Subtitles section Play video
-
Every day we are bombarded on all platforms of media
-
with personal stories that span the continuum
-
from the embarrassing and the trivial
-
to the dire and the critical.
-
The foodie posting photos of every plate of lasagna he orders,
-
the Iranian blogger describing the shooting death
-
of Nedā Āghā-Soltān.
-
Authentic narrative is the glue that connects people,
-
providing a compelling reason to keep reading.
-
It makes the personal universal,
-
transcends the individual,
-
and makes a story timeless and humanistic.
-
How, as a journalist, do you ask the questions
-
that yield this type of narrative?
-
You have to know what to ask of whom.
-
First you need to understand that every piece of journalism
-
requires a trifecta of sourcing.
-
If you picture the reporting process as depicted by a triangle,
-
one side will be official sources,
-
another side will be overview sources,
-
and a third side will be unofficial sources.
-
All three components are necessary in every well-reported piece.
-
The first side has official sources.
-
Those are the people with titles and expertise,
-
who own the company; are spokespeople for the movement.
-
They tell you the numbers, and the answers
-
to how much, how many, where, when, and who.
-
A second side of the triangle includes overview sources:
-
academics, consultants, authors,
-
who are not directly connected as stakeholders,
-
but have knowledge of the big picture.
-
Yet it is the third side of the trifecta - unofficial sources -
-
who hold the power of the individual's insight.
-
This is where you can find the why,
-
Giving consequence on the event, trend, phase, or idea
-
and what it means on a soul level to someone affected by it.
-
So how do you mine for the gems,
-
identifying what is compelling from what is chatter?
-
You ask surprising questions.
-
To achieve the complicated, fragile human connection,
-
you regard the stories of every subject as sacred.
-
Realize that an anecdote is oxygen
-
that breathes life into a grey story of exposition,
-
facts and data.
-
What the surgeon did at home the morning he operated on a woman's brain tumor.
-
How it feels to dream and train for the Olympics for a lifetime.
-
There are times when it is important to convey information quickly,
-
to present bulleted facts and updates.
-
When a situation is urgent, when action is required now,
-
when you need to know where the tornado will hit,
-
how fast the fire is spreading, and if it will reach your home today.
-
But the narrative personal stories
-
that contribute to the buffet of journalism
-
are pieces that have the luxury of a slow dance of information.
-
It is this artful solicitation of story
-
that will make the journalism memorable
-
and will deliver the narrative bond that will connect us to each other.