Thursday, May 30, 2019

Citizen Kane (Film, Day 1)

Our last project is to create a short documentary. Today, before we begin watching Citizen Kane, brainstorm some documentary ideas. Here are a few student films from the past as some examples of the form. You may work alone or with a single partner.
How to go about doing this project. 
1. Decide to work alone or with a single partner. 
2. If you work alone: make a list of potential subjects for your human interest video or a documentary. Choose one as your subject (this can be a family member, a friend, a neighbor, a teacher, a person of interest, or an overlooked or important topic, etc.)
3. If you work with a partner who will be your subject, decide who will be the subject and who will be the videographer.
4. Videographers should come up with some interview questions to ask the subject. Record your questions and answers in your journal.
5. Decide on where you will shoot video footage of your subject. You may have to travel, so plan accordingly. Brainstorm different possible settings to use as an appropriate backdrop for your video in your journal.
6. Record your interview with your subject. Use some of this material (the best parts) for your video.
7. Use your smartphones or video equipment (you can borrow this from our department) to make your film.
8. Upload your video/audio footage into Windows Movie Maker (or iMovie or Premiere, or other video software if you have access to it).
9. Edit and prepare your video. It should be about 2-5 minutes in length.
10. Upload your video when it is completed.

At 12:40, we'll will read a little of Citizen Kane (the script) and then begin watching the film.

HOMEWORK: Please read Chp. 7 (The Film Industry) and complete ?'s for Wednesday, June 5. This will count as a quiz grade. No late work will be accepted. See Google Classroom for details. Finally, get an idea/subject for a documentary film project. Identify who you might interview or what topic you are making a film of.

Tuesday, May 28, 2019

Film Unit: Types of Film Shots; Shot Exercise; Introduction to Citizen Kane

Welcome to our brief Film Unit.

When we discuss the choice of a particularly shot, filmmakers have several options. We can shoot a scene from an extreme long shot, a long shot, a full shot, a medium shot, a close-up, an extreme close up, using a birds-eye angle, a high or low angle, an eye-level-match angle (the default), or decide to use a truck, track, crane, pan, or trolley device to help frame and move the focus of the camera on the subject of the film. But with all these options, we also need to include the following terms to our vocabulary:

classical cutting: editing for dramatic intensity and emotional emphasis rather than for purely physical reasons.

Shifting from long to close or close to long shots shifts the viewers POV within a scene. This can be done to emphasize, include, exclude, consolidate, connect, contrast, or parallel the action of the plot, to introduce an important motif or detail for story-telling purposes (just like describing an important object in fiction), etc.

Master Shot (also known as a sequence shot): a scene of continuous film, usually at long-range, that is used as the through-line of a film or scene.

Reaction Shot: a cut from dialogue to the reaction of the person listening to the dialogue.

Two-shot: a shot that includes just enough space for two-characters to show that they are in the same space.

Three-shot: as a two-shot, but with enough room for three. How cozy!

First cut: a sequence of shots in editing that represents the director's preference for how the scene should be "shot."

Final cut: a studio or producer's preferred cutting of the film. (As opposed to the directors: first cut)

Cover shot: a shot used to reestablish a sequence, (time or space), or establishing shot used to reorient the viewer.

Eye-line Match: A character looks a certain direction, then we cut to what they are supposed to be looking at.

Matching action: similar to the eye-line match, but this involves any movement that is suggested as being continuous, even though it's not shot that way. Example: a tight shot of a person opening a door, the next shot is of that person arriving in another room. It is assumed that the door leads to the room seen, but this is rarely the case in filming.

Mise en Scene: more on this one later, it is literally "what is included in a shot."

180 degree rule: used to stabilize the space of the playing area so the viewer isn't confused or disoriented. Essentially keeping the camera on the same side of the 180 degree line of a scene.

Reverse angle shot: most commonly used in dialogue scenes, the camera moves between two speakers, first showing one, then the other.

Parallel action: just as in literature, the juxtaposition of shots that show complimentary shots. These shots are often from a different location.

Cross-cutting: moving between two or more locations or scenes in a film (often in rapid succession, but not always) to tell parallel stories.

Thematic montage: stress the association of ideas, rather than the continuity of plot, time, or space.

Motifs: objects, places, people, visual pictures, that are repeated to create significance or meaning.

