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Feature
and Column Writing MCM 514
VU
LESSON
12
NEWSPAPER
FEATURE STORY
The
concept is to write something like a
non-fiction short story:
quotation-filled, descriptive,
entertaining,
informative.
First, it needs to do some
research check the newspaper
library for previous stories
about
the
subject. Story will be even stronger if a
nationally or an internationally recognised
source is used.
Beginning
reporters working for small-circulation
dailies are expected to be able to
write both news and
feature
stories. Often a reporter's
first months on the job may
consist of even more feature writing
than
weighty
news writing, until a "beat"
is assigned or the reporter otherwise
gains the confidence of the
editor.
Feature
writing, then, is a crucial weapon in the
arsenal of writing talents required of
the professional
print
journalist, particularly now,
when broadcast news also is
focusing more and more on such
popular
stories.
A
feature story is a journalistic
article that is typically
both original and
descriptive. Some feature
stories
are
geared toward entertainment
with little information.
Other features inform, but
entertain little. The
best
combine both aspects.
A
feature story is original in
two ways. First, it is original in
respect to the way it is written.
News stories
are
commonly written in what is
called the inverted pyramid
style. This rigid form,
which evolved about
the
time of the American Civil
War, demands that a story
begin with a one-paragraph lead of one
or
perhaps
two sentences summing up the essence of
the story. The lead is short,
typically less than
35
words.
The rest of the story is
written in a declining order of
importance, with information
proceeding
from
the most important to the least
important.
The
inverted pyramid made sense
during the Civil War because
stories often were filed
using telegraph
lines,
which could be disrupted at
any time. In that situation,
it obviously was a good idea
first to send a
summary--or
what journalists today call
the lead of the story--and then to
transmit the rest of the
story
with
information in a declining order of
importance. The inverted
pyramid style of news-writing
makes
even
more sense today, for two
reasons. First, readers can
quickly scan the story by
reading the lead and
perhaps
a few additional paragraphs.
Second, busy editors can cut
lengthy news stories simply
by
removing
less important material from
the bottom of the
story.
Unlike
the news story's inverted
pyramid style, the feature
story's form is more fluid. Feature
stories
probably
date to the beginning of world
journalism, but they began
to assume their modern form in
the
United
States in the "penny press" of the
l830s. They most strongly
resemble short stories in
structure.
For
example, they have distinct
beginnings, middles and ends. Feature
stories, unlike news
stories, aren't
intended
for the scan-fling reader. They
must be read completely in
order to make sense. They
also must
be
edited carefully by removing
various sections from
throughout the text, rather than
just from the end.
Features
are also original because
they can be about virtually
any subject that falls
within the realm of
"human
interest," unlike news
stories, which presumably
are written only because
they cover newsworthy
events.
Human
interest obviously means what
"interests' people and a good
rule of thumb is that
anything that
interests
the feature writer and the
editor is also likely to interest a
substantial number of readers.
Human-
interest
stories can be about both
"people" and "things," but
journalists know that
"people" stories
typically
are more interesting and are more
often read than are
stories about "things." For
that matter,
stories
about unusual events are more
interesting than stories
about usual events.
In
summary, if you've found a
story about a person and something
about that individual is unusual,
you
probably
have a good feature story
idea.
Actually,
feature stories need not
even have the element of oddity for them to
contain human interest.
Some
feature writers maintain
they can write a good
feature story about
absolutely anyone and have, in
fact,
proved it by opening the city
telephone directory at random, pointing
to a name, and then doing
a
feature
story on the person they've
selected.
An
overview
Feature
stories tend to be
descriptive,
another
element of the definition. News stories
are supposed to be
objective,
which often precludes
description. For example, the
news writer would rarely
describe the
48
Feature
and Column Writing MCM 514
VU
subject
of a news story by height,
weight, hair colour, and
kind and type of clothing,
unless that
description
was vital to the story. Yet
the feature writer routinely
uses this type of
description.
A
kind of description, evoking
imagery, is encouraged in a feature
story. But it would likely
be edited out
of
any news story.
