While
one kind of featurized lead may be inappropriate for a breaking
news story, another may be just right. Choosing the perfect
lead for a story presupposes familiarity with many possibilities.
But "straight lead" and "anecdotal lead"
don’t frame a terribly broad range. Newsrooms lack an adequate
writing lexicon, says Jack
Hart, Managing Editor of the Oregonian.
|
|
The Lexicon of
Leads
The country's
top writing coaches have harped on the subject long enough to make it
conventional wisdom. Newsrooms lack an adequate writing lexicon. That
shortcoming cripples conversation between writers and editors, limits
creativity and restricts us all to a few tired story forms.
A lexicon is simply
a collection of terms that apply to a particular skill or field of study.
The fuller the lexicon, the richer the communication. You can't talk about
a subject if you don't have the words. And, some psychologists would argue,
you can't even think about it. At least not very productively.
All of which came
bubbling to the surface when the team leaders met to consider the paper's
use of anecdotal leads. The concern was that we were slipping into the
habit of topping too many hard news stories with soft leads. The participants
came armed with examples.
As the discussion
proceeded, one thing became obvious. The examples represented a broad
range of featurized approaches to news stories. And, as Jacqui Banaszynski
pointed out, "It appears that we're calling everything other than a straight
news lead an anecdotal lead."
That poses several
problems, most of which illustrate the value of an extensive writing and
editing lexicon. For one thing, while one kind of featurized lead may
be inappropriate for a breaking news story, another may be just right.
For another, choosing the perfect lead for a story presupposes familiarity
with many possibilities. But "straight lead" and "anecdotal lead" don't
frame a terribly broad range.
Here is a list
aimed at improving our lexicon of leads:
Straight Leads
1. Summary Leads:
The University
of Oregon must move more women into higher-level faculty jobs or face
federal sanctions. (12/24/92, B1)
This is the
spring from which all journalistic waters flow. Summary leads summarize
(what else?) the most important idea in the story. They often top
inverted-pyramid news stories, the most traditional form. Because
a good summary lead makes meaning instantly clear, it's often the
preferred form for breaking-news and issue stories.
2. Blind Leads:
The state's
land-use planning agency on Friday chose a former city planner from
Eugene to be its new director. (5/6/89, D4)
A blind lead
is a summary lead that leaves out potentially confusing detail. The
lead cited here omits the name of the planning agency (the Department
of Land Conservation and Development) and the city planner, who was
relatively unknown statewide.
A "catch-all
graf" immediately follows a blind lead. The catch-all includes the
specific detail omitted from the lead.
3. Wraps:
Thursday's
storm caused the deaths of a Salem woman who broke her neck in a fall,
a Bend man who had a heart attack while shoveling snow and a Eugene
teen-ager struck by a skidding car.
An editor's
order to "wrap it" means to combine several items. The reporter usually
packages the items under a lead that refers to all of them.
4. Shirttail
Leads:
"A man taking
photographs of Portland's skyline about 2:15 a.m. Sunday apparently
was struck by a car and knocked into the Willamette River off the
Interstate 5 ramp to Interstate 84...."
"Another accident
Friday, this one involving a hit-and-run driver in Southwest Washington,
left a Lynnwood, Wash., man in serious condition...." (10/8/90, B3)
The shirttail
is the alternative to the wrap lead. The reporter writes a summary
lead focusing on the most newsworthy element in the wrap. Then he
hangs the remaining items, each with its own lead, from the first
element's "shirttails."
Shirttail
leads are traditional on meeting stories. The first lead targets the
most important item on the agenda. The remaining items are introduced
with an "in-other-business" transition.
Feature
Leads
1. Anecdotal
Leads:
Richard Leakey
likes to tell about the day in 1950 when he was a 6-year-old whining
for his parents' attention. Louis and Mary Leakey were digging for
ancient bones on the shores of Lake Victoria, but their little boy
wanted to play. He wanted lunch. He wanted his mother to cuddle him.
He wanted something to do.
"Go find your own
bone," said his exasperated father, waving Richard off toward scraps
of fossils lying around the site.
What the little
boy found was the jawbone -- the best ever unearthed -- of an extinct
giant pig. As he worked away at it with the dental picks and brushes
that served for toys in the paleontologists' camp, he experienced
for the first time the passion of discovery. (Kathleen Merryman in
the Tacoma News Tribune)
Here's a true
anecdotal lead, as opposed to all the other kinds of feature leads.
As an anecdote, the lead takes the form of a short narrative with
a beginning, middle and end. The end is particularly important. It's
analogous to the punch line in a joke -- it wraps up the story with
a flourish that brings things to a apt conclusion.
An anecdotal
lead should illustrate the story's central theme. Kathleen Merryman's
anecdote, for example, explains something central about her subject,
Richard Leakey.
2. Narrative
Leads:
They pulled
the car to the side of the road, turned off the motor and waited silently
as the memories washed over them in a series of gentle waves.... (Tom
Hallman, 3/8/90, B1)
A narrative
lead simply launches an action line. It's not part of an anecdote,
necessarily. But it puts central characters into a scene and begins
telling the story that pits those characters against some kind of
complication. Narrative leads are -- surprise! -- most appropriate
to narrative stories. But they work on other kinds of stories, too.
The bookend narrative, for example, begins with some relevant action,
turns to standard news-feature style for the middle of the story and
completes the narrative for the story kicker.