Some advice:
  • the longer the shot, the slower the film pacing. 
  • the shorter the shot, the faster the film pacing. 
  • Longer shots usually include more visual information.
  • Shorter shots usually include less visual information.
  • Cut your scenes at the "content curve": the moment when the viewer has had just enough time to take in the visual information in a scene.
  • Cutting your scene BEFORE the content curve, creates anxiety, frustration, and/or disorients the viewer.
  • Cutting the scene AFTER the content curve, frustrates and bores an audience.
  • Watch these instructional videos:
Working in groups of 3, please do the following:

  1. Use the classroom cameras.  
  2. Go shoot different shots (see the handout you were given in class for this project) that illustrate the 3-5 shots you were given. Take no more than 5 minutes to do this.
  3. When you return, please upload your film files to Windows Movie Maker and create TITLES for each film example you took. 
  4. Make sure the names of your group members are listed on the title card/slide!
  5. Render your film, save it as an MP4, then submit it to Google Classroom. We will screen your group's film during period 8.
If you finish your film (and we are waiting for the other groups to finish, please read about Citizen Kane below). 

Period 8:

After viewing our film projects, we will discuss Citizen Kane.

We will eventually view Orson Welles' ("War of the Worlds") masterpiece Citizen Kane. Today, let's learn about the film.


Citizen Kane (intro)

Topping the best films of all time is the important and influential 1941 film by Orson Welles: Citizen Kane (1941). As we view Citizen Kane, there are a series of important elements that can enrich our understanding of this film.

Orson Welles as Auteur:

Welles directed, wrote (partial), and starred in this film (even though it was thought he wasn't old enough to portray Kane). While Welles had direct control over the film and its look, there were other people who contributed artistically. Some of the invention and creativity of film making includes:

Camera Work:
  • The Deep Focus shot! (the deep focus shot includes action in the foreground, mid-ground, and background of a shot). 
  • Low angle shots revealing ceilings!
  • Moving shots used as wipes!
  • Overlapping dialogue! (not original to Welles, but a trend in Screwball Comedies)
  • Long uninterrupted shots!
  • Expressionist lighting and photography!
Narrative/Special techniques:
  • Multiple perspective!
  • Flashbacks!
  • Aging!
Motifs and themes:
  • The American Dream: For all of Kane's "success", he is not happy. He dies lonely, with only his "possessions" around him. Is all our striving to succeed in America an illusion?
  • Perspective: The differing perspectives on Kane's life, especially in the absence of Kane's own point of view, force us to question what was truly important in Kane's life (and by extension what constitutes a life well lived in general.) Judging by Kane's last muttered word: Rosebud, the most important pieces of Kane's life were not the things that made him newsworthy, such as his newspaper successes and political ambitions, nor his friendships and associations. As Thompson interviews different people about Kane, we are given different perspectives on the man (some are unreliable). Odd, though, that we do not see Kane from Kane's POV.
Motifs:
  • Isolation (loneliness...it's lonely at the top...)
  • Materialism/Capitalism
  • Old Age (the end of the line...)
Symbols:
  • The Snowglobe
  • Sleds
  • Statues
Allusions:
Director: Orson Welles
Writers: Herman J. Mankiewicz and Orson Welles (screenplay)
Cinematography by Gregg Toland

Orson Welles ... Charles Foster Kane
Joseph Cotten ... Jedediah Leland
Dorothy Comingore ... Susan Alexander Kane
Agnes Moorehead ... Mary Kane
Ruth Warrick ... Emily Monroe Norton Kane
Ray Collins ... James W. Gettys
Erskine Sanford ... Herbert Carter
Everett Sloane ... Mr. Bernstein
William Alland ... Jerry Thompson
Paul Stewart ... Raymond
George Coulouris ... Walter Parks Thatcher
Fortunio Bonanova ... Signor Matiste
Gus Schilling ... The Headwaiter
Philip Van Zandt ... Mr. Rawlston
Georgia Backus ... Bertha Anderson
Harry Shannon ... Kane's Father
Produced by Orson Welles and George Schaefer .... executive producer

Original Music by Bernard Herrmann
Film Editing by Robert Wise
Casting by Rufus Le Maire & Robert Palmer
Art Direction by Van Nest Polglase
Set Decoration by Darrell Silvera
Costume Design by Edward Stevenson
Makeup by Maurice Seiderman

Let's read a little bit of the script together to get you started. Then, we'll screen the scene.

HOMEWORK: None. You may read the rest of Citizen Kane to get the idea of how we write a film script.

Wednesday, May 22, 2019

Shattered Glass (conclusion); Coffeehouse/Catch up

After screening the film Shattered Glass, please complete and turn in your packets for participation credit. That is Activity 1, part 1 (you did part 2 in class before viewing the film); Activity 2 (part 1 only); and Activity 3 (part 1 only), and both parts of Activity 4 (see below).

