Episoder
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The Society for Features Journalism hosted a conversation between Lane DeGregory and New York Times writer Eli Saslow to discuss what makes a feature story. Read the article about it here: https://featuresjournalism.org/tag/pulitzer/
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Students at the PACE center for girls come from difficult backgrounds. Some have been homeless, in jail, or are teen moms. Lane DeGregory followed them for months, trying to see whether learning to be “ladies” would change their lives.
You can read the story here: THE SWAN PROJECT
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Mangler du episoder?
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A reader called the newspaper: He’d found a note in an ancient Pepsi bottle behind his house. Lane DeGregory set out to find whoever wrote it. And helped make a heart-breaking connection.
You can read the story here: A MESSAGE FROM ROGER | Poynter
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While city leaders around Tampa Bay were debating whether to outlaw panhandling, Lane DeGregory spent two days on the streets, learning how to convince drivers to give you money.
You can read the story here: THE TRUTH IS FLEXIBLE
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Lane DeGregory of the Tampa Bay Times talks about taking a walk with an ailing, elderly man, his amazing pet, and the good dogs can do.
You can read the story here: Time is short, but Zeke the Labrador lives to keep his owner alive
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Lane and her mom discuss their writing lives and how they each were drawn to words.
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Find stakeholders, explore other perspectives, follow someone through a vigil.
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Make a connection, build trust, have a conversation: Dogs, kids, cars.
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Hang out at bars, eavesdrop on conversations, bribe with beers, find: Character. Action. Setting. Theme.
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On this episode of WriteLane: follow your instincts and it might lead to the beach. Lane shares how keeping your "story radar" on, and being willing to follow it, can lead to touching stories in unexpected places.
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On this episode of WriteLane, Lane uncovers a simple lie that changes the course of her entire story. How a seemingly boring travel story turned into her first ever second-person narrative.
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On this episode of WriteLane, we take you into the heart of a Covid ICU unit. Lane shares the challenges of reporting from a hospital in a pandemic and how she had to adapt her own reporting process to get the story.
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On this episode of WriteLane, we sit down with Ben Riggs, a senior communications specialist at Kettering Health. He asked us for tips on how to get his team to think and write like storytellers.
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Washington Post reporter Eli Saslow recounts the process of collecting and writing a series of first person narratives during the COVID-19 pandemic. These stories are published in his new book, Voices of the Pandemic.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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After a reckoning over policing in America, 30 recruits enroll at the academy. We reflect on how our eight-part series, with an epilogue, came together.
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After three years and 159 episodes, time for a break.
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Take risks. Ignore naysayers. Trust your instincts. That advice and more.
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The conversation continues with Kelly McBride, NPR’s public editor and chair of the Craig Newmark Center for Ethics and Leadership at the Poynter Institute.
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Kelly McBride, NPR’s public editor and chair of the Craig Newmark Center for Ethics and Leadership at the Poynter Institute, discusses the ethical issues journalists face today.
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Listen for a case study in how to pull together a story that’s changing as you report it.
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- Se mer