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The Elements of Journalism: What Newspeople Should Know and the Public Should Expect

Completely updated and revised
"The most important book on the relationship of journalism and democracy published in the last fifty years." – Roy Peter Clark, The Poynter Institute

We Interrupt This Newscast: How to Improve Local News and Win Ratings, Too

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A landmark study on what people watch and why. The most exhaustive study ever of local TV news -- what helps ratings, what drives viewers away, and what editorial approaches and story-telling techniques most influence viewership.

The Skeptical Editing Technique

Portland Oregonian, July 29, 2006

This approach, employed at the Portland Oregonian, is as its name suggests, mostly an editing tool, but it can be used by the writer him or herself.

In Oregon they actually call it prosecutorial editing, but there is another editor in Connecticut, Reid McCluggage, who talks about something similar, which he calls Skeptical Editing, and we much prefer that term.

With this approach reporters know their editor will in effect adjudicate their stories line by line-on major stories with the reporter at their side asking: How do you know this? Why should the reader believe this? What is the assumption behind this sentence? Amanda Bennett, a former managing editor in Portland now working in Kentucky, said skeptical editing is great for "rooting out not so much errors of fact, but unconscious errors of assertion and narrative."

J-Tools

CCJ has collected some of journalism's best ideas, strategies and techniques to help journalists and citizens alike.