Transcript Document

Inverted
Pyramid
Style
All stories
have shapes
The reporter’s job is to decide which
shape is best for the story
Inverted pyramid style
Goes from most interesting
information to least interesting
information.
Chronological style
Tells the story from beginning to
end, using fiction techniques.
Hourglass Structure
Combines the inverted
pyramid and the narrative
pyramid together
Champagne Glass
1. a compelling summary
2. Narrows into a
chronological account
3. A kicker
Section style
Told in parts, such as different time
frames, points or view, or as chapters
in a narrative
Inverted pyramid style
is the most common way to write a
news story.
The story is shaped this
way:
•Most important info in the lead
•Next most important info in the
second paragraph
•Least most important info at the end
Once it is written, the story is
“shaped” like this:
Lead
Details
Less impt.
details
Here’s an example of an inverted
pyramid news story:
A 16-year-old West High
School sophomore is in critical
condition today at River City
Hospital after being treated for
smoke inhalation at his home
last night.
Joe Smith, son of Bob and Carol
Smith of 116 Travis Lane, was
overcome by smoke in the family
garage about 8 p.m. after pouring
carbon solvent into the carburetor
intake of his car, according to a
hospital spokesman.
He was discovered by his
parents, who called an ambulance.
All of the information is not used
in the lead of the story. If we were
to label what is in the lead, it
would look like this:
who
what
A 16-year-old West High
School sophomore is in critical
condition today at River City
Hospital after being treated for
smoke inhalation at his home
last night.
where
why
when
Emphasizing the
“W’s and H”
A lead may begin with any of
the who, what, when, where,
why and how, depending where
the reporter wants to place
emphasis.
Emphasis on “who”
The Yorktown High School
Football Booster Club is having its
bookkeeping files investigated by the
Yorktown School District.
Emphasis on “what”
An investigation into the
bookkeeping files of the Yorktown
High School Football Booster
Club has begun by the Yorktown
School District.
Emphasis on “when”
Late yesterday afternoon, the
Yorktown School District opened
an investigation into the
bookkeeping files of the
Yorktown High School Football
Booster Club.
Emphasis on “where”
Yorktown High School in Smith
County is having its Football
Booster Club bookkeeping files
investigated by the school district.
Emphasis on “why”
Because of irregular spending
practices, the Yorktown School
District has opened an investigation
into the bookkeeping files of the
Yorktown High School Football
Booster Club.
Emphasis on “how”
A full-scale audit and investigation
for the past six months will be
conducted on the bookkeeping files of
the Yorktown High School Football
Booster Club, the school district
announced yesterday.
Another example of inverted
pyramid style
Ben Davis, 85, of 345 Benson St.,
was killed in an automobile accident
on Warner Road about 1:30 p.m.
Sunday, according to the Arkansas
State Police.
Davis, a Hot Springs farmer, was
killed when his car left the road and
struck a tree two miles east of town
on Warner Road, police said.
Same story, written in
chronological style
Today at 1:30 p.m., Ben Davis,
who is a farmer at 345 Benson St.,
was driving home on Warner Road.
He was two miles east of town when
his car went off the road and hit a
tree.
Davis, 85, was killed instantly,
according to a hospital spokesman.
He was pronounced dead on arrival
at the hospital.
Why is inverted pyramid
style used?
It allows the reader to read only the
lead and know most of the important
information.
It allows the editor to cut the least
important information from the
bottom of the story and not worry
about leaving out anything of great
importance.
How did inverted pyramid
style begin?
During the Civil War, telegraph wires
relaying news were sometimes cut by
opposing sides. As a result, war
correspondents began using the most
important part of the story first.
The Hourglass Structure
• The hourglass was named by my
colleague Roy Peter Clark in 1983 after
he had begun to notice something new in
his morning paper.
• It wasn’t the news; it was the way the
news was being told. In their stories,
reporters seemed to be combining two
forms: the inverted pyramid and the
narrative.
• THE TOP. Here you deliver the news in a
summary lead, followed by three or four
paragraphs that answer the reader’s
most pressing questions. In the top you
give the basic news, enough to satisfy a
time-pressed reader. You report the story
in its most concise form. If all that is
read is the top, the reader is still
informed. Because it’s limited to four to
six paragraphs, the top of the story
should contain only the most significant
information.
•
• THE TURN. Here you signal the reader
that a narrative, usually chronological, is
beginning. Usually, the turn is a
transitional phrase that contains
attribution for the narrative that follows:
according to police, eyewitnesses
described the event this way, the
shooting unfolded this way, law
enforcement sources and neighbors
agree.
•
• THE NARRATIVE. The story
has three elements: a
beginning, middle and end.
The bottom allows the writer
to tell a chronological
narrative complete with
detail, dialogue, and
background information.
•
• The hourglass can be used in all
kinds of stories: crime, business,
government, even to report
meetings. It’s best suited, however,
for dramatic stories that can be told
in chronological fashion. In the
right hands, as the following story
from The Miami Herald illustrates,
the hourglass is a virtuoso form
that provides the news-conscious
discipline of the inverted pyramid
and the storytelling qualities of the
classic narrative.
A salute to the Class of 2011
• as we mentioned before the break, the
time has come tonight to continue our
annual tradition around here, showing
you the best of this year's college
commencements, and meeting members
of the graduating class along the way.
there's no shortage of advice for them.
but among them there's no shortage of
brains or talent or spirit, either. so here
now, your class of 2011 .
• I think it's incredible that four years have
gone by in the blink of an eye .
• I have very persnickety hair.
• the jig is up. the clock has run out. and
the future with a capital f now rests with
all of you and your goofy hats.
• the plot you choose may change or even
elude you. but being your own story
means you can control the theme.
• I'm Matthew Randall.
• I definitely very silly.
• I'm michael nguyen. I'm very personable.
• I'm a student veteran.
• let's think about those who
would love to be sitting in the
chairs you occupy today. the
entire time you've been here at
fordham there have been young
men and women in uniform
over there serving in two wars.
• my time in iraq is really, really hard to
put to words.
• you were young children when you
watched planes hit the world trade
center. you quickly understood what it
was like to feel out of control.
• i was in the seventh grade. from the
window we could see the smoke coming
from the towers
• the shooting brought to my front yard
things that i thought i had put away a
long time ago. this is a beloved member
of this community.
• the country's most powerful earthquake –
• the massive earthquake and tsunami hit
my home town in Japan. everything was
gone.
• i looked out, and i couldn't see the end of the
tornado to left or right. it's an awe-inspiring
terror.
• i can report to the American people -• we ran down to the white house to celebrate
that moment in history
• do not let the many challenges of the world
discourage you. don't let the cynics and
skeptics dampen your enthusiasm. dream, my
friends. dream. you fall up
• i dream to be a film director and producer.
• well, i have lots of dreams. i dream of saving
the world .
• what brought down hosni mubarak was not
facebook, and it was not twitter. it was a
million people in the streets ready to die for
what they believed in. so if you want to get
something done in the world, never forget,
ultimately you have to get out of facebook
and into somebody's face.
• and every single day I walk into the oval office ,
and for all the days of my life i will always
remember that in no other nation on earth
could my story be possible. could your stories
be possible.
• we are some of the most resilient -• determined. compassionate. we are unwilling
to carry on the hatred. i really love you.
• so there you have it. humility, patience, and
faith. and always a few tears from me.
• i'm the class. of 2011 .