A
feature story must remain
above all journalistic,
in
addition to being original and
often descriptive. By
that,
the feature writer is expected to
subscribe to the same standards of
journalistic accuracy as the
news
writer.
He or she must verify the
information, quote accurately and be
fair and precise with
description.
And
the feature writer follows
journalistic "style." Style is
nothing more than a uniform approach
to
punctuation,
capitalisation, abbreviation, titles and,
in some cases, spelling.
Most American
newspapers
today
have a fairly uniform journalistic
style. At one time, however,
newspaper reporters would have to
master
a local style every time
they moved to a new
newspaper.
In
summary, a feature is subject to the same
accuracy and style requirements as
any other story in
the
publication.
A
feature story traffics in
entertainment or information or both. It
should also have entertaining
moments,
perhaps
through examples or "anecdotes"
told by the mechanic. However, there is
nothing wrong with a
feature
that's very entertaining,
with little valuable
information. "Entertainment" in this
context can mean
an
interesting, amusing--or moving--feature
story.
A
feature story, then, is
significantly different from a
news story. The feature
has a beginning, a
middle
and
an end, and is intended to be read
completely and edited with
care. The feature can be
written about
almost
anything, but commonly is
written about an unusual person, place or
activity. It is accurate,
usually
filled with description and
may be sheer entertainment,
information-oriented or a combination
of
both.
Newspaper
feature story types: News
and timeless
features
Unlike
flavours of ice cream, there
are only two basic
kinds of newspaper features.
One
type is the news feature,
which usually is tied to a
breaking news event, is placed in the
same general
location
as the breaking story, and is
often written under deadline
pressure. This type of news
feature is
called
a "sidebar," in that it is a "side"
article that accompanies the
main news story. A variation
is a news
feature
that appears after the
publication of the hard news story.
Such a follow-up story is
often called a
"second-day"
feature.
The
other basic kind of feature
is the timeless story, which
does not have to be used
immediately in the
newspaper
and can sometimes be written
leisurely over a period of
two or three days or even weeks
or
months.
The
news feature is perhaps a
little less common than the
timeless feature in most
American newspapers.
This
may be because the news
feature often results in at
least two stories on a given
event: the news, or
"cover,"
story and its news feature.
Two stories, of course, mean
the editor will have to find
twice as
much
space and commit twice the
staff time to coverage of a single
event. At many newspapers
where
space
and personnel are at a premium,
editors are often reluctant
to make that decision. In
addition,
feature
stories, because of their
use of description and detail,
are often very difficult to
write under
deadline
pressure. Thus, because of space,
staffing and time problems, many
editors are prone to
ignore
feature
angles on breaking local
stories.
For
example, assume you are the
editor of a small-town afternoon
newspaper. Your deadline is
about
noon.
A school bus filled with
children on a field trip
crashes at about 9:00
A.M.,
and
you learn about the
accident
shortly before 10:00
A.M.
You
could easily assign a
reporter to the story, which
could gather the
facts
by telephone and have the news
story written by noon.
However, if you want a sidebar
feature about
the
crash--perhaps a personality profile of
the heroic bus driver who
pulled injured children from
the
wreck--
the story would be far more
difficult to write by the noon
deadline because it would
probably
require
an interview with the driver,
who might not be immediately
available by telephone. In
addition,
the
thorough feature writer
would want to see the crash
site firsthand and interview
witnesses as well as
surviving
children. That means more
time. All of this would be
difficult for one reporter to accomplish
by
the
noon deadline and probably
would require assigning a second
reporter to write the
feature.
A
good editor would assign the
second reporter to do the feature if a
reporter were, in fact, available.
If
the
editor lacked personnel, the available
reporter could write the
news story for deadline
and the feature
for
publication on the following, or second,
day of the coverage.
