Title: JOURNALISM LEADS
1JOURNALISM LEADS
- How To Write Amazing Leads
2Their Purpose
- A lead or lede grabs the readers attention.
- It is the most important part of an article.
- If it is not good, risk losing reader.
3NEWS LEADS
4- Always the what of the article, but can include
the other 4 Ws and the H - Who
- Where
- When
- Why
- How
5The What Lead
- The What of the article.
- -Example
- Troop levels in Iraq would remain nearly the
same through 2008 as they have been through most
of the war, senior officials said.
6The Who Lead
- A person, place, or thing.
- Helps if the who is well-known.
- Example
- Senator John McCains fact-finding trip offered
an opportunity to signal his support of Israel to
Jewish and evangelical Christian voters back
home.
7The Where Lead
- Use on rare occasions only when place is most
significant. - Example
- South Africa is trying to balance the liberty of
patients with tuberculosis against the need to
protect society.
8The When Lead
- Use rarely, only when circumstances make it
interesting. - Example
- When football coaches gather to talk about the
team these days, their cocktail of choice may be
Maalox. They worry as they debate how to fire up
a team that hasnt one a game in three years.
9The Why Lead
- Using the motive or cause for a lead.
- Example
- In an effort to teach Shakespeare to sophomores,
English teacher Gina Hatley and science teacher
Phil Barnes reenacted the love scene between
Romeo and Juliet.
10The How Lead
- Starts with the method by which something is
accomplished. - Example
- By flunking every course, missing 62 days of
classes, and assaulting two teachers, Junior Sam
Hunt gravely endangered his eligibility for high
school basketball.
11FEATURE STORY LEADS
12What is a Feature Lead?
- More poetic. A natural extension of the story.
- Doesnt have to be the what, but has to entice
reader. - Dont follow as many rules as news stories.
- Relevant, fits mood, and grabs attention
- More types than news leads.
13Feature Leads Include
- Allusion (Literary and Historical)
- Contrast
- Pun
- Description (Sight, Person, Event)
- Capsule (Punch Lead)
- One Word
- Miscellaneous Freak Leads
14- 8. Parody Lead
- 9. Direct Address
- 10. Staccato
- 11. Anecdotal Lead
- 12. Sequence (Narrative)
- 13. Then and Now
- 14. Question
- 15. Quote
15Allusion (Literary)
- Relates person/event to character/event in
literature. - Example
- To have been ordered into battle to attack a
group of windmills with horse and lance would
have seemed to Joe Robinson no more strange an
assignment than the one given to him Thursday by
Miss Vera Newton . . . - ?Allusion to Don Quixote
16Allusion (Historical)
- Relates person/event to character/event in
history. - Example
- Washingtons trip across the Delaware was
childs play compared with Dave Jasons span of
the Big Lick River.
17Contrast Lead
- Compares extremes
- Example
- His wealth is estimated at 600 million. He
controls corporations operating in more than 20
nations. Yet he carries his lunch to work in a
brown paper bag and wears the latest fashions
form Sears and Roebucks bargain basement.
18Pun Lead
- Uses a play on words to capture reader.
- Example
- Western Highs trash collectors have been down
in the dumps lately.
19Description Lead (Sight)
- Detailed description of what is seen.
- Example
- The road to nsukka in eastern Nigeria is rutted
and crumpled, the aging asphalt torn like ragged
strips of tar paper.
20Description Lead (Person)
- Detailed description of a person, usually the
main character of the story. - Example
- The imam begins his trek before dawn, his long
robe billowing like a ghost through empty
streets.
21Description Lead (Event)
- Detailed description of an event.
- Example
- The air inside the darkened gymnasium is heavy
with the heat of an uncommonly prolonged North
Carolina summer.
22Capsule (Punch) Lead
- Blunt, explosive statement to summarize article.
- Example
- The Beatles are back!
23One Word Lead
- Blunt, explosive word to summarize article.
- Example
- Awesome. Thats the best term to describe the
Rattler girls basketball team, which notched its
15th consecutive win Friday night.
24Miscellaneous Freak Leads
- Begin with uncommon or odd statement.
- Example
- For sale one elephant. The City Park
Commission is thinking about inserting that ad in
the newspaper.
25Parody Lead
- Copies well-known proverb, quotation, or phrase.
- Example
- Whisky, whisky everywhere, but nary a drop to
drink. Such was the case at the City Police
Station yesterday when officers poured 100
gallons of bootleg moonshine into the sewer.
26Direct Address Lead
- Speaks directly to reader on appealing subject.
- Example
- Do not expect any pity from the weatherman
today. He forecasts a continuation of the butter
Arctic cold wave that has gripped the city for a
week.
27Staccato Lead
- Jerky, exciting phrases used if facts justify it.
- Example
- Midnight on the bridgea screama shota
splasha second shota third shot.
28Anecdotal Lead
- Uses event to represent universal experience.
- Example
- It was 1965 and the Dallas Cowboys were making
good use out of an end-around play to Frank
Clarke, averaging 17 yards every time a young
coach named Tom Landry pulled it out of his
expanding bag of tricks.
29Sequence (Narrative) Lead
- Puts reader in midst of action.
- Example
- On a frozen morning in hilly rural Wisconsin,
the dead deer lay stacked in a pile, like so much
garbage. Big and brawny, these whitetail bucks
and does should be prizes. But the hunters who
shot them are afraid to take them home.
30Then and Now Lead
- Shows progress over time.
- Example
- The Rio Grande once flowed through there, a wide
and robust river surging between steep banks as
it followed a southward course hugging the
states curvy profile.
31Question Lead
- Use when story has direct relevance to reader.
- You think you have it bad? Consider Ron Mullens.
Once vice president of a major real estate
corporation, today his is penniless.
32Quote Lead
- Usually avoid them.
- Quote should capture theme of story.
- Example
- People usually have two completely different
opinions of what my life must have been like
growing up, said actress Joely Fisher, 28, a
child of the short, unhappy union between Connie
Stevens, the sex kitten of 1950s TV, and Eddie
Fisher, the singer and former matinee idol.
33GENERAL TIPS
34- Immediately grab readers attention.
- Give reader hard facts so they will continue
reading. - Each paragraph built on previous one.
- Dont write two leads, or be repetitive.
- Dont write a warm-up paragraph. Cut to the
chase.
35Do
- Be specific concrete (especially with
descriptions). - Convey energy action.
36Dont
- Use too much detail.
- Use abstract/general language.
- Be vague.