About Activity 4: 

Additionally, please research one of the following journalists and find out what they did that was unethical (What was the situation they were accused of regarding journalist ethics? Which rule did they break? What happened to them professionally? Etc.):

  • Julie Amparano
  • Mike Barnicle
  • Jayson Blair
  • Janet Cooke
  • Ken Dilanian
  • Michael Finkel
  • Sean Hannity
  • Mike Huckabee
  • Jack Kelley
  • Lara Logan
  • Rachel Maddow
  • Bill O'Reilly
  • Ruth Shalit
  • Patricia Smith
  • Juan Thompson
  • Mike Tobin
Post your answer in the COMMENT section of MY BLOG for credit.

Finally, please complete activity 4, part 2 as a BLOG POST entry on YOUR BLOG.

HOMEWORK: None. Coffeehouse tonight at 7:00. Join us!


Sunday, May 19, 2019

Journalist Ethics; Shattered Glass; Introduction to Film

Do you have the moral fiber it takes to be a journalist?

The Ethics of Journalism include the following:
  • Credibility
  • Accuracy
  • Objectivity
And to a lesser extent:
  • Good taste (show compassion, minimize harm)
  • Simultaneous rebuttal, or right of reply
  • Fairness to all (subject & audience)
  • Avoid plagiarism
  • Use attribution--do not use anonymous sources
  • Truth
  • Accountability
CLASS ACTIVITY:
We are going to screen the film Shattered Glass (2003)
Written & Directed by: Billy Ray (with Buzz Bissinger)
Cinematography: Mandy Walker

Hayden Christensen ... Stephen Glass
Peter Sarsgaard ... Charles "Chuck" Lane
Chloe Sevigny ... Caitlin Avey
Rosario Dawson ... Andy Fox
Melanie Lynskey ... Amy Brand
Hank Azaria ... Michael Kelly
Steve Zahn ... Adam Penenberg

HOMEWORK: As we watch the film, please note the activities on the packet. Complete these as we view the film (they are due when we're done viewing the film). Our Coffeehouse is Wednesday, May 22 at 7:00. We'd love to see you there!

Thursday, May 16, 2019

Yellow Journalism Activity (Con't); introduction to Journalism Ethics


A. Come up with some outrageous claims or details about a topic of your own choice.

  • Articles about celebrities are common
  • Articles about supernatural or weird events are common 
    • Ex. Aliens Influence the White House with Pyramid Power!
    • Ex. Donald Trump Marries Putin: Melania is Furious!
    • Ex. The White House Spends Billions of Dollars to Paint the Capital Yellow!
    • Ex. The Chinese Moon Exploration Discovers Evidence of Ancient Alien Life!
    • Ex. Beyonce Announces Her Retirement to Pursue a Career in Food Service!
Use the typical 5 W's and H to make up and fill out your notes. You may make this up completely. Your notes do not have to be true--you just need to make them up and say you spoke to some source about their validity. But beware: the more outrageous your claim, the more likely readers will assume you are lying. Still support your ridiculous claims with evidence and cite your sources!

B. Your topic can be about an event, person (celebrity), or trend.
Provide ONLY the facts, statistics, hear-say, details about people, places, things, events, quotes, etc. that sound true (or not true). Write these notes down in prose form. We will be using them again in the next 15 minutes of class. Please turn in by 12:30 today. Just provide the notes--not the article!

Then: once we have all the options on the table, come up and select one article from a different students' notes and write a short 300 word article of yellow journalism. Use the notes (and your imaginative skills) to write an article that is "fake news". Turn in your article by the end of class today.

If you finish early, please read about journalism ethics.

Journalists (like doctors or teachers or clergy) have a moral code of ethics that they attempt to follow. These include:
  • Seek the truth and report it
  • Minimize harm
  • Act independently to serve the public
  • Be fair and impartial
  • Be accountable and transparent (confirm sources) and explain one's decisions; acknowledge mistakes; expose unethical journalism/journalists
View the video below...



See handout for further information. We will view the film Shattered Glass next class.

HOMEWORK: None. Our Coffeehouse is Wednesday, May 22 at 7:00. We'd love to see you there! our department book sale starts Monday. Bring in any books you might want to donate to the sale!

Monday, May 13, 2019

Yellow Journalism/Press Activities

Complete your homework if you did not do it over the weekend and turn in by the end of class today.

