Understanding the news values
By Ken Blake, Ph.D.
Middle Tennessee State University

Your lead should emphasize the most "newsworthy" information in the story you are trying to tell. But how do you figure out what information is most newsworthy? There are no pat answers. The information you consider most newsworthy depends in part on your own values, experiences and knowledge. But some general guidelines exist. Below are several characteristics that can make information newsworthy. The more of these characteristics a piece of information has, the more newsworthy the information is.

Impact:  information has impact if it affects a lot of people.

Timeliness: information has timeliness if it happened recently. Prominence: information has prominence if it involves a well-known person or organization. Proximity: information has proximity if it involves something happened somewhere nearby. Conflict: information has conflict if it involves some kind of disagreement between two or more people. Weirdness: information has weirdness if it involves something unusual or strange. Currency: information has currency if it is related to some general topic a lot of people are already talking about.