3. Scene-Setter
Leads:
A woman with
tormented eyes talks to herself as she plays a battered piano in Ward
D's dayroom. Other psychiatric patients shuffle on the beige linoleum
or stare from red-and-green vinyl chairs.
A bank of windows
opens to a fenced courtyard. Outside.... (Brian Meehan, 10/27/93,
D1)
Scene-setters
open with description. They may contain some action, as is the case
here. But the main point is to create a stage on which action can
unfold or to give a sense of place important to the focus of the story.
Brian Meehan's story concerned conditions at Dammasch State Hospital.
So a description of those conditions was an appropriate way to begin.
4. Scene-Wraps
or Gallery Leads:
A man claiming
to be a Catholic priest sits in a Santa Claus suit in a wheelchair
outside a Southeast Portland supermarket, collecting money for the
"Holy Order of Mary Inc."Across
town, a supposed South African visitor asks a holiday-spirited shopper
for directions to a local church.
The South African then launches into a complicated tale that soon
has the Portlander withdrawing $2,000 from the bank....
Elsewhere, a boiler-room
telephone sales company.... (Jim Long, 12/13/91, B1))
Scene-wraps
illustrate trend stories. They show that the same thing is happening
in a variety of places. Because they consist of a series of pictures,
they're also called "galleries."
5. Significant
Detail Leads:
Hidden beneath
a heap of inner-tubes in a tiny storeroom on an island in the middle
of the Vistula River is the statue of Lenin that stood for decades
inside the Gdansk Shipyard. (6/18/91, A3)
As you might
expect, this story explored the continuing influence of Communism
and central planning on the operation of the shipyard and the economy
of Poland. The statue of Lenin -- hidden, but still in the neighborhood
-- perfectly symbolized the story's central theme. And it perfectly
illustrates the use of a significant detail to craft a lead.
6. The Single-Instance
Lead:
For five days,
Alice's husband, high on drugs, threatened to kill her. He hit her
and abused her.
Terrified, Alice
fled the house when she finally got the chance and ran to a local
business to call the police.
"He would kill
me. He's very scary," Alice said. "He would walk through walls if
he had to."
The police advised
her to contact the Domestic Violence Resource Center in Hillsboro,
and Alice found her way there. (12/7/89, WM1)
The single-instance
lead uses one example to illustrate a larger topic. For that reason,
single-instance leads are also called "microcosm leads." In this case,
Alice's story was a gateway to a larger story on the Domestic Violence
Resource Center.
Single-instance
leads are a mainstay of magazine writing. In fact, they're almost
required for stories in the most popular women's magazines. They've
spread rapidly into newspaper writing, to the point that some critics
now complain about their overuse.
7. Word Play
Leads:
In Michael
Crichton's previous novel, "Jurassic Park," a tropical island has
been transformed into a zoo whose denizens are dinosaurs brought to
life by a group of greedy, irresponsible scientists who have been
cloning around. (2/1/92, D2)
Word-play
is essentially lighthearted. Word-play leads therefore work best on
less-than-serious stories. They're popular in sports and entertainment,
but they can succeed at grabbing and delighting readers in other forms
as well.
Dangerous
Leads
1. Question Leads:
What's black and
orange and the worst nightmare for teams headed to the state football
playoffs? (10/28/95, C1)
Some editors
simply ban question leads, reasoning that readers want answers, not
questions. But George Orwell assures us that the only rule in writing
is that there are no rules. So let's concede that question leads occasionally
work, for all the right reasons.
They often
fail because they seldom perform the basic function of a lead -- stating
the central theme that organizes and explains the entire story. Furthermore,
they can be irritating. Readers probably do resent frivolous questions
when what they really want is news.
Still, some
stories deal with fundamental questions. So a question lead can be
appropriate. Nonetheless, question leads seldom represent the best
solution. It pays to be especially cautious when using them.
2. Quote Leads:
Quotation
leads were banned in some newsrooms, too. The rationale was similar
to the justification used for banning question leads: The chances
that a quote was the best way to express the story's theme were awfully
slim.
But quote
leads can work wonderfully well, too. Consider the famous Saul Pett
lead for a 1963 AP Newsfeatures story on Dorothy Parker:
"Are you married
my dear?"
"Yes, I
am."
"Then you won't
mind zipping me up."
"Zipped up, Dorothy
Parker turned to face her interviewer, and the world."
Or this intriguing opener from a Jeanie Senior story:
Michael H. Walsh
calls it it "teaching the elephant to dance."
"That's his term
for making the enormous, historic Union Pacific Railroad Co. competitive
and profitable in the 20th century. (5/28/89, D1)
3. Topic Leads:
More than 40 environmentalists
and developers debated before the Portland City Council on Wednesday
on the future of wetlands areas in the Columbia South Shore area.
(3/9/89, B4)
BOARDMAN --
The prospect of tripling this town's population with a 3,000-inmate
prison was the subject of a hot debate Tuesday. (9/27/89, B1)
Orwell notwithstanding,
topic leads probably should be banned. The point of a news story is
to tell us what happened, what the outcome was. In the case of a meeting
story, the important thing is not that the meeting took place, but
the consequence of the meeting. What was the key decision? Why is
that important? Where do we go from here?
Topic headings,
in other words, should be restricted to information. It's hard to
imagine that they can ever be an appropriate way to introduce news.
|