video ramp in the beginning and the video tail at the end
Both the ramp and tail of a news story should be only
two or three seconds of video with natural sound. This
is done to let the switcher in the control booth put the
story on the air without airing black or missing the first
words of your story.
Outs are written for the anchors to read as a way of
easing the transition from story to story or as seques into
another section of the news show. Like intros, outs are
not to be written because the reporter could not condense
his story to an acceptable length. Most often intros and
outs are written (or at least rewritten) by the anchors so
the voice is in the news anchors own style.
SCRIPTWRITING
The basics of broadcast writing are known to all
journalists through the efforts of DINFOS and the
JO 3 & 2 manual. The following guidance helps the
experienced broadcast journalist train staff members in
the peculiar world of television writing.
The scriptwriting process for news stories must
always begin with pictures. (Remember, the previously
mentioned time saver technique of story editing is to be
used only when meeting crushing deadlines.) As stated
earlier in this chapter, a story with pictures just flopped
on top of it as cover video is radio news with pictures.
This is a hard concept to understand for most journalists,
so spend some time on this next paragraph and think
about it over and over in your mind until every time you
start the reporting process in television, you do not fall
into the announcer mentality (that is, thinking of words
before pictures).
Television news, unlike radio news, is not the
simple transmission of facts to a listening audience. In
radio news, the spoken word can be used as a one
dimensional vehicle to relay information from point A
to B (reporter to audience). Television has to be a
reconstruction of the news event itself. You may have
all the facts on hand, but it will not interest an audience,
nor will the audience even possibly understand it if you
use words (script) as your primary information
transmission carrier. You must take the viewer to the
scene and show him what is going on. People watch
television news to see what is happening, not to hear
what is happening. The video is the base from which the
television journalist must work. Along with this basic
video information channel, the journalist then uses
narrative and sound effects to carry additional
illuminating information and details.
An example of this would be an individual watching
a story about the rising number of welfare recipients in
the United States and then seeing some image that
shows him that fact. In this scenario, the following
depictions would be appropriate: pictures of recipients
picking up their checks, shots of how life changes for a
family when Dad loses his job or graphics (bar chart)
that display the increase in welfare recipients compared
to tax increases.
NEWS
Learning Objective:
Understand the principles,
activities and personnel requirements of newsroom
organization.
What is or is not news is a discussion most
journalists started having during A school and will
continue to have until they die. In this section, we simply
state that news at your station is going to be what you,
as the supervisor, decide it to be. For example, the
requirements for a news story to air on Navy News This
Week will need to be of Navy-wide interest while the
news peg for a local story will be very different most of
the time. If you are working at an isolated duty station,
such as Adak, Alaska, news is going to mean primarily
sports and family oriented events (a typical small town
news format). The reasons for that particular decision is
based on the large family population and the large
unmarried, predorminately male, barracks population.
The faces of children and sport activities were what the
audience wanted to see (that information is based on, of
course, various audience surveys). You have to know
your audience and satisfy their needs to sell them
command information. (World and national news is part
of the commands information package in this
discussion). Think of command information as the
product that must be sold to keep the station open.
NEWSROOM ORGANIZATION
As always, the organization of any activity in
broadcasting depends on the specific requirements and
the available manpower. Therefore, for the purposes of
training, we will discuss the positions needed to
complete a nightly half-hour news requirement.
Usually, such a demand is made when the manpower
consists of the following: a PH2 or below to help fill
the ENG shooting and editing roles, a JO1 or JO2 as
news director/assignment editor and two JO2s or below
as reporters. (Often an IC technician is added to the
newsroom as the ENG gear caretaker or trouble
shooter).
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