TASK #3: CHOOSE ONE OPTION

1. After viewing the video on Hearst (see videos in post below this one) compare/contrast Hearst's character and temperament with that of Donald Trump. Read the articles on 1. "Journalism in the Age of Trump", 2.  "How Donald Trump Changed Political Journalism" and 3.  "How Can Journalists Protect Themselves During a Trump Presidency." Write an opinion piece (op ed) or letter to the editor of these magazines or a local newspaper (a well-developed paragraph or two) in which you make a decision about the future of news journalism in America. Take into consideration what you learned about Randolph Hearst and Donald Trump in the articles you have read to support your points.

or

2. After watching the video on Hearst (see videos in post below this one) and reading a few strips from The Yellow Kid (see above), read the following handout/articles: "A Culture of New Racism"; "White Privilege & Anti-Racism in the Funnies", "Racism & Comics: Good intentions Aren't Good Enough". Write an opinion piece (op ed) or letter to the editor of these magazines or a local newspaper (a well-developed paragraph or two) in which you discuss the issue of racism depicted in comic strips, comic books, or animation. Take into consideration what you learned about Randolph Hearst, The Yellow Kid, and these articles to support your points.

TASK #3 is due by the end of class today.

If you have completed this assignment, please move on to the following final writing task for our Journalism unit:

Yellow journalism is journalism that is exaggerated, hyperbolic, subjective, or based solely on sensationalism. It presents little logic or poorly researched news that attempts to be "eye-catching" to entice a viewer/audience to read or watch the article. This is done primarily to sell more newspapers or gain more viewers, as opposed to the reporting of truth. Yellow journalism often focuses on scandals, entertainment, sex/violence, or other sensational or exaggerated content. Also called Yellow Press. Check this link for more details.

Is news journalism just entertainment? Why not lie? What use is telling the truth when we know truth is subjective? How can we tell if the news we read or view or listen to is true? Do you believe that "all successful journalism has 'shock value'"? Post your thoughts in the COMMENT section of this post below for extra credit.

Then, please watch and read the following videos/linked articles:


How to Spot Fake News (Article: Lori Robertson & Eugene Kiely, Factcheck)
Snopes is a website that helps fact check to validate and/or debunk made up stories in American popular culture and online news sources. You can use Snopes when you are checking to see if a news story is "fake" or "real". Snopes is a non-profit website.
Factcheck.org is another site (non-profit) that attempts to do the same thing for our media-entrenched culture.
The Straight Dope is another resource you can use.


1. Peruse the following 3 websites of contemporary yellow journalism. Select an article from each site and read it. Notice how the journalist uses (or doesn't use) attribution or citation of sources.
2. Now for the writing project.

A. Come up with some outrageous claims or details about a topic of your own choice. Use the typical 5 W's and H to fill out your notes. You may make this up. Your notes do not have to be true--you just need to make them up. But beware: the more outrageous your claim, the more likely readers will assume you are lying.

B. Your topic can be about an event, person (celebrity), or trend.
Provide ONLY the facts, statistics, hear-say, details about people, places, things, events, quotes, etc. that sound true (or not true). Write these notes down in prose form. We will be using them again next class. Please turn in by the end of class today. 

Once you have your note sheet completed please turn in by the end of class today.

HOMEWORK: None. Please complete any assignments you did not complete so far (see previous posts for details!) If you were absent last class, please read about Tasks 1 & 2 and complete those!

Friday, May 10, 2019

The Associated Press; Nellie Bly; Randolph Hearst & Joseph Pulitzer; Yellow Journalism

Please complete your 300 word article on local news and turn your draft in. Please use the 2-column format for your article! Use only the first 30 minutes to complete this article!

Then: (at 12:45)

The Associated Press (AP) is a U.S.-based not-for-profit news agency headquartered in New York City. Founded in 1846, it operates as a cooperative, unincorporated association. Its members are U.S. newspapers and broadcasters. Its Statement of News Values and Principles spells out its standards and practices.

The AP has earned 53 Pulitzer Prizes, including 31 for photography, since the award was established in 1917. It earned a 2019 Pulitzer Prize for International Reporting for coverage of the civil war in Yemen.

As of 2016, news collected by the AP was published and republished by more than 1,300 newspapers and broadcasters. The AP operates 263 news bureaus in 106 countries. It also operates the AP Radio Network, which provides newscasts twice hourly for broadcast and satellite radio and television stations. Many newspapers and broadcasters outside the United States are AP subscribers, paying a fee to use AP material without being contributing members of the cooperative. As part of their cooperative agreement with the AP, most member news organizations grant automatic permission for the AP to distribute their local news reports.

The AP employs the "inverted pyramid" formula for writing which enables the news outlets to edit a story to fit its available publication area without losing the story's essentials.

Cutbacks at rival United Press International (UPI) in 1993 left the AP as the United States' primary news service, although UPI still produces and distributes stories and photos daily. 

TASK #1: Click the link below and select an article from the Associated Press. In YOUR blog, create a post where you "report" (summarize the key points) of the AP article you chose. Decide on a lead and angle (see previous posts for options!) 

