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Print Journalismessays on all aspects of journalism - from print to the Internet More than 12.5 million national newspapers are sold in Britain every day. The figure goes up to 14 million on Sundays. And for every copy of the Guardian sold each day, ten copies of the Sun cross the counter - which is what led former Sun editor Kelvin McKensie to rather cruelly call the Guardian 'the world's worst newspaper'.
Then, moving into the newsroom itself, there are chapters on the role of news editor, what sub-editors do, and how pictures are captioned. The individual essays could profit enormously from more illustrative examples, and almost every page is crying out for graphics. The would-be journalist is given a detailed breakdown of news features, and more importantly how to successfully pitch your ideas to editors, then how to write them if and when they are accepted. Once you have written your piece and checked it several times over for style, content, accuracy, spelling, and grammar, it then goes to a features editor who will edit it all over again. There's a whole chapter explaining this process. It's a tough world, and this is required reading for anybody who wants to make a success of freelance writing. You are unlikely to be invited to write comment or opinion pieces, but you could break into print via reviewing. How to write them is explained in detail - and these days its as likely to be reviewing radio and TV programmes as traditional books and theatre performances. Print journalism is now as we know being challenged by the online world - though you are even less likely to earn income from it. There are essays which analyse the differences between newspapers' print and online versions, and technical advice on how monitor screen and web browsers affect how and what we read on screen. There's also advice on writing blogs and wikis, before the collection winds up with essays on the ethics and law in journalism, copyright, and intellectual property rights - which is one of the best short explanations of a complex issue I have seen for quite some time. © Roy Johnson 2007 [more JOURNALISM books] Richard Keeble (ed), Print Journalism: a critical introduction, London: Routledge, 2005, pp.347, ISBN: 0415358825 |
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