Title: The Art of Good Headline Writing
1The Art of Good Headline Writing
2(No Transcript)
3Headline Writing as an ArtOriginal, duh titles
-- headlines
- Away We Go (title of famous musical)
- "Oklahoma!"
4Headline Writing as an ArtOriginal, duh titles
-- headlines
- 3,000 (title of Julia Roberts movie)
- "Pretty Woman"
5Headline Writing as an ArtOriginal, duh titles
-- headlines
- Tomorrow Is Another Day (title of famous novel
and then movie) - Gone With the Wind
6Headline Writing as an Art
- August Rodin, asked how to sculpt an elephant, is
said to have responded - Take a big block of marble and carve away
everything that doesn't look like an elephant.
7Carving Away Everything That Does Not Look Like a
Headline
- Toss some words up on the screen.
- View them like a lump of formless clay.
- At first, disregard the "count" and write the
head the way you would like it to appear.
8Carving Away Everything That Does Not Look Like a
Headline
- Then begin to carve away.
- Make as few changes as possible to fit the
headline. - But stay close to your original thought
- Drop the most expendable words
- Switch to better-fitting words
- A thesaurus or your synonym finder may help.
9Carving Away Everything That Does Not Look Like a
Headline
- Identify the key angle and key words.
- Follow the checklists that help achieve
consistency and quality.
10Carving Away Everything That Does Not Look Like a
Headline
- Recognize that headlines tell the story best when
they are - Clear
- Specific
- Precise
- Dense with information.
11Headline Writing as Art Reaching for a Higher
Level
- Try brain-storming around word association
- To approach the headline from less obvious
tangents - Come up with some key words
- Free associate internally
- Free associate while digging through reference
texts - A dictionary
- A thesaurus
- An encyclopedia
- A book of quotations
12Headline Writing as ArtGood Wordplay vs. Bad
Wordplay
- Good wordplay
- Uses contrast
- Twists a phrase
- Twists a cliché
- Pleases the ear
- Does not rely solely on alliteration or assonance
13Headline Writing as ArtGood Wordplay vs. Bad
Wordplay
- Bad wordplay
- Is a groaner of a pun
- Magnet Manufacturer Attracts Earnings
- Is an obvious thread-bare cliché
- Relies solely on alliteration or assonance
- Feds Find Fraud at Fannie
14Headline Writing as Art Example of Bad
Wordplay
- This example is adapted from the editing blog
FirstDraft at www.timporter.com/firstdraft/
15Here's to You, Cliché Writers Everywhere
- The death of actress Ann Anne Bancroft this week
produced a gaggle of "Mrs. Robinson" headlines -
and the subsequent send-up of same by sharp-eyed
(and sharp-tongued) headline watchers. - They rightly skewer the "Here's to You" heds as
predictable clichés.
16Here's to You, Cliché Writers Everywhere
- I'll go one step further.
- Clichés are the bane of good writing and their
ubiquitous presence in newspapers directly
undercuts efforts to reach younger readers, who
prefer "surprise and humor." - Read The Readership Institute's work in at the
Minneapolis Star-Tribune and Readership Survival
Lessons for the Future from Minneapolis.
17Here's to You, Cliché Writers Everywhere
- Brian Montopoli of CJR Daily slices and dices the
Bancroft heds most deftly in this piece, "Hard
Day on the Rim." He writes - "There's gotta be something in the song, you
think -- go back to the song. - You get up from your cube, stare out the window.
Start singing to yourself. Wait -- shit -- that's
it! The chorus! It's so obvious! There's that
part where Simon and Garfunkel croon, "Here's to
you, Mrs. Robinson." Why not just that? Here's to
you, Mrs. Robinson. - It's so simple, but it says everything.
Everything. - You type in the headline, sit back, and rub your
eyes. You're smiling, for the first time in days."
18Here's to You, Cliché Writers Everywhere
- Brian Montopoli of CJR Daily slices and dices the
Bancroft heds most deftly in this piece, "Hard
Day on the Rim." He writes - "There's gotta be something in the song, you
think -- go back to the song. - You get up from your cube, stare out the window.
Start singing to yourself. Wait -- shit -- that's
it! The chorus! It's so obvious! There's that
part where Simon and Garfunkel croon, "Here's to
you, Mrs. Robinson." Why not just that? Here's to
you, Mrs. Robinson. - It's so simple, but it says everything.
Everything. - You type in the headline, sit back, and rub your
eyes. You're smiling, for the first time in days."
19Here's to You, Cliché Writers Everywhere
- "The test for stories like this is Does
something jump immediately to mind? - "If so, whatever jumps immediately to mind must
be rejected on the grounds that everybody else
will have the same idea.
20Here's to You, Cliché Writers Everywhere
- Nicole Stockdale, a copy editor, rounds up a
collection of Mrs. Robinsons heds on her blog, A
Capital Idea - Here's to you, Mrs. Robinson (Atlanta
Journal-Constitution 1A promo) - To you, Mrs. Robinson (San Antonio Express-News
1A promo) - Here's to you, Mrs. Robinson (St. Paul Pioneer
Press) - Here's to you, Anne Bancroft (USAToday.com)
- And here's to you, Ms Bancroft (London Times)
- Here's to you, Mrs Bancroft (The Age of
Australia) - So here's to you, Mrs Robinson ... (Scotsman.com)
- 'Graduate' co-star dies Here's to you, Mrs.
Robinson (San Jose Mercury News) - And Here's to You... Remembering Anne Bancroft
(Slate)
21Headline Writing as Art
- Story about a police dog retiring from the force.
- Key Words?
- Long arm of the law
- Bow out
- Dogs bark bowwow
22Headline Writing as Art
- Long paw of the law bowwows out
23Headline Writing as Art
- Roller coaster manufacturers tout their new, much
more exciting products for the upcoming summer
season. The most exciting ever, they say. - Key Words?
- Roller coasters
- Promoters / Carnival Fairs barkers
- Promise / assure vow
24Headline Writing as Art
- Roller
- coaster
- barkers
- vow wows
25- Story about school district banning prayers at
graduations - Key words?
- Schools ordered/told/commanded not to allow
prayers - Think about it write one in your head.
26- Thou shall not pray at graduations
27Headline Writing as Art
- Babies go from drug exposure to hug exposure
28Headline Writing as Art
- Radio waives fidelity to facts
- Contest loser takes exception to stations
deception
29Headline Writing as Art
- Catch a wave and a viral-caused infection
- Pollution has ruined Malibu beach, water lovers
say
30Headline Writing as Art Now, you try
- Subject A story about high school boys caught
looking through a hole in a shower wall at girls
in the locker room next door. - Boys get in trouble.
- Story reports that the girls were very angry with
their fellow students. - Write down some key words
- Write a headline
- Send me a copy of your headline by e-mail by
Monday at 9 a.m. - Work together if you like put all your names on
submission