Getting to
Writing Effective Leads
Five Ws and an H
(or, finding a lead by emphasizing the most important news element):
- WHO: President Clinton will
visit Cuba next week at the request of Caricom nations.
- WHAT: Lightning struck the
upper deck at Wrigley Field last night while the Cubs were playing in San
Francisco.
- WHEN: Midnight tonight is
the deadline for tax returns, but the local post office is ready to accommodate
procrastinators.
- WHERE: The Emerson and Towanda
intersection is officially the most dangerous crossing in Bloomington,
according to the Illinois Bureau of Transportation.
- WHY: Because she could correctly
spell "ostentatious," Lisa Wheeler will go to the state Spelling
Bee finals.
- HOW: By hitting his 50th
home run last night for the fourth year, Chicago Cubs slugger Sammy Sosa
etched his name in the baseball record books alongside Babe Ruth and Mark
McGwire.
Common Types of News and News-Feature Leads (more
ways to "lead" the reader into the story)
- Straight Summary Lead: Twenty-eight passengers and a crew of
four were killed last night when a single-engine plane crashed four miles
south of Bloomington.
- Picture or Dramatic Lead: Mourners lined up for miles yesterday
in the pouring rain to take one last look and lay flowers near the coffin
of Mother Teresa, who lived among Calcutta's sick and needy for 35 years.
- Background Lead: After two weeks of picketing, United Auto Workers
put down their signs yesterday following an agreement which would give
members a 10 percent raise.
- Quotation Lead: "I don't want to sound anti-American,"
poet Derek Walcott told his audience at Illinois Wesleyan University, "but
this country is the only nation that taxes the Nobel Prize."
- Ironic or Contrast Lead: St. John's Church survived the 1868
fire that destroyed most of Bloomington, and it weathered firebombs thrown
in anger during the sixties. But it crumbled last night under the weight
of snow from yesterday's freak storm.
- Punch Lead: Two muskrats have taken over Holiday Pool, evading
would-be capturers and forcing residents to look for other ways to survive
the latest heat-wave.
- Quotation Lead: "When a man bites another human being's
ear, he should be banned from boxing for life," Evander Holyfield
said, pressing a handkerchief against the side of his bloodied head.
Common mistakes:
- The Hidden Lead. Does the lead zero in on the latest and most
important news, or is the real heart of the story (and therefore a better
lead) hidden elsewhere in the story?
- The Overly Dense Lead. Does the lead have too many of the W's
and H? Does it have too many proper nouns or too much data?
- The Dull Lead. Given your lead, would you really read this article
if you hadn't written it?
Assignment:
Write three different leads for each of the three campus news
ideas you came up with. Since the exercise is to help you develop a sense
of which leads are most effective in certain situations, and since you
obviously haven't researched your story ideas yet, you are free to "make
up" what you need for the leads. Be prepared to talk about which are
the most successful--and why.
Newswriting Exercises Newswriting
Syllabus