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Index
Media Skills Contents Acknowledgements 1 Introduction
WHAT THIS BOOK COVERS WHAT THIS BOOK DOES NOT COVER THE APPROACH
2 Good spoken English
ARE STANDARDS SLIPPING?
Standards in broadcast news
The pressures on broadcast journalists WHICH MODEL OF THE SPOKEN WORD?
The Queen’s English Standardising English
BBC ENGLISH AND BROADCAST NEWS ENGLISH English as a global language Popular acceptance Tradition versus changing usage Authority versus accessibility
3 The language of broadcast news
WRITING THE SPOKEN WORD
How the audience watches and listens to the news Journalese Officialese from the emergency services Officialese from politicians
JARGON
Business news jargon Specialist reporting Sick as a parrot: reporting sport News agency copy
CLICHÉS THE DEFINITE ARTICLE AMERICANISMS
American imports Increasing use of Americanisms A date in the USA American pronunciation
4 Writing broadcast news scripts
THE PRINCIPLES
Clarity, simplicity and conciseness Short sentences work better
WHAT’S THE STORY?
Subjects and events are not necessarily stories Story-focus in the treatment of subjects Writing the key point of the story first
THE DIRECT STYLE
Not too many subordinate clauses The active voice Redundant words Adjectives and adverbs Adjectives and value-judgements
ACCURACY
Accuracy in language The meaning of words Ambiguity Precision Questions of attribution
ACCURATE NAMES
Names and titles: the establishment
The judiciary The church The military Gongs Lords and Ladies
Names and titles: lesser mortals On first-name terms? Names of organisations Abbreviated names Registered names
ACCURATE GEOGRAPHY
My country – right or wrong? A sense of place Different organisations in the UK Different social trends and patterns The nations of the UK Scotland
Scottish politics Scottish courts Scottish education
Wales
Welsh politics
Northern Ireland
The political landscape in Northern Ireland
England Europe The EU – getting it right European courts Around the world
THE NUMBERS GAME
Simple numbers Up to … Vague numbers Number or amount? Measurements Foot or feet? Figures in opinion polls Writing the numbers Ages
QUESTION OF GRAMMAR
The split infinitive Collective nouns His and hers Blatant errors Reported speech Quoting direct speech
SENSITIVITY
Stereotyping and loaded language Sexism Sexual orientation Race Racism Colour Asian Religion Disability
PRONUNCIATION
Saying it aloud Do’s and don’ts and won’ts and can’ts
STORY STRUCTURE
Short bulletin items Kipling’s questions
WRITING INTROS
The latest development The length of an intro The inviting intro Involve the listener or viewer – especially at the local level Intros on television Graphics in TV intros The ‘split-intro’ on television Special occasions Exclusive? Intros written on location Casualty figures in the intro The intro in summary
NARRATIVE JOURNALISM
Patterns and stories Pyramids or lines? Chronology Picture sequences on TV Setting the scene first Other familiar patterns
5 Different techniques for radio and television
SIMILARITIES AND DIFFERENCES WRITING RADIO NEWS
Using actuality and description Big stories need more description
WRITING TELEVISION NEWS
Write commentary first or edit the pictures first? Shot-lists Short stories and longer packages Writing to pictures Words and pictures are complementary What am I looking at? Pictures from the library or archive The present tense The play-on-words and the pun Natural sound on television Using graphics Full-screen and integrated graphics Writing to graphics Spellings on graphics An example of a full TV package Headlines on TV Why headlines? An inviting style in headlines Clichés in headlines Howlers in headlines How long and how many headlines? Split headlines A mini-production Closing headlines
24-HOUR TV NEWS
Live on location Live in the studio
6 Writing online news
VERSIONING YOUR STORIES FOR THE WEBSITE A DIFFERENT WRITING STYLE A NEW KIND OF JOURNALISM FASTER AND DEEPER FRESH AND EASY MORE THAN WORDS NEWS TO MOBILE BLOGGING AND TWEETING
7 And finally …
ORWELL’S SUMMARY WHAT OF THE FUTURE?
Appendix Dangerous words Further reading
BROADCAST JOURNALISM AND BROADCASTING TECHNIQUES THE DEVELOPMENT AND USE OF THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE GUIDES TO WRITING STYLE IN JOURNALISM AND OTHER REFERENCES
Index
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