Three Important Journalists:

Please watch the following videos and complete the notes needed for each journalist. Find out: WHO was this journalist, WHAT did they do to be significant or important, WHERE they worked, WHEN (what time period or decade) did they live or write, HOW did they affect the journalist industry/profession, and WHY are they important today? These notes will be turned in for participation credit:

TASK #3: YELLOW JOURNALISM


Yellow Journalism was a term introduced between the difference of opinion journalists William Randolph Hearst and Joseph Pulitzer had about what kinds of reporting newspapers should publish.

Pulitzer's New York World and Hearst's New York Journal changed the content of newspapers by adding more sensationalized stories and cartoons or comic strips published by the paper.

Pulitzer began to publish the cartoon "The Yellow Kid" in 1896. The cartoon was created by R.F. Outcault and was popular with readers. Hearst offered Outcault an outrageous salary for his cartoon and "stole" the comic strip from Pulitzer. Pulitzer published an imitation of the cartoon very similar to "The Yellow Kid" to competing with Hearst.

This competition escalated between the newspapers--each over-dramatizing stories to win readership. Stories were written and altered to fit ideas that publishers and editors thought would sell the most papers. They attempted to stir public interest so that news boys could sell more papers on street corners (see Newsies).

Hearst (according to some historians) played a major role in America's involvement with Cuba during the Spanish-American War. He published sensational articles about Cuba to sway public opinion about America's involvement in the war. He was a business man interested in politics. Sound familiar?

When reporter Fredrick Remington sent a telegram to Hearst stating that there was not much going on in Cuba, Hearst replied,"You furnish the pictures and I'll furnish the war."

Hearst eventually persuaded President McKinley to sign a bill officially entering America into the Spanish-American war.

Here is a link to The Yellow Kid. Notice how these illustrations suggest sensational social or political commentary.

HOMEWORK: CHOOSE ONE OPTION:

1. After viewing the video on Hearst (see above) compare/contrast Hearst's character and temperament with that of Donald Trump. Read the articles on 1. "Journalism in the Age of Trump", 2.  "How Donald Trump Changed Political Journalism" and 3.  "How Can Journalists Protect Themselves During a Trump Presidency." Write an opinion piece (op ed) or letter to the editor of these magazines or a local newspaper (a well-developed paragraph or two) in which you make a decision about the future of news journalism in America. Take into consideration what you learned about Randolph Hearst and Donald Trump in the articles you have read to support your points.

or

2. After watching the video on Hearst (see above) and reading a few strips from The Yellow Kid (see above), read the following handout/articles: "A Culture of New Racism"; "White Privilege & Anti-Racism in the Funnies", "Racism & Comics: Good intentions Aren't Good Enough". Write an opinion piece (op ed) or letter to the editor of these magazines or a local newspaper (a well-developed paragraph or two) in which you discuss the issue of racism depicted in comic strips, comic books, or animation. Take into consideration what you learned about Randolph Hearst, The Yellow Kid, and these articles to support your points.

TASK #3 is NOT due yet.

Remember to turn in your 300 word local article draft today!

HOMEWORK: None. If you did not complete tasks #1 & #2 today in class, please catch up and turn your work in late. Late penalties apply.

Wednesday, May 8, 2019

Open Book Test Due! 300 Word Local News Article

Open Book Test for New Journalism novel:

This assignment is due today. Answers should be thoughtful and use textual evidence for full credit. Note: there are many parts to each question. Make sure you answer ALL parts of the question posed for full credit for each answer. Submit your answers by paper or through our Google Classroom site.

In Cold Blood ?'s:

