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News And Mag Editing Basics

Instructions:
  • Answer 50 questions in 15 minutes.
  • If you are not ready to take this test, you can study here.
  • Match each statement with the correct term.
  • Don't refresh. All questions and answers are randomly picked and ordered every time you load a test.

This is a study tool. The 3 wrong answers for each question are randomly chosen from answers to other questions. So, you might find at times the answers obvious, but you will see it re-enforces your understanding as you take the test each time.
1. Timeliness - Proximity - Prominence - Consequence - Rarity - Human Interest






2. When paraphrasing and quotes repeat each other - redundant.






3. Visual interest - cosumerism - trends - community - inspiration - twists of fate - great writing.






4. Style






5. Sidebar






6. Tape editors






7. Actual malice

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8. Rub within body copy (subheads and pull quotes) - Should appear on the same page or spread as the words or ideas for the blurb appear - Should appear in proper story order - Break up text and seas of gray to coax or tease reader into copy - Should fo






9. Reputation is...

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10. Why are accuracy problems magnified at the local level?






11. Concept - Structure - Reporting - Style (creativity) - Presentation - Was it worth saying? Is there relevance/timeliness?






12. What's the exception to the order of attribution?






13. What are the 5 key tests of libel?

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14. Web blog or Journal style






15. More historical context and common ground for opposing views.






16. Lists (step-by-step; recipes are SJ) - Subheads - Blurbs - Sidebars and boxes - Charts and graphics






17. Alliteration and rhyme - Allusions to books - movies and TV - Songs and music - Phrases and puns - Names become fun to play with






18. Credibility by telling exactly what witnesses see - experts say - etc. - Enliven and dramatize - Reveal personality






19. Provide a sizeable portion of a publication's revenue.






20. Internal - External - Both provide entry points to story






21. Aristotle's 3 questions: What does it say? - How well does it say it? - Was it worth saying? [What does it say? Is there a clear focus? Is there a point?] - Theme?






22. A statement of purpose that identifies the specific editorial focus of the magazine - who the intended readers are and a definition of its personality






23. Cut the copy (quick and to the point) - Be clear - Involve the reader ('How I' approach - 'How you' approach - 'How Jane Doe' approach) - Think useful - Think new or news - Think money






24. Libel






25. Emphasize the latest angle and play down the exact time of the original event.






26. Do not change anything inside quote marks (Exception: punctuation and spelling) - Never put quote marks around indirect quotes






27. Correlative conjunctions






28. In essence - anything from the text but the story (Title - deck - head - subhead - pull quotes - bylines - blurbs - captions - etc.) - Used to draw readers into a story - Stats reinforce display copy and visuals






29. A personal story rather than general.






30. Story budget

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31. Stories - videos - audio - photos and grpahics provided by the times - ap - etch to subscriber newsrooms.






32. Loopwhole journalism






33. Form of communal email in which people interested in a common topic send messages to a specific online address and receive all other messages sent to that addresses.






34. Basic situations in Invasion of privacy






35. Steps in the editing process






36. Essential part of credibility - Has to do with someone (not the writer or reporting) re-reporting the factual info - Magazines have more extensive fact checking than newspapers (more time for turnaround) - Fact checkers also called research editors/e






37. Write a caption for every photo (except studio shots) - Write sentences - Write in the present tense - active voice (on first sentence) - Place captions under the photos - Don't state the obvious - Write more than one line - Make the last line count






38. They are direct (chance for sources to connect w/ readers) - They are nuanced (spokesmen say things particularly)






39. Grammar






40. Web sites need...






41. Audiences respond to these words because they convey a precise relationship to their concepts- words like office rather than facility.






42. Agenda Setting (sets the agenda) - Gatekeeping - Watchdog - Verification - Marketplace of Ideas - Mobilizers -Public journalism - Developmental journalism






43. Subordinating conjunctions






44. Editors must be able to idenify this in stories that can result in imnbalance or offensive langugage.






45. What's an efficient approach to copy editing?






46. What's the order for attribution?






47. Editors such purge copy of these trite - overused expressions. Ex: sweet as sugar






48. Managing editor






49. Should complement the picture - Should connect the picture to the story and get readers to read the story






50. Why should you use quotes?






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