paper. Back home in Hialeah, Fla., he is not Navy
Seaman Apprentice Thomas Katt. He is Mr. Michael
Katts son, Thomas, who used to help his father rebuild
homes devastated by Hurricane Andrew. He is someone
the readers know. The element of proximity is present
to a high degree. Further information on home town
news may be frond in Chapter 17.
CONSEQUENCE
News of change or news that affects human
relations is news of consequence. The more people
affected, the greater the news value. A story on the
advancement of 1,500 petty officers has consequence
within the Navy, especially to those who took the exams.
A congressional act that raises the pay of everyone in
the armed forces is of great consequence both to the
Navy and to the public, which foots the bill and also
benefits from the increased purchasing power of the
serviceman or servicewoman.
CONFLICT
Sporting events, wars and revolutions are the most
common examples of conflict in the news. Man maybe
pitted against man, team against team, nation against
nation or man against the natural elements. A story about
a pilot struggling to land a crippled plane or a coxswains
heroic efforts to keep his crowded boat from swamping
in heavy seas are other examples.
ODDITY
The unusual or strange will help lift a story out of
the ordinary. If an ordinary pilot parachuted out of an
ordinary plane with an ordinary parachute and makes an
ordinary landing, there is no real news value. However,
if the aviator has only one leg, this is news; or if the
parachute fails to open and the pilot lands safely, this is
news. A sailor named B. A. Sailor is a good angle. So is
the helicopter that towed a ship, the man that bit his dog
or the plane that landed even though the pilot had bailed
o u t .
SEX
Sometimes sex is the biggest single element in
news, or at least it appears to be the element that attracts
readers the most. Consider all the stories in papers that
involve men and women sports, financial news,
society and crime. Sex, in discussing news elements,
covers far more than a Hollywood stars impending visit
to your command. The element of sex ranges from
front-page sensationalism to news involving
engagements and marriages.
Stories and accompanying pictures of movie stars
or other prominent celebrities visiting your ship or
station can be loaded with sex. Nevertheless, any type
of news that overemphasizes the cheesecake element
is considered to be in poor taste for an official Navy
release and is to be avoided.
EMOTION
The emotional element, sometimes called the
human interest element, covers all the feelings that
human beings have, including happiness, sadness,
anger, sympathy, ambition, hate, love, envy, generosity
and humor. Emotion is comedy; emotion is tragedy; it
is the interest man has in mankind. A good human
interest story can range from a real tearjerker to a
rollicking farce.
PROMINENCE
Prominence is a one-word way of saying names
make news. When a person is prominent, like the
President of the United States, almost anything he does
is newsworthy even his church attendance. Several
hundred civilians may visit your ship or station in the
course of a month without raising a stir. Yet, if one
happens to be the governor of the state, you have a news
story packed with prominence. Prominence is not
restricted or reserved for VIPS only. Some places, things
and events have prominence. For example, the White
House (a place), the Hope Diamond (a thing) and
Christmas (an event) all awaken interest.
SUSPENSE
You most often see the suspense element in a
day-by-day or hour-by-hour account of a desperate
search for a lost submarine, in a story of rescue
operations in a mine where workers are trapped or in the
efforts made to rescue a Navy diver trapped in the
wreckage of a sunken ship. A news story does not build
to a climax as a mystery does. Still, putting the most
important facts first does not destroy the suspense of
many stories because the ultimate outcome is unknown
and is usually revealed in progressive, periodic
installments.
PROGRESS
In our technologically advanced society, we are
interested in space exploration. Therefore,
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