> Again, nothing against Trevor. Obviously he's not the only person who
> writes this way. I just can't figure out why journalists do this. I
> really would prefer to have my facts served up in a rapid, clear,
> orderly fashion, without a lot of extraneous cruft. Nothing against
> Robin either, but it's not really important to the overall Linux story
> for me to know that Robin has a big belly, drove a cab, and lives in a
> double-wide. A story without Robin, or Bill, or me, or Smitty would have
> conveyed the essential information adequately.
I tend to write in an "hourglass" format most of the time, which means I 
start out focusing on the main topic (Linux), then spout some facts and 
that sort of thing, then move to personalities/human interest, then 
close with more facts and a conclusion of some sort.
The least important, most cuttable material is in the middle of most of 
my stories.
In an "inverted pyramid" style, which is the most common breaking news 
format, you start with the most important facts and move down your notes 
in decreasing order of importance until the least important item (big 
belly? Paul's outfit at the lasdt meeting?) at the end, so the end of 
the story can be cut off without taking out any important information. 
This style was developed as a convenience for typesetters back in hot 
metal days.
The "focus on personality" style Trevor used tries to humanize an 
otherwise dry story. I rarely use it unless the person's personality is 
a major part of the story, but it is common among feature writers.
Discussions about the mechanics of story presentation can get as deep as 
programming technique conversations. I go to editorial converations now 
and then where this sort of thing is hashed out.
Also, different publications prefer different writing styles. I tend to 
like telegraphic brevity and high fact density. Weekly Planet and other 
publications may not share my taste, which is only important on OSDN 
sites, where I make the editorial rules because I'm the boss editor, and 
on the many sites and in the many magazines which (sigh) try to copy our 
style.
My training came at the hands of the last "Mencken-trained generation" 
of Baltimore Evening Sun editors, a rough crowd that smoked big cigars, 
ate big steaks, and prided themselves on their ability "to write an 
interesting story about a blank white wall if there was space that 
needed filling by deadline."
Take away the audience interaction stuff, and I am an old-fashioned 
reporter, not modern in any way. I will stop now before I say something 
like "Oy! Kids these days!" and move from journalism to how code used to 
be tight because memory was precious, and young programmers throw in all 
sorts of needless crap real he-man programmers would never consider.
This may be coming to mind because I was out drinking tonight with some 
old-line Unix guys (I'm at LinuxWorld) who were heavily into that rag 
after the third beer...
- Robin
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