What is News 新闻的定义.docx
- 文档编号:7871232
- 上传时间:2023-05-12
- 格式:DOCX
- 页数:13
- 大小:40.77KB
What is News 新闻的定义.docx
《What is News 新闻的定义.docx》由会员分享,可在线阅读,更多相关《What is News 新闻的定义.docx(13页珍藏版)》请在冰点文库上搜索。
WhatisNews新闻的定义
WhatisNews?
Newsdependsonavarietyoffactors
HandbookofIndependentJournalism
(ThefollowingarticleistakenfromtheU.S.DepartmentofStatepublication,HandbookofIndependentJournalism.)
ByDeborahPotter
Theanswertothequestion“Whatisnews?
”mayseemobvious. Newsiswhatisnew;it’swhat’shappening. Lookitupinthedictionary,andyou’llfindnewsdescribedas“areportofrecenteventsorpreviouslyunknowninformation.” Butmostofthethingsthathappenintheworldeverydaydon’tfindtheirwayintothenewspaperorontotheairinanewscast.
Sowhatmakesastorynewsworthyenoughtobepublishedorbroadcast?
Therealansweris,itdependsonavarietyoffactors. Generallyspeaking,newsisinformationthatisofbroadinteresttotheintendedaudience,sowhat’sbignewsinBuenosAiresmaynotbenewsatallinBaku. Journalistsdecidewhatnewstocoverbasedonmanyofthefollowing“newsvalues”:
Timeliness
Didsomethinghappenrecentlyordidwejustlearnaboutit?
Ifso,thatcouldmakeitnewsworthy. Themeaningof“recently”variesdependingonthemedium,ofcourse. Foraweeklynewsmagazine,anythingthathappenedsincethepreviouseditiontheweekbeforemaybeconsideredtimely. Fora24-hourcablenewschannel,thetimeliestnewsmaybe“breakingnews,”orsomethingthatishappeningthisveryminuteandcanbecoveredbyareporterliveatthescene.
Impact
Aremanypeopleaffectedorjustafew?
Contaminationinthewatersystemthatservesyourtown’s20,000peoplehasimpactbecauseitaffectsyouraudiencedirectly. Areportthat10childrenwerekilledfromdrinkingpollutedwateratasummercampinadistantcityhasimpacttoo,becausetheaudienceislikelytohaveastrongemotionalresponsetothestory. Thefactthataworkercutautilitylineisnotbignews,unlessithappenstocauseablackoutacrossthecitythatlastsforseveralhours.
Proximity
Didsomethinghappenclosetohome,ordiditinvolvepeoplefromhere?
AplanecrashinChadwillmakeheadlinesinN'Djamena,butit’sunlikelytobefront-pagenewsinChileunlesstheplanewascarryingChileanpassengers.
Controversy
Arepeopleindisagreementaboutthis?
It’shumannaturetobeinterestedinstoriesthatinvolveconflict,tension,orpublicdebate. Peopleliketotakesides,andseewhosepositionwillprevail. Conflictdoesn’talwaysentailpittingoneperson’sviewsagainstanother. Storiesaboutdoctorsbattlingdiseaseorcitizensopposinganunjustlawalsoinvolveconflict.
Prominence
Isawell-knownpersoninvolved?
Ordinaryactivitiesormishapscanbecomenewsiftheyinvolveaprominentpersonlikeaprimeministerorafilmstar. ThatplanecrashinChadwouldmakeheadlinesaroundtheworldifoneofthepassengerswereafamousrockmusician.
Currency
Arepeopleheretalkingaboutthis?
Agovernmentmeetingaboutbussafetymightnotdrawmuchattention,unlessithappenstobescheduledsoonafteraterriblebusaccident. Anincidentatafootballmatchmaybeinthenewsforseveraldaysbecauseit’sthemaintopicofconversationintown.
Oddity
Iswhathappenedunusual?
Asthesayinggoes,“Ifadogbitesaman,thatisnotnews.Butifamanbitesadog,it'snews!
” Theextraordinaryandtheunexpectedappealtoournaturalhumancuriosity.
Whatmakesnewsalsodependsonthemakeupoftheintendedaudience,notjustwheretheylivebutwhotheyare. Differentgroupsofpeoplehavedifferentlifestylesandconcerns,whichmaketheminterestedindifferenttypesofnews. Aradionewsprogramtargetedatyoungerlistenersmightincludestoriesaboutmusicorsportsstarsthatwouldnotbefeaturedinabusinessnewspaperaimedatolder,wealthierreaders. Aweeklymagazinethatcoversmedicalnewswouldreportonthetestingofanexperimentaldrugbecausethedoctorswhoreadthepublicationpresumablywouldbeinterested. Butunlessthedrugisbelievedtocureawell-knowndisease,mostgeneral-interestlocalnewspaperswouldignorethestory. Theexceptionmightbethenewspaperinthecommunitywheretheresearchisbeingconducted.
Newsorganizationsseetheirworkasapublicservice,sonewsismadeupofinformationthatpeopleneedtoknowinordertogoabouttheirdailylivesandtobeproductivecitizensinademocracy. Butmostnewsorganizationsalsoarebusinessesthathavetomakeaprofittosurvive,sothenewsalsoincludesitemsthatwilldrawanaudience:
storiespeoplemaywanttoknowaboutjustbecausethey’reinteresting. Thosetwocharacteristicsneednotbeinconflict. Someofthebeststoriesonanygivenday,infact,arebothimportantandinteresting. Butit’sfairlycommonfornewsorganizationstodividestoriesintotwobasiccategories:
hardnewsandsoftnews,alsocalledfeatures.