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Feature
and Column Writing MCM 514
VU
It
is also possible, of course, to write a
news feature about a
continuing news event and to
publish that
feature
on a day when there is nothing
about the main event in the
paper. For example, if
gasoline prices
have
been skyrocketing for the
past few weeks, it might be
appropriate to research and write a
feature
about
the expense of getting a gallon of
gasoline from the well to the
neighbourhood service station.
Here's
another example. A child is bitten by a
rabid skunk. A feature
writer is assigned to do a story
on
the
medical treatment required for
humans who have been exposed
to rabies. This story might
follow the
original
news story by four, five or
even more days. Both of these examples,
however, are
generally
known
as second-day stories.
The
other basic type of feature,
the timeless feature, is described by
just what the words imply--a
story
frozen
in time. Like frozen food,
the timeless feature will keep
for a long time without
spoiling. A
timeless
feature might be written in
early March and held for
April or even May before it is
published.
The
careful feature writer, of
course, will check back with
the subjects of the story before it is
published
to
ascertain that no facts have
changed since the interview. In
most instances, nothing will
have happened.
In
other cases, ages or
addresses will have to be updated. In
rare instances, feature
writers will find
that
major
changes will have occurred, perhaps even
including the death of the featured subject or of
others in
the
story.
The
news feature and the
timeless feature have a number of
characteristics in common. They are
original,
both
in form and subject matter. They
both use description to give
them life. They are held to
tight
journalistic
standards of accuracy. They inform or
entertain, and sometimes they do
both. In short, they
both
fall within the definition of
what a feature story is
supposed to be.
In
addition, news and timeless
features share at least one
other characteristic: They are
popular with
readers.
Many studies have shown that
readers of general-circulation newspapers
tremendously enjoy
well-written
features. And a feature story
with a photograph is an almost unbeatable recipe
for high
readership
because studies have shown that pictures
also have extremely high readership
value.
And
in that sense, feature
stories are a lot like
ice cream. Few ice
cream lovers are neutral
about a hot
fudge
sundae smothered with rich,
foamy whipped cream and
capped with a blushing
cherry. And few
newspaper
readers are neutral about a
well-written, anecdotally rich,
professionally illustrated news
or
timeless
feature.
News
features: Categories and
appeals
Feature
stories, while journalistic,
are first and foremost
stories,
with
beginnings, middles and
ends.
These
stories--albeit with different
characters in different
circumstances--tend to recur so frequently
that
they
can be divided into familiar
categories built around topics of
universal appeal.
Let's
look at the categories
first.
There
are at least 15 widely recognised types
of newspaper features and many more
when individual
variations
within categories are considered. All
can be either news or
timeless features, with the
exception
of
the "commemorative" feature, which is
almost always tied to a breaking
news event.
Remember
that while some categories
are about things, people
are more interesting. The
effective feature
writer
will try to transform the
"thing" feature into a
"people" feature.
The
Business Story:
The
problem with the business
story is that it is easy to
write a lacklustre little
feature about what a
business
sells (such as live lobsters),
makes (such as cardboard caskets) or
provides (such as removal
and
replacement
of aircraft warning lights
for television and radio towers).
Such stories, however, are
boring
(except
to the owner of the business), and
interesting stories are
usually very hard to come by
because
business
owners are fearful of tarnishing
their images and (unlike
government agencies) are not
required
to
provide you with any
information unless shares in the
business are traded on the stock
exchange.
Here's
how you can handle the
business feature. In most
cases, you should focus on an
employee or the
owner
of the business. If the business
has competition, you should
look for a timely or unusual
angle--a
reason
for writing the story about
that particular business at
that particular time--and
then try to
concentrate
on an individual. You should also
mention the competition to avoid the
appearance of giving
the
business free advertising
space. On the other hand, if it is a
business with no competition,
you could
50
Feature
and Column Writing MCM 514
VU
zero
in on why the owner started the
business and what
impediments he or she faced on the road
to
success.
Success is a universal appeal often
used by storytellers.
Above
all, be aware that you
are not writing a free
advertisement for the business. If your
article reads
like
copy you would expect to see
from the business's advertising
agency, press the "delete"
button on
your
video display terminal and
start over.
