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Advice for TV news reporters on how to sound dramatic and urgent

July 3, 2013 BoingBoing.net post

The biggest leak of all this week: a document from a television news consultancy that lists words and phrases reporters should use to add a sense of (OMG!) urgency to TV news reports.

July 2, 2013 - JimRomenesko.com

Consulting firm SmithGeiger has given its TV clients a three-page list of phrases intended “to help reflect and promote urgency and a ‘happening now’ feeling in a newscast.”

Here are the words and phrases that SmithGeiger suggests be used:

  • we do have some breaking news right away
  • rapid developments
  • this story is rapidly changing
  • you saw it here first just minutes ago
  • we are going to be covering this live for you
  • breaking overnight
  • you are looking live
  • but first we begin with
  • all new
  • new right now
  • new developments are unfolding
  • we are watching with you these first pictures live from the scene
  • this is a rapidly developing situation
  • breaking as we go on air
  • you’ll hear in just seconds
  • take a live look behind me
  • but after we told you…we kept asking
  • we’ve been talking about this in the last hour
  • we want to give you the very latest
  • we are going to stay on this story every step of the way
  • we have new information for you as soon as anything happens
  • we are following this closely and are making sure you don’t miss anything
  • we are going to stay on this story night and day
  • we are not stopping with our coverage until this story is done

#media

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