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News writing strives to be objective, engaging, succinct and intelligible to the vast majority of potential readers. Within the limits created by these goals, news stories also aim for a kind of comprehensiveness. They attempt to answer all the questions Who? What? Where? Why? and How? The goal is not comprehensiveness per se, but satisfaction of reader curiosity. Journalists try to anticipate and to answer not only the questions with which readers will arrive at a topic but also those the story itself is liable to provoke.
Journalistic prose is explicit and precise, but it does not rely on jargon. As a rule, journalists will not use a long word when a short one will do. They use subject-object-verb construction and vivid, active verbs. They offer anecdotes, examples and metaphors, and they rarely depend on colorless generalizations or abstract ideas. News writers avoid using the same word more than once in a paragraph (called an "echo"). Most importantly, they use neutral or nonjudgemental language. Journalists view non-neutral words and unattributed statements of opinion as "editorializing" or failures of objectivity.
Teachers often describe the organization or structure of a news story as an "inverted pyramid." In essence, a journalist "top loads" the essential and most interesting elements of his or her story. Supporting information then follows in order of diminishing importance.
The most important structural element of a story is its lead (or sometimes lede), which may in fact be all of a story that many people will read. The lead is the first sentence, or in special cases the first two sentences. The top-loading principle applies especially to leads, but the unreadability of long sentences constrains the size of the load. This makes writing a lead into an optimization problem, in which the goal is to articulate the most encompassing and interesting statement that a writer can make in one sentence, given the material he or she has to work with.
While a rule of thumb says the lead should answer most or all of the "5 W's" (Who? What? When? Where? Why?), few leads fit all of these in. If they did they would either be tedious, opaque with jargon or they would be too long.
The second paragraph is a fine place for vital information that does not appear in the first. At the very end comes the non-vital material.
This structure enables readers to quit at any point and still come away with the essence of a story. It allows individuals to enter a topic to the depth that their curiosity takes them, and without the imposition of details or nuances that they would consider irrelevant.
Newsroom practicalities represent another rationale. The inverted pyramid structure enables editors and other news staff to quickly create space for ads and late-breaking news simply by cutting paragraphs from the bottom ("cutting" literally, at the papers that still use traditional paste-up[?] techniques). The structure frees editors to truncate stories at almost any length that suits their needs for space.
In fact, news stories aren't the only stories that appear in newspapers and magazines. Longer articles, such as magazine cover articles and the pieces that lead the inside sections of a newspaper, are known as features. Feature stories differ from straight news in several ways. Foremost is the absence of a straight-news lead, at least most of the time. Instead of offering the essence of a story up front, feature writers typically attempt to lure readers in. A feature's first paragraphs often relate an intriguing moment or event. The section that signals what a feature is about is called its billboard. The billboard typically appears as the third or fourth paragraph from the top, and may be up to two paragraphs long. Unlike a lead, a billboard rarely gives everything away. This reflects the fact that feature writers aim to hold their readers to the end, which requires engendering curiosity and offering a "payoff." Feature paragraphs tend to be longer than those of news stories, with smoother transitions between them. Feature writers use the active-verb construction and concrete explanations of straight news, but often they put more personality in their prose. Feature stories close with a "kicker." In feature writing it's always a mistake to end by simply petering out...like this.
See also: Wikipedia:News style
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