TY - BOOK AU - Boyd Andrew TI - Broadcast Jounalism: Techniques of Radio and Television News SN - 81-312-0705-6 U1 - 070.194 23 PY - 2001/// CY - New Delhi PB - Focal Press N1 - Part One Broadcast Journalism NEWS GATHERING 1 The best job in town Personal qualities Jobs in broadcasting Radio Television The multi-skilled broadcast journalist Freelancing Industry training Training courses Degree, or not degree …? Getting a foot in the door A level playing field? 2 What is news? Proximity Relevance Immediacy Interest Drama Entertainment Different types of news Checklist Fieldwork 3 News sources Reporters Contacts Newsroom diary Files Check calls Emergency services radio Politicians Pressure groups Staged events News releases Syndicated recordings Freelances Tip-offs Hoaxes Wire services and news agencies The network Other news media Shared material Fieldwork 4 Getting the story Newsroom conference Copytasting Balance of news Visuals and actuality The brief The angle Chasing the contact Staged news conferences Beating the clock Work to sequence Don't panic Fieldwork WRITING FOR BROADCAST 5 Conversational writing Telling the story Writing for a mass audience No second chance Confusing clauses Inverted sentences Plain English Familiar words Easy listening Accurate English Keep it concrete Make it interesting Contractions Rhythm Fieldwork 6 Newswriting The news angle Multi-angled stories Hard news formula The intro Placing key words Feature openers Developing the story Signposting Last line Last words Accuracy Fieldwork 7 Broadcast style book Clichés Journalese Hyperbole Adjectives Quotations Attribution Contentious statements Immediacy Active Positive Redundancies Repetition Homonyms Singular or plural? Pronouns Punctuation Spelling Abbreviations Figures Proof reading Ambiguity Fieldwork INTERVIEWING 8 The interview The interviewer's skill Different types of interview A disaster story? The disaster story continues … Fieldwork 9 Setting up the interview Background A plan of campaign – the questions Get your facts right Fit the brief Check arrangements Approach The questions Winding up the interview Being interviewed yourself: the Q & A Fieldwork THE NEWS PROGRAMME 10 From 2-minute headlines to 24-hour news The bulletin News programmes Documentary Vérité 24-hour news Who does what? Fieldwork 11 Item selection and order ‘A fair picture …’ Second thoughts Item order Local considerations Foreign coverage Producing a running order Fieldwork 12 Putting the show together Winning an audience – the openers Keeping an audience – headlines and promotions Actuality Pictures Graphics Programme balance – being all things to all people Nightly News And now the good news? Fieldwork 13 Making the programme fit Cutting Filling Backtiming Fieldwork PRESENTING THE NEWS 14 News anchors and presenters The talent Qualities of a newscaster Women newscasters More than just a newsreader … Professionalism Voice Fieldwork 15 ÔOn-air!Õ Performance Presence Getting through to the audience – rapport Know your material Ad-libs The gate Making a swift recovery Corpsing Relaxation Fieldwork 16 Newsreading mechanics Speed Breathing Projection Emphasis Pitch Microphone technique Using the prompter Noise, noise, noise Bringing the story to life Fieldwork DUTIES AND DILEMMAS 17 Power, freedom and responsibility Power The law The regulators ‘Independence’ Censorship in developing nations The myth of objectivity Impartiality under fire Responsible reporting Internal pressures on reporting National Union of Journalists’ Code of Professional Conduct Fieldwork Part Two Radio INSIDE THE BBC WORLD SERVICE 18 The best of British The newsroom Foreign correspondents Bi-media reporting The news conference The stories Accuracy The service Newsdesk Newsreaders Independence The way ahead? Fieldwork RADIO NEWS COVERAGE 19 Story treatment Newsflash (bulletin, US) Headline Copy story Voicer or voice report Teaser or taster Voice report from the scene Interview Newsclip Package Mini-wrap Fieldwork THE EQUIPMENT 20 Recording Principles of recording Using portable sound recorders Before the interview Fieldwork 21 Editing ‘You can't see the join’ Unethical editing Digital audio editing Multi-tracking Analogue editing Mixing Types of fade Fieldwork 22 The studio today and radio tomorrow On-air studio Talks studio The contributions studio Remote studios Radio car Outside broadcast vehicle Portable telephones Telephone reports Obscenity button Tomorrow today Fieldwork Part Three Television INSIDE ITN 23 Independent Television News Getting the news The editors The producers Getting the programme on air Fieldwork 24 A story is born Fieldwork TV NEWS COVERAGE 25 Gathering the news ENG (electronic newsgathering) The outside broadcast Getting the story back Master control room Fieldwork 26 Camera shots The shots Camera positions Grab action shots first Shoot for impact Shoot in sequences Context Sound Cutaways The line Continuity Pieces to camera Planning – the full treatment Fieldwork TV SCRIPTWRITING 27 Writing the script The cue (lead, or link) Complement the pictures with the narrative Writing to sound Keep detail to a minimum Script layout Balancing words with pictures Using the library Fieldwork COMPILING THE REPORT 28 Editing the image Sequence of shots Shot length Digital editing Editing videotape Playing the tape on air Fieldwork 29 Visuals Stills Film library Electronic graphics Titles and captions Overlays Fieldwork THE NEWS STUDIO 30 ‘Standby for transmission …’ The set Control room Fieldwork ONLINE JOURNALISM AND NEW MEDIA 31 Videojournalism The VJ at work Editing? Fieldwork 32 Pushing back the frontiers News online Research Qualities of an online journalist Satellite and cable TV Teletext The computerized newsroom And next? Fieldwork Appendix: Courses in journalism Glossary Further reading Index ER -