, 08 February 2009
Share/Save/Bookmark

News stories go straight to the point. In this respect, they are quite unlike other forms of written English, such as novels and short stories, committee reports, letters and theses. All these are written primarily for people with the time to consider and absorb what has been written. In this module we take a high-level look at the principles of pyramid journalism as explained in The News Manual.

 

Pyramid journalism

News stories go straight to the point. In this respect, they are quite unlike other forms of written English, such as novels and short stories, committee reports, letters and theses. All these are written primarily for people with the time to consider and absorb what has been written.

In this module we take a high-level look at the principles of pyramid journalism as explained in The News Manual.

The inverted pyramid

Use the inverted pyramid style of newswriting to give your readers or listeners the most important facts first.

The basic shape of the news story is the inverted pyramid. This means that the most newsworthy key point comes first in the story, in the intro. This is followed by the other key points, in descending order of newsworthiness, so that the main detail comes first and the minor detail last.

Chronological order

If you need to tell part of the story in the order in which events happened, use chronological order after the opening paragraph - the intro - or first few paragraphs. This is an especially useful way of telling stories about sequences of events, rather than single events.

Pyramid of pyramids

If a story is complex with lots of different sections, speakers or issues, use the pyramid of pyramids style. In these cases when a story has a number of different parts to it, it is better to tell the story one part at a time than to jump backwards and forwards between the different parts.

This means that you go to the end of one part, telling the minor details about that, before moving on to the major details of the next part.

This story structure is a pyramid of pyramids, in which each part of the story is told in a mini-inverted pyramid of its own. The sequence of these mini-pyramids will depend upon the newsworthiness of each one. The most newsworthy part of the story will come first, followed by the other parts in decreasing order of importance.

 

[important color=green title=The News Manual]This article is reproduced with the permission of The News Manual - a professional resource for journalists and the media by Henshall and Ingram. This site is taking sharing training resources with The News Manual to ensure the resources have the widest audience. [/important]

 

Add comment

Please check the site's rules for posting before adding your comments. Thanks


Security code
Refresh

Google Adverts

 
Joomla 1.5 Templates by Joomlashack