The
Commemorative Story:
Commemorative
stories are news features pegged to the
anniversary of an earlier news
event. The
commemorative
story is usually written
initially at the first anniversary,
with other stories following
at
five-year
intervals. Depending on the event,
you can interview people
who originally were involved in
the
story,
or, if the individuals are
dead or otherwise unavailable,
you can write an article
capturing the mood
of
the anniversary.
The
Explanatory Story:
You
can show the reader how
electricity or natural gas
reaches consumers' homes,
how a check written
at
a
store in a distant city
reaches the local bank, how
a television newscast is assembled, or
how a radio
commercial
is created. Again, you
should focus on a person in the
process.
Be
forewarned: This type of
story requires saturation research;
you have to know almost as much
about
the
process as does the expert in
your story.
The
First-Person Story:
In
the typical first-person story, something
dramatic happens to the writer that is so
personal that nothing
less
than the first person
singular ("I") is appropriate.
For example, read the first
45 words from an award-
winning
New York Times
feature
about toxic shock
syndrome.
The
Historical Story:
The
historical feature is usually
loosely pegged to a breaking news
event, which gives the
feature writer
an
excuse to do some research in the
library and to show readers how
their community or world
has
changed.
The
Hobbyist Story:
Everyone
collects something, ranging from stuffed
aardvarks to matchbook covers. Some
hobbyists have
extraordinary
collections. As a feature writer,
your job is to make certain
that you are writing
about the
right
collector--the one with the biggest, best
or most unusual collection in your
area. Check this out
by
talking
to other collectors who can
identify dealers who in turn
can lead you to national
publications that
provide
a clearinghouse for collectors across the
country. If you're about to
interview a collector
with
10,000
rubber ducks and the editor of the
national publication serving
rubber-duck collectors says
that's a
big
collection, you're in
business.
The
How-To Story:
The
interview with one or more experts who
advise the reader how to accomplish a
tricky task is a
meat-
and-potatoes
newspaper feature story.
Because experts make a living
charging customers for
such
information,
they are often reluctant to
give much free advice in an
interview. Consequently, you
may
find
yourself calling a number of professionals
before you are able to piece
together a coherent, helpful
account.
These stories are usually
timeless articles but can be
news features if they are pegged to a
season
or
a news event such as a flood
(for instance, how to dry a
wet carpet).
The
Invention Story:
You
have probably heard about an inventor
who is developing a light
bulb that never burns out or
perhaps
toothpaste
that stains teeth red when
they are inadequately brushed.
Inventors are good feature
material.
But
there's hitch to this kind
of story: Inventors usually
will not give interviews
until they have
formally
applied
for a patent to protect their
ideas, and conservative inventors
will not discuss their
ideas until a
patent
has actually been granted, a
process that often takes
years. Timing is the
key.
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and Column Writing MCM 514
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The
Medical Story:
People
get sick. And people die,
some well before their
time. There are strong
feature stories in
illness
and
death, albeit tough ones to
write.
Let's
look at stories of illness
first. Serious illnesses require huge
amounts of money. Some
people don't
have
adequate medical insurance. Thus,
relatives of a sick person--often of a
sick child--frequently
seek
out
feature writers to chronicle the
family's financial plight in
hopes that the story may
trigger donations.
If
the medical insurance is adequate
but the disease is unusual, the medical
story often is focused on
the
struggle
to find the appropriate treatment. If the ill
person has recovered from
the disease, a story can
be
written
tracing the struggle to overcome the
illness.
A
variation on the illness story is the
medical breakthrough story,
which often focuses on a
doctor who
has
succeeded in isolating the cause of a
disease.
Stories
about impending death are
extremely difficult to write
because of the emotional toll on
both the
interviewee
and the feature writer. Nonetheless,
such stories are
occasionally written. A person
who
learns
of terminal illness undergoes
certain attitude changes.
Eventually, many people
approaching death
find
comfort in leaving a message
for the living--perhaps a warning to
live life fully or to avoid
the
habits
that have brought on the disease.