  1. A journalist should always remain objective in reporting a story. Does the fact that Capote likely altered some of the dialogue and characterization in the book affect its merit as an example of the nonfiction novel? Does it affect your enjoyment of the work? How does his book differ in style from a newspaper article or feature? Give examples from the text to support your answer. What would this story have looked like if it had appeared as a journalistic article in the New York Times or a local newspaper like The City or The Democrat & Chronicle?
  2. If the murder victims weren't as white, prosperous, or well-liked as the Clutter family, do you think Capote would have written this book? Give reasons (using the text to support your answers) why it is important for writers and reporters to represent race, gender, culture, or class objectively? 
  3. Examine the writing/narrative techniques in this book. What's the effect on the reader of the author's technique of alternating between stories of the killers and the stories of the rest of the characters? What does this add or detract from the narrative of the story? What techniques does the author use to make this a nonfiction novel rather than just a history or work of journalism? How is this choice of narrative an effective one for Capote to make? 
  4. Even though we know immediately that the Clutters were murdered, the author doesn't give us the eyewitness details until 264 pages in. What's up with that? How does this book not follow the traditional inverted pyramid used in journalism? Is this tactic better or worse (does it strengthen or weaken the book) and why? Use examples from the text to support your answer.
  5. Would the story have been told differently if the author hadn't been an outsider to Kansas? If you lived in a small town where there were killers presumed to be on the loose, would you stick around? How is this novel a "romantic" view of small town American life? What scenes or passages conjure this romantic image? Given this viewpoint, how does this create conflict or irony with the violent murder? Use textual evidence to support your answer.
The Other Wes Moore ?'s:
1. During their youth, both Wes' spent most of their time in crime-ridden Baltimore and the Bronx. How important was that environment in shaping their stories and personalities? (Give examples from the text to support your answer). How does the author's own experience and upbringing create subjectivity in the book--remember that journalists aim to remain objective? What parts of the book are objective and which are subjective? Support your answer with the text.
2. Moore states that people often live up to the expectations projected on them. Is this true? If someone you care for expects you to succeed--or fail--will you? where does personal accountability come into play? Additionally, a reader's expectations of a news article or story may color or reaffirm their own biases. How might this book represent urban life in a negative light? Do you feel the book is an accurate depiction of life in an urban setting? Use textual support in your answer.
3. Discuss the writing/narrative structure and techniques used in the book. What's the effect on the reader of the author's technique of alternative personal narrative with that of the other Wes? What does this juxtaposition add or detract from the narrative of the story? What techniques does the author use to make this a nonfiction novel rather than just a history or work of journalism? How is this choice of narrative an effective one for Moore to make?
4. How does this book not follow the traditional inverted pyramid used in journalism? Is this tactic better or worse (does it strengthen or weaken the book) and why? Use examples from the text to support your answer. How does the book differ in style from a newspaper article or feature in the way it is structured (for ex. it has 3 parts...why does the author divide his book in this manner?)
5. Moore says "the chilling truth is that Wes's story could have been mine." Would the story have been told differently if the author had been an outsider: a stranger to Baltimore or from another State or from a rural setting or as a different gender? If you grew up like the other Wes how would you have made different choices? How is this novel pragmatic (useful) in "teaching" the reader about how to avoid tragic problems due to our environment or situation. For example, comment on the importance of family support, financial support, or education as ways to address America's crime and violence problem.
Period 7 or 8:

After you complete your test and turn it in, continue to work on your local news article.

The ANGLE in an article: The angle is the main reason for writing the article or the main point or theme of a news or feature story.  The angle is most often found in the lead of the article (usually the first sentence). It's the lens through which the writer filters the information he or she has gathered. There may be several different angles to a single news event.

For example, if a new law is passed, angles might include the cost of implementing the law and where the money will come from, or the legislators who authored and pushed for the law, or the people most closely affected by the law (the readership). While each one of these could be included in the main story, each one also lends itself to a separate story. What the story focuses on is your angle.

Types of Story Angles

Local angle: Sometimes reporters are asked to "localize a story." You can have a national news story, like hurricane ravaging shorelines across the East Coast or anything about President Trump. But a news outlet in Florida would focus specifically on the area where its readers/viewers are located. Trump may be another issue, entirely, as much of what he does may or may not affect Rochester directly. Democrat & Chronicle readers, however, want a Rochester angle. Ex. What does the news mean for us? In your article, what does the news mean for the students at SOTA?

National angle: Taken for major stories, trend pieces, and issues that affect the country as a whole, this angle connects us with the rest of our country. An example would be how Trump's scandals have impacted the reliability of politics in Washington and for our Democracy.

Follow-up story: After a breaking news story hits the Internet and newspapers, reporters will often write a follow-up story where the lead focuses on new information. Using the inverted pyramid style of writing—where the most relevant information is at the top of the story—a follow-up article gives readers new details followed by the background that is found in the initial story.

Reporters and journalists must learn to build a sense of what's called a "news sense" or a "nose for news," an instinctive feel for what constitutes a big story.

Developing a feel for what constitutes a big story (or news worthy) is something many journalism students struggle with. It can take time and effort to develop this sense. The best way to learn how to find good story ideas is to model published articles or shadow experienced reporters (if you're serious about becoming a journalist). 

Work on your 300-400 word LOCAL NEWS article draft after you have completed and turned in your test (see above).
  • Find out who you might contact regarding information on the idea or topic you selected. Make a list of who you might interview or get information from. This list may change as you complete your research. 
  • Some information about SOTA can be found here at this link, but you might need to dig deeper and talk to real live people. The district's information can be found here...; you might also find information for the district the RTA website.
  • Come up with some questions. Write these down. I'll collect your "questions" with your article at the end of this assignment. 
  • Use a press pass and go find out information about your topic/news event. [Please note: some teachers are unavailable at this time...do not bother them!] Ask the substitute today for a pass to interview a teacher or interested party related to your article.
  • Complete the 5 W's & H. See handout for help.
  • Use your information to write an article of 300-400 words in length. Do not waste your time in the lab--you have a lot to do...!
HOMEWORK: None. Catch up if you missed an assignment.

