Test your basic knowledge |

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. When should the time element appear?






2. Basic format (colors; yellow border on Nat Geo) - Logo and ancillary info (tagline [i.e. GQ Look smart - Live sharp] - price - vol # - issue date) - Illustration (in a generic sense - any kind of art or visual) - Cover lines ("sell lines -" "cover bl






3. Policy on accusers in sex crimes

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4. This may be appropriate to emphasize the details of the action rather than the one who is responsible.






5. Steps in the editing process






6. Design/layout editors






7. 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






8. Managing editor






9. 'Totally demolished' is an example of this. This diminishes the conciseness and clarity of writing.






10. Opening spread






11. A personal story rather than general.






12. Used in broadcasting. it frames a story by telling viewers and listeners what to expect.






13. Shouldn't be able to put a dollar bill on a page and not see some type of blurb






14. Whites will soon make up...






15. Teaser headlines to shock buyers - usually use numbers to suggest value






16. Web sites need...






17. Emerging style for journalism on local communities.






18. How broadcasters write stories. Leads are shorter in length and they are in the present tense.






19. Indefinite pronouns






20. 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.






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






22. Label - such as "contents" (Table is in design aspect only) - Logo - Slogan - Historical reference - Date of publication - Listing of editorial staff - Associate affiliations - Masthead (Post Office info - etc.)






23. When are commas used?






24. Qualified privilege






25. Local sidebars that include details like phone numbers - addresses - etc.






26. What's the best defense against libel?






27. 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






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






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






30. Dash






31. Someone says something unique (revolutionary; news worthy) - Someone says something uniquely (colorful language) - Someone important says something important






32. Timeliness - Proximity - Prominence - Consequence - Rarity - Human Interest






33. Damages






34. Aka refrigerator journalism - How-to; practical info - Advertisers love - Not a separate category of writing - just a different approach - Used in publishing houses like Meredith (grandfather of SJ) and Rodale






35. When is 'which' used?






36. Tape editors






37. What word should be used in attribution?






38. Appear outside body copy with the title - deck or subhead






39. Titles should promise...






40. When are relative pronouns like who used?






41. What's the order for attribution?






42. Absolute privilege






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






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






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






46. Web blog or Journal style






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






48. Where should attribution go?






49. Sidebar






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