The feature story carries
that message.
The
Number Story:
This
kind of feature uses
interviews with experts and a familiar
number such as "10" to put a
problem--
and
sometimes a solution--in
perspective.
The
Odd-Occupation Story:
Who
washes the outside windows of the
city's tallest building?
What's a workday like for a
modem
gravedigger?
Who heads the city police
bomb squad, and what does
that work involve? And
who changes
the
little light bulbs on top of
the local television station-transmitting
tower?
Every
community has scores of
individuals with unusual
jobs--occupations that are
dangerous,
unappealing,
or simply strange. Such
stories should prove
interesting to your
readers.
A
cautionary note: In the past,
some fairly ordinary occupations
became "odd" when a female
selected a
traditionally
male job--such as automobile mechanic--or
a male opted for a traditionally
female-filled
position,
but less feature value
exists today in sex-role stories. A male
"nanny" might be interviewed in
a
wider
feature about child-care experts,
but not merely because he is
a male looking after a
child.
The
usual story approach requires you to find
a person who has held an
odd occupation for some
time and
who
enjoys it, and to interview
that person about how the
job is performed, why he or
she chose the field,
or
both.
The
Overview Story:
Some
kinds of features--for example,
stories dealing with missing
children or with arson--can
be
supported
with voluminous statistics
from various official
sources. These statistics
can be used to
provide
the
reader with an informational
overview of the problem, in addition to
the emotional, humanistic
qualities
you will want to inject
into the story.
The
Participatory Story:
Participatory
stories go back to the days of Nellie
Bly of Joseph Pulitzer's New
York World. Bly,
whose
real
name was Elizabeth Cochrane, had
herself committed to a New
York State insane asylum in
order to
write
about conditions there,. Frank
Sutherland, a reporter for
The
Tennessean in Nashville
and later
president
of the Society of Professional Journalists, did the
same thing in Tennessee
about 75 years later.
And
the participatory story is the trademark
of writer George Plimpton,
who, among other things,
joined a
football
team and acted in a movie
for stories.
Hunter
S. Thompson, who used to write
for Rolling Stone magazine,
called this blatant
injection of the
writer
into the story "Gonzo
journalism." Gonzo or not, there is
nothing intrinsically wrong
with living a
role
in order to write about it,
unless you misrepresent
yourself to write about the
intimate details of
other
people.
And even that may not be
wrong in the case of investigative
reporters such as Bly and
Sutherland,
who
had no other means to investigate
serious social problems.
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Feature
and Column Writing MCM 514
VU
However,
most feature writers using
this approach will, like
Plimpton, make arrangements
beforehand
and
will "live" the story with
the permission of the participants.
In
Pakistan, it is a rarity.
The
Profile Story:
You
can profile practically
anyone or anything. Of course,
profiles are usually written
about people, with
their
cooperation. You usually pick
someone of interest, ask the subject for
an interview, research and
then
interview the individual and finally
talk to other people who
know the subject.
The
profile--with or without
cooperation--should paint a word
portrait of the subject. The reader
should
come
away from the profile with
an understanding of how the person
looks, sounds, and
thinks.
Groups,
institutions, events, and things
can be profiled, too. In
fact, in the early 1980s
writer Tracy
Kidder
even profiled the birth of a computer in
his award-winning book, The
Soul of a New
Machine.
The
Unfamiliar Visitor
Story:
A
visitor often offers a
unique perspective on a local problem,
culture or event. If the visitor is
available
for
an interview, his or her perspective can
often help readers understand
their world better.
Some
of these features tend to be
further categorised because they
are published in specific
newspaper
"sections"
such as business, entertainment,
fashion, food, health, home,
religion, society and travel.
For
example,
profile stories often appear
in business, entertainment, health,
religion, and society and
travel
sections.
On
the other hand, first person and
participatory stories often
wind up in newspaper Sunday
"magazines."
And
commemorative, historical and
unfamiliar-visitor stories frequently
find their way into a
newspaper's
primary
news section.
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