Sunday, May 5, 2019

Prep for Your Novel Take-Home Test; Writing your Local SOTA News Article

Period 7: 

Please turn in the answers to the 6 questions for our Chapter Unit on NEWSPAPERS. See homework from last class if confused.

Open a Google doc and share your chapter summary (the 5 W's & H for one of the chapters you read in your chosen novel) with your group. Individuals can use this information to help answer the 5 questions for their book test:

This assignment is due Wednesday, May 8. Answers should be thoughtful and use textual evidence. Note: there are many parts to each question. Make sure you answer ALL parts of the question posed.

In Cold Blood ?'s:


  1. A journalist should always remain objective in reporting a story. Does the fact that Capote likely altered some of the dialogue and characterization in the book affect its merit as an example of the nonfiction novel? Does it affect your enjoyment of the work? How does his book differ in style from a newspaper article or feature? Give examples from the text to support your answer. What would this story have looked like if it had appeared as a journalistic article in the New York Times or a local newspaper like The City or The Democrat & Chronicle?
  2. If the murder victims weren't as white, prosperous, or well-liked as the Clutter family, do you think Capote would have written this book? Give reasons (using the text to support your answers) why it is important for writers and reporters to represent race, gender, culture, or class objectively? 
  3. Examine the writing/narrative techniques in this book. What's the effect on the reader of the author's technique of alternating between stories of the killers and the stories of the rest of the characters? What does this add or detract from the narrative of the story? What techniques does the author use to make this a nonfiction novel rather than just a history or work of journalism? How is this choice of narrative an effective one for Capote to make? 
  4. Even though we know immediately that the Clutters were murdered, the author doesn't give us the eyewitness details until 264 pages in. What's up with that? How does this book not follow the traditional inverted pyramid used in journalism? Is this tactic better or worse (does it strengthen or weaken the book) and why? Use examples from the text to support your answer.
  5. Would the story have been told differently if the author hadn't been an outsider to Kansas? If you lived in a small town where there were killers presumed to be on the loose, would you stick around? How is this novel a "romantic" view of small town American life? What scenes or passages conjure this romantic image? Given this viewpoint, how does this create conflict or irony with the violent murder? Use textual evidence to support your answer.
The Other Wes Moore ?'s:
1. During their youth, both Wes' spent most of their time in crime-ridden Baltimore and the Bronx. How important was that environment in shaping their stories and personalities? (Give examples from the text to support your answer). How does the author's own experience and upbringing create subjectivity in the book--remember that journalists aim to remain objective? What parts of the book are objective and which are subjective? Support your answer with the text.
2. Moore states that people often live up to the expectations projected on them. Is this true? If someone you care for expects you to succeed--or fail--will you? where does personal accountability come into play? Additionally, a reader's expectations of a news article or story may color or reaffirm their own biases. How might this book represent urban life in a negative light? Do you feel the book is an accurate depiction of life in an urban setting? Use textual support in your answer.
3. Discuss the writing/narrative structure and techniques used in the book. What's the effect on the reader of the author's technique of alternative personal narrative with that of the other Wes? What does this juxtaposition add or detract from the narrative of the story? What techniques does the author use to make this a nonfiction novel rather than just a history or work of journalism? How is this choice of narrative an effective one for Moore to make?
4. How does this book not follow the traditional inverted pyramid used in journalism? Is this tactic better or worse (does it strengthen or weaken the book) and why? Use examples from the text to support your answer. How does the book differ in style from a newspaper article or feature in the way it is structured (for ex. it has 3 parts...why does the author divide his book in this manner?)
5. Moore says "the chilling truth is that Wes's story could have been mine." Would the story have been told differently if the author had been an outsider: a stranger to Baltimore or from another State or from a rural setting or as a different gender? If you grew up like the other Wes how would you have made different choices? How is this novel pragmatic (useful) in "teaching" the reader about how to avoid tragic problems due to our environment or situation. For example, comment on the importance of family support, financial support, or education as ways to address America's crime and violence problem.
Period 7 or 8:

