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.
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A proposed income tax increase, for instance, has impact, because an income
tax increase would affect a lot of people.
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The accidental killing of a little girl during a shootout between rival
drug gangs has impact, too. Even though only one person -- the little girl
-- was directly affected, many people will feel a strong emotional response
to the story.
Timeliness: information has timeliness
if it happened recently.
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"Recently" is defined by the publication cycle of the news medium in which
the information will appear.
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For "Newsweek," events that happened during the previous week are timely.
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For a daily newspaper, however, events that happened during the 24 hours
since the last edition of the paper are timely.
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For CNN Headline News, events that happened during the past half hour are
timely.
Prominence: information has prominence
if it involves a well-known person or organization.
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If you or I trip and fall, no one will be all that interested, because
you and I aren't well known.
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But if the president of the United States trips and falls, everyone will
be interested because the president is well known.
Proximity: information has proximity if
it involves something happened somewhere nearby.
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If a bus wreck in India kills 25 people, the Nashville Tennessean will
devote maybe three or four grafs to the story.
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But if a bus wreck in downtown Nashville kills 25 people, the Tennessean
will devote a sizable chunk of its front page to the story.
Conflict: information has conflict if it
involves some kind of disagreement between two or more people.
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Remember how, when you were a kid, everyone would run to watch a fight
if one erupted on the playground?
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Fights have drama -- who will win? -- and invite those watching to choose
sides and root for one or more of the combatants.
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Good democracy involves more civil -- we hope -- conflicts over the nature
of public policy. That's why the media carry so much political news. Journalists
see themselves as playing an important role in the public debate that forms
the basis for democracy.
Weirdness: information has weirdness if
it involves something unusual or strange.
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Charles A. Dana, a famous editor, once said, "If a dog bites a man, that's
not news. But if a man bites a dog, that's news!"
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Dana was saying that people are interested in out-of-the-ordinary things,
like a man biting a dog.
Currency: information has currency if it
is related to some general topic a lot of people are already talking about.
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A mugging in downtown Murfreesboro generally won't attract much attention
from reporters at the Daily News Journal.
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But if the mugging occurred a day after a report by the FBI had named Murfreesboro
the city with the state's fastest-growing crime rate, the mugging would
be big news.
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People would respond to news of the mugging by saying, "See, here's an
example of just the kind of thing that FBI report was talking about. We've
got to do something about the crime rate!"