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Feature
and Column Writing MCM 514
VU
LESSON
08
STRUCTURE
OF FEATURES
Generally
speaking, there might not any
significance about the structure of a
feature, and people will
like
to
divide it into three major
portions, that is, the Intro,
body and conclusion.
However, with the passage
of
time
and considering the reservations and constraints of
the readers, one must be giving due
attention to
the
division, and especially the transition
from one portion to another, as a
reader must be carried
along
with
it. Otherwise, he might lose
interest in the middle, and would never
read that article
again.
A
feature is seldom written in the
traditional inverted pyramid
pattern or it can be written in a
narrative
fashion,
much like a good joke or
anecdote. A good feature requires as
much organisation as the
straight
news
story, for the feature has
to flow smoothly and parts of a
feature story must be kept
intact if it is to
succeed.
In the well-planned story, every
paragraph, every sentence, should
add to the total
effect.
However,
the structure may vary from
feature to feature. However, it
goes like this when it is
written with
the
usual standards.
Intro
or Lead
The
lead must attract immediate
attention and pull the
reader into the story. Leads
can vary in style
and
content.
You can use description,
narration, dialogue, question, unusual
statement, call to
action,
comparison-contrast.
(Discussed in detail in the last
lectures).
Transition
No
matter how good the lead is,
you need a solid transition
into the body of the feature. If
you think of the
lead
as a lure to attract the audience, then the
transition sets the hook. It
makes the reader want
to
continue.
And it promises some kind of
satisfaction or reward. The
reward can be
entertainment,
information
or self-awareness but has to be something
of value to the reader.
Body
Sound
knowledge of the subject, coupled with
good writing skills, will
let you take the reader
through a
variety
of experiences. You should use the
standard writing devices of crisp
dialogue, documental
but
vivid
fact and detail, careful
observation, suspense and if appropriate,
plot.
Body
is the major area
Whenever,
one is writing the body of a feature
which can carry many
short pieces following
points
must
be kept in mind.
Never
fill it, important
part
People
can try to fill the part
only may be thinking that
the reader has been gripped
into a certain
situation
and
he will stick to reading the
feature. It is never the case as the
newspaper reading is a willing one,
and
if
the reader feels that he is being
bored or over-burdened, he might
leave it even in the middle of the
feature.
So every word and concept
must be rightly written and
rightly placed.
Should
be well-connected, forceful and
coordinated
All
the paragraphs of the main body
should be well-connected with
each other. Jumping from one
idea to
another
should be well-thought and must be
seen whether it is getting
its connection to the previous or
the
following
paragraphs. Never take it
for granted that the reader is
going to form linkages in the
thought
process.
Avoid
unnecessary details
When
we say a particular portion of a
feature is the main body, it
never means that every
detail should be
put
in order to fill that body.
There must be only relevant
details without any
stuffing-the-sack idea.
The
writer
must consider that the main
body is as important as the other
portions of the feature.
Concentrating
in
the same manner like the
way the Intro or the Lead is
written, the reader will
remain absorbed in the
story.
37
Feature
and Column Writing MCM 514
VU
But
never omit important if it is required
so
If
unnecessary details are to be
avoided, then it never means
that the important should be
missed or
omitted
from the feature. Obviously the
responsibility of keeping this
intact and observing the rule
lies
with
the writer.
Building
towards the
climax
Main
body should be used as a
portion, which is building the
feature towards the climax. Hence, it
must
be
planned in this manner that
reader is expecting the climax
after the main
body.
Conclusion
The
conclusion should give the
reader a sense of satisfaction. You
need to tie the conclusion
to the lead so
that
the story has unity. Often
you can do this through a
short, tight summary, occasionally, you
can
conclude
with an anecdote or a quote
that sums up the substance of the
story. With a narrative
approach,
you
build toward a
climax.
Length
If
a reporter asks how long a
feature story should be, the
editor may reply, 'as
long as you keep it
interesting.'
Feature stories vary in length
from two or three paragraphs to 15 or 20
triple-spaced sheets of
copy.
Readers' interest is the main yardstick
by which they are judged.
And editors are paid to
accurately
assess
readers' interest.
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