JOUR 311 Chapter Notes - Chapter 13: Dramatization, Telling Stories, Glossy Display
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These true stories tell how a central character encounters a complex challenge that he or she overcomes. These true-life sto(cid:396)ies do(cid:374)"t usuall(cid:455) (cid:373)ake (cid:374)atio(cid:374)al headli(cid:374)es. I(cid:374) (cid:373)ost (cid:272)ases, they happen to o(cid:396)di(cid:374)a(cid:396)(cid:455) people i(cid:374) s(cid:373)all to(cid:449)(cid:374)s a(cid:374)d (cid:272)ities. If the(cid:455) get (cid:396)epo(cid:396)ted at all, it"s i(cid:374) a (cid:449)eekl(cid:455) o(cid:396) community newspaper and not in a big-city daily. Distinguishing characteristic applied the use of fiction techniques to nonfiction reporting. Its writers took stories about people and reported them using the fiction techniques of character development, narrative, dialogue, description and immersive reporting. The plot of a good story looks like this: you introduce a main character who possesses admirable qualities that attract the empathy of readers. You i(cid:374)t(cid:396)odu(cid:272)e a situatio(cid:374) that th(cid:396)o(cid:449)s a(cid:374) o(cid:271)sta(cid:272)le o(cid:396) (cid:272)o(cid:374)fli(cid:272)t i(cid:374) the pe(cid:396)so(cid:374)"s path. You give your character a goal and show him trying to reach it. This same type of structure forms the plots of thousands of movies and novels.