WheretheNewsComesFrom
Journalistsfindnewsinallsortsofplaces,butmoststoriesoriginateinoneofthreebasicways:
•naturallyoccurringevents,likedisastersandaccidents;
•plannedactivities,likemeetingsandnewsconferences;
•reporters’enterprise.
Unplannedeventsfrequentlybecomemajornewsstories. Aferrysinking,aplanecrash,atsunami,oramudslideisnewsworthynotjustwhenithappensbutoftenfordaysandweeksafterwards. Theextentofthecoveragedependsinpartonproximityandwhowasinvolved. AfatalautomobileaccidentinParismightnotbebignewsonanygivenday. ButanaccidentinParisin1997wasahugenewsstory,notjustinFrancebutalsoaroundtheworld,becauseoneofthevictimswasBritain’sPrincessDiana.
Citizenswhowitnessadisasterwilloftencontactanewsorganization. Journalistsalsolearnabouttheseeventsfromfirstresponders:
police,fire,orrescueofficials. Insomecountries,newsorganizationsareabletomonitoremergencycommunicationsbetweenfirstrespondersandcandispatchjournaliststothescenequicklysotheycanwatchthestoryunfold.
Inmanynewsrooms,themostobvioussourceofnewsisthedailyscheduleofeventsintown,whichincludesgovernmentmeetings,businessopenings,orcommunityevents. Oftencalleda“daybook,”thislistofactivitiesisnotautomaticallynewsworthybutitprovidesagoodstartingpointforreporterssearchingfornews. Reporterswhoregularlycoverspecifickindsofissuesorinstitutions,alsocalled“beat”reporters,saytheyoftengetstoryideasbylookingatagendasforupcomingmeetings.
Pressreleasescanbeanothersourceofnews,butagain,theyarejustastartingpoint. Dozensofpressreleasesarriveinnewsroomseveryday,bymail,byfax,orevenonvideoviasatellite. Governmentofficialsandagenciesgeneratemanyofthem,butotherlargeorganizationslikeprivatebusinessesandnon-profitgroupsalsoissuepressreleasestoletthenewsmediaknowwhattheyaredoing. Apressreleasemayresembleanewsstorybutbecauseitisproducedbysomeonewithavestedinterestinthesubjectitisnotlikelytotellthecompletestory. Pressreleasesmaybefactuallycorrect,buttheyusuallyincludeonlythosefactsthatreflectpositivelyonthepersonororganizationfeaturedintherelease. Evenifapressreleaselooksnewsworthy,aprofessionaljournalistfirstmustverifyitsauthenticity,andthenbeginaskingquestionstodeterminetherealstorybeforedecidingifit’sworthreporting.
Stagedevents,suchasdemonstrations,alsocanproducenews,butjournalistsmustbewaryofbeingmanipulatedbytheorganizerswhowanttotellonlytheirsideofthestory. Politicianshavebecomeadeptatstagingeventsand“photoopportunities”inordertoattractcoverage,evenwhentheyhavenorealnewsvalue. Thatdoesnotmeanjournalistsshouldignoretheseevents,butonlythattheyneedtodoadditionalreportingtogetacompletestory.
Mostreporterssaytheirbeststoriescomefromtheirownenterprise. Sometimesstorysuggestionscomefromstrangers,whomayvisit,telephone,ore-mailthenewsroomwithacomplaintorconcern. Somenewsorganizationsactivelysolicitideasfrompeoplewholiveinthecommunitiestheyserve,byprovidingatelephonenumberorane-mailaddresswheresuggestionscanbesubmitted. Journalistsspendalotoftimebuildingrelationshipswithpeoplewhocanprovidethemwithinformation. (We’lltalkmoreaboutsourcebuildinginChapter2,“GettingtheStory.”)
Journalistsfrequentlyfindstoriessimplybylookingaroundandlisteningtowhatpeoplearetalkingabout. Whatyouoverhearatasportseventorinlineatthepostofficecouldturnintoanewsstory. Askthepeopleyoumeetwhenyouarenotcoveringastorywhatisgoingonintheirlivesortheirneighborhoodsandyoumightfindyourselfonthetrailofanewsstorynooneelsehascovered.
Anotherwaytofindnewsistoaskwhathashappenedsincethelasttimeastorywasinthepaperorontheair. Follow-upsoftenleadtosurprisingdevelopmentsthatareevenmorenewsworthythantheoriginalreport. Forexample,astoryaboutafirethedayafterithappenedmighttellyouhowmanypeoplewerekilledandtheextentofthepropertydamage. Butafollow-upseveralweekslatercoulddiscoverthatafaultyradiosystemmadeitimpossibleforfirefighterstorespondquicklyenoughtosavemorelives.
Documents,data,andpublicrecordscanleadtoterrificstoriesaswell. Reporterscanusethemtolookfortrendsortospotirregularities. Thiskindofworkrequiresmoreeffort,buttheresultsarealmostalwaysworththetrouble. It’sconsiderablyeasierwhenthedataaremadeavailableelectronically,ofcourse,butreportershavebeenknowntoenterdatafrompaperrecordsintocomputerdatabaseprogramsjustsotheycansearchforthemostsignificantinformationinapileofstatistics.
- 配套讲稿:
如PPT文件的首页显示word图标,表示该PPT已包含配套word讲稿。双击word图标可打开word文档。
- 特殊限制:
部分文档作品中含有的国旗、国徽等图片,仅作为作品整体效果示例展示,禁止商用。设计者仅对作品中独创性部分享有著作权。
- 关 键 词:
- What is News 新闻的定义 新闻 定义