Journalism Sophia J

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Across
  1. 4. Space in a publication sold to businesses. Display ads usually contain headlines, illustrations, copy, a call for action and information to identify the business.
  2. 7. A person who researches and generally writes stories as assigned by editors.
  3. 9. TYPE Decorative typefaces which are not used for typical headlines or text. Better used for accent. Decorative fonts should be used limitedly.
  4. 12. Refers to the justification of text at its margins; left, right, centered or justified.
  5. 14. Part of the criteria on which a photograph is judged, very subjective; includes the Rule of Thirds, which indicates that the subject of a photograph should not be placed in the center.
  6. 17. A statement made by another person included in a published story. A direct quote is exactly what a person said and appears inside quotation marks. An indirect quote paraphrases what a person said and does not appear inside quotation marks.
  7. 18. The beginning of a story which serves to summarize the story and/or grab the reader’s attention.
  8. 20. The portion of a layout which explains what is happening in a photograph. Captions are placed touching the photograph.
  9. 21. SERIF Type with no feet or extensions on the letters which is easier to read in large sizes. Example, Arial, Helvetica.
  10. 22. A drawing which indicates the placement of elements on a page or spread; could be a rough or final draft.
  11. 23. EDITOR A person designated to supervise the production of a publication; ensures design consistency; serves as liaison between the staff and the people printing the pages.
Down
  1. 1. PYRAMID A style of writing most commonly applied to news stories in which the most important facts appear early in the story and less important facts later in the story. The copy at the end of the story can easily be cut to fit the space.
  2. 2. Copy that indicates who wrote a story, for example: “By John Doe.”CAPTION The portion of a layout which explains what is happening in a photograph. Captions are placed touching the photograph
  3. 3. The act of selecting a portion of the original image for publication. It may be enlarged or made smaller.
  4. 5. The time when a completed assignment is due or pages are to be sent to the printer.
  5. 6. Research done before interviewing that allows the reporter to ask questions that can only be answered by a source
  6. 8. A form of editorial written to comment and evaluate an art form such as a play, painting, movie, piece of music, book, food, etc.
  7. 9. A line of text that states where and when the story was physically written.
  8. 10. The text which tells the reader who made an opinionated statement quoted by the writer; most common is “said.”
  9. 11. INTEREST An element of news that includes people or events with which the audience can identify; stories that are interesting.
  10. 13. Written defamation; damaging false statements against another person or institution that appear in writing or are spoken from a written script.
  11. 15. PAGE The first page of the newspaper. This page contains the most timely, relevant, and newsworthy stories.
  12. 16. A block of text on a single topic beginning with some form of lead followed by the body that contains quotations and transitions.
  13. 19. & H The essentials of any story: who, what, when, where, why and how
  14. 20. An element of news that involves tension, surprise and suspense.