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TV
News Reporting and Production MCM
516
VU
LESSON
16
SELECTION
OF THE NEWS
What
is News?
News
is some thing or matter new, fresh,
unusual, unique, strange and
exclusive.
It
may be defined as accurate
fact or idea that will
interest a large number of viewers. In a
news
strangeness,
abnormality, unexpectedness and nearness
of and event, all add to interest in the
news
story.
The
American College Dictionary defines
news as "A report of any
recent event or situation and as
the
report
of event published in a newspaper"
According
to Lord Northcliffe' "if a dog bites a
man it is no news but if a
man bites a dog it's
news."
News
is in fact a communication between human beings
from the earliest period of human
civilization.
News
is information about an event,
some development plan, and movement of
important persons as it
is
said, "big names make big
news."
Qualities
of news
·
Accurate
·
Balanced
·
Truthful
·
Recent
·
Exact
·
Perfect
·
Objective
·
Impartial
·
Unbiased
·
Disinclined
·
Concise
·
Short
·
Brief
·
To
the point
·
Clear
Elements
of news
·
Timeliness/Immediacy
·
Proximity
·
Consequence
·
Prominence
·
Suspense
·
Mystery
·
Oddity
·
Conflict
·
Progress
·
Action
·
Interest
·
Human
Emotions
67
TV
News Reporting and Production MCM
516
VU
News
and Documentary Production
Twelve
Factors in Newsworthiness
Those
involved in broadcast news
must understand 12 factors that
constitute news value,
or
newsworthiness.
¤
Timeliness
¤
proximity
¤
exceptional quality
¤
possible future
impact
¤
prominence
¤
conflict
¤
the number of people involved or
affected
¤
consequence
¤
human interest
¤
pathos
¤
shock value
¤
titillation component
1.
Timeliness:
News
is what's new. An afternoon
raid on a rock cocaine house
may warrant a live
ENG
report
during the 6 p.m. news. However,
tomorrow, unless there are
major new developments, the
same
story
will probably not be
important enough to
mention.
2.
Proximity: If
15 people are killed in your
hometown, your local TV
station will
undoubtedly
consider
it news. But if 15 people
are killed in Manzanillo,
Montserrat, Moyobambaor, or some
other
distant
place you've never heard of, it
will probably pass without
notice. But there are
exceptions.
3.
Exceptional quality: One
exception centers on how the
people died. If the people in
Manzanillo
were
killed because of a bus or
car accident, this would not
be nearly as newsworthy as if they
died
from
an earthquake or stings from "killer
bees," feared insects that have
now invaded the United
States.
Exceptional
quality refers to how uncommon an event
is. A man getting a job as a
music conductor is
not
news--unless that man is
blind.
4.
Possible future impact: The
killer bee example
illustrates another news element:
possible future
impact.
The fact that the killer
bees are now in the
United States and may
eventually be a threat to
people
watching the news makes the
story much more
newsworthy.
A
mundane burglary of an office in the
Watergate Hotel in Washington, DC,
was hardly news until
two
reporters
named Woodward and Bernstein
saw the implications and the possible
future impact.
Eventually,
the story behind this
seemingly common burglary brought
down a U.S. President.
5.
Prominence: The
15 deaths in Manzanillo might
also go by unnoticed by the local media
unless
someone
prominent was on the bus--possibly a
movie star or a well-known
politician. If a U.S.
Supreme
Court Justice gets married,
it's news; if John Smith,
your next-door neighbor,
gets married, it
probably
isn't.
6.
Conflict: Conflict
in its many forms has
long held the interest of observers.
The conflict may be
physical
or emotional. It can be open, overt
conflict, such as a civil
uprising against police authority,
or
it
may be ideological conflict between
political candidates.
The
conflict could be as simple as a
person standing on his
principles and spending a year fighting
city
hall
over a parking citation. In
addition to "people against people"
conflict, there can be conflict
with
wild
animals, nature, the environment, or even the frontier
of space.
7.
The number of people
involved or affected: The
more people involved
in
a news event, be it a
demonstration
or a tragic accident, the more newsworthy the
story is. Likewise, the number of
people
affected
by
the event, whether it's a
new health threat or a new
tax ruling, the more newsworthy
the
story
is.
8.
Consequence: The
fact that a car hit a
utility pole isn't news,
unless, as a consequence, power is
lost
throughout
a city for several hours. The
fact that a computer virus
found its way into a
computer system
68
TV
News Reporting and Production MCM
516
VU
might
not be news until it
bankrupts a business, shuts
down a telephone system, or
endangers lives by
destroying
crucial medical data at a
hospital.
9.
Human interest: Human-interest
stories are generally soft
news. Examples would be a baby
beauty
contest,
a person whose pet happens to be a
nine-foot boa constrictor, or a man
who makes a cart so
that
his
two-legged dog can move
around again.
On
a slow news day even a story
of fire fighters getting a
cat out of a tree might make
a suitable story.
(Or,
as shown here, a kid meeting a
kid.) Human-interest angles
can be found in most hard
news stories.
A
flood will undoubtedly have
many human-interest angles: a lost child
reunited with its parents
after
two
days, a boy who lost
his dog, or families
returning to their mud-filled
homes.
10.
Pathos: The
fact that people like to
hear about the misfortunes of others
can't be denied. Seeing or
hearing
about such things commonly
elicits feelings of pity,
sorrow, sympathy, and compassion.
Some
call
these stories "tear
jerkers."
Examples
are the child who is now
all alone after his
parents were killed in a car accident,
the elderly
woman
who just lost her life
savings to a con artist, or the blind man
whose seeing-eye dog
was
poisoned.
This
category isn't just limited
to people. How about horses
that were found neglected and starving,
or
the
dog that sits at the curb
expectantly waiting for its
master to return from work
each day, even though
the
man was killed in an accident
weeks ago.
11.
Shock value: An
explosion in a factory has
less shock value if it was
caused by gas leak than if
it
was
caused by a terrorist. The
story of a six year-old boy
who shot his mother
with a revolver found in
a
bedside
drawer has more shock (and
therefore news) value than
if same woman died of a heart
attack.
Both
shock value and the titillation
factor (below) are well
known to the tabloid press.
The lure of these
two
factors is also related to some
stories getting inordinate
attention, such as the sordid
details of a
politician's
or evangelist's affair--which brings us to the
final point.
12.
Titillation
component:
This
factor primarily involves gender and is
commonly featured--some
would
say exploited--during rating
periods.
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