Choose a category of journalism and find an event that is happening at SOTA to report on: Ex.
    • Rent, the musical
    • Charlotte's Web (middle school production)
    • NYS Math & English Exams
    • Academic Eligibility Team
    • Speech & Debate
    • Chess Team
    • SOTA Stream
    • HSA
    • Games Club
    • GSA
    • Community Service
    • SAT exams
    • AP exams
    • Dial-a-Teacher
    • Friends of School of the Arts
    • Track & Field
    • Science Department News
    • Math Department News
    • Special Education Department News
    • English Department News
    • Social Studies Department News
    • Foreign Language Department News
    • Visual Arts
    • Student Government Elections
    • The Superintendent Nominations
    • ISS news
    • Library news
    • Lunch room news
    • Guidance Office news
    • The City School District
    • Local church/temple news
    • Other...
  • Find out who you might contact regarding information on the idea or topic you selected. Make a list of who you might interview or get information from. Some information about SOTA can be found here at this link, but you might need to dig deeper and talk to real live people. The district's information can be found here...; you might also find information for the district the RTA website.
  • Come up with some questions. Write these down.
  • Use a press pass and go find out information about your topic/news event. [Please note: some teachers are unavailable at this time...do not bother them!] Ask the substitute today for a pass to interview a teacher or interested party related to your article.
  • Complete the 5 W's & H. See handout for help.
  • Use your information to write an article of 300-400 words in length. Do not waste your time in the lab--you have a lot to do...!
HOMEWORK: Complete the test questions (see above) for your chosen novel: The Other Wes Moore or In Cold Blood.

Thursday, May 2, 2019

Journalism: The Local News Article

A typical newspaper is divided into multiple sections. Here is a list of standard newspaper sections:
  • Local/domestic/national news
  • International news
  • Business/finance/economy
  • Politics
  • Sports
  • Weather
  • Classified ads
  • Interviews
  • Letters from the readers
  • Opinion/editorial
  • Entertainment/comics/crossword puzzle/horoscopes
  • Arts, culture, literature
  • Events/movies
  • Broadcast/cable television guide
  • Society/people
  • Tourism/travel tips
  • Computers
  • Automobiles
  • Style/fashion
  • Cooking/cuisine
  • Health/medicine
  • Home & decoration
  • Family
  • Kids/youth
TASK #1: Please select 3 of these categories and find and read 3 articles from the Democrat & Chronicle. Categories can be found above in the banner menus and under the quick links (since this is a website, not a physical newspaper). Once you have read these 3 articles, post a COMMENT on YOUR BLOG where you name the article, quickly summarize the article in 2-3 sentences and identify: who is most likely to read this article? What do you notice about how the article is written (include the headline)? Does it answer the 5 W's & H? Is the article written in an inverted pyramid style? What's your proof? What have you learned about journalistic writing as a style by reading these articles?

TASK #2: Working with 2-3 other students, search the internet and find the definitions for the following journalist terms. It will be important for you to find the definition of these words in relation to journalism (not just their typical definition). Compile your notes together on what you found and print out a vocabulary sheet for your team (and 1 for me for credit--put the name of your members on your work...):

  • Headline
  • Banner
  • Byline
  • Copy
  • Correspondent
  • Cutline
  • Dateline
  • Enterprise copy
  • Exclusive
  • Feature
  • Flag
  • Hard news
  • Masthead
  • Puff Piece or Puffery
  • Wire services

TASK #3:

Choose a category of journalism (see list above) and find an event that is happening at SOTA to report on: Ex.
    • Rent, the musical
    • Charlotte's Web (middle school production)
    • NYS Math & English Exams
    • Academic Eligibility Team
    • Speech & Debate
    • Chess Team
    • SOTA Stream
    • HSA
    • Games Club
    • GSA
    • Community Service
    • SAT exams
    • AP exams
    • Dial-a-Teacher
    • Friends of School of the Arts
    • Track & Field
    • Science Department News
    • Math Department News
    • Special Education Department News
    • English Department News
    • Social Studies Department News
    • Foreign Language Department News
    • Visual Arts
    • Student Government Elections
    • The Superintendent Nominations
    • ISS news
    • Library news
    • Lunch room news
    • Guidance Office news
    • The City School District
    • Local church/temple news
    • Other...
  • Find out who you might contact regarding information on the idea or topic you selected. Make a list of who you might interview or get information from. Some information about SOTA can be found here at this link, but you might need to dig deeper and talk to real live people. The district's information can be found here...; you might also find information for the district the RTA website.
  • Come up with some questions. Write these down.
  • Use a press pass and go find out information about your topic/news event. [Please note: some teachers are unavailable at this time...do not bother them!]
  • Complete the 5 W's & H. See handout for help.
  • Use your information to write an article. You will need to pick an angle, but we'll do this next class!
Here's a calendar to help you as well.

If you cannot complete Task #3 in class today, please work on your homework. See below.

HOMEWORK: Please read the 1st part on our Chapter Unit on NEWSPAPERS. Answer the 6 questions and turn in Monday.

Game Review Article; Ready Player One

  Please write a review of the Atari 2600, NES or Sega game you played. Your article should include the following: 1. A researched historic...