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Human-interest story

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when overused or given too much significance, the human-interest story can lose engagement from its viewers. But scholars such as journalism professor Perry Parks argue that walling off the human-interest story from serious news has led to an unhealthy split between emotionless "hard" news and affectively compelling "soft" news, and that in order for significant news to maintain its relevance journalists must reintroduce emotional elements to important news stories.
20: 276:, human-interest stories and their content vary across the variety of print mediums. They are commonly in the form of newspaper articles, in which the author details the story of a person/topic of focus through an interview, photographs and information. The author's opinion on the topic is often included in order for the consumer to respond in a similar manner. Human-interest stories may also take the form of 1044: 390:
occurs when a piece of human-interest news generates a substantial public response which may give the topic further exposure or cause it to go viral. Once this occurs, the person, group or agenda of the news story may be heavily supported, which may incite company or government action, depending on whom the topic is targeting.  
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The popularity of the human-interest format derives from the stories' ability to put the consumer at the heart of a current event or personal story through making its content relatable to the viewer in order to draw their interest. Human-interest stories also have the role of diverting consumers from
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also puts forward the notion that the lighter moments of news can make a viewer's overall experience significantly more enjoyable and entertaining. This follows the traditional view that the human-interest stories' purpose is to take the audience's attention away from the "hard news" supplied by the
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50 best-ever articles. The story focuses on the struggles of Dasani and goes into significant detail about the challenges she encounters during her daily life including her sleeping by a rotten wall or having to use a mop bucket as a toilet. The article uses the human-interest format to draw sadness
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red notice. Foster, with the support of others, became an advocate for al-Araibi's story and campaigned for his freedom through the use of news reporting and social media, particularly Twitter. The presentation of al-Araibi's situation brought out much sympathy and anger from the public, and a
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The emotional response and interest the human-interest story draws from its consumers are reasons why the human-interest story is a widely utilised form of news media. The reception of the human-interest story has been mixed by both its audience and scholars alike. Studies from scholars reveal that
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It has been cited that the popularity of the human-interest story stems from a concept known as "emotional arousal", as the emotions of readers and viewers when consuming human-interest stories are heightened due to the stories purpose and contents. Dutch news media studies have discovered that the
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The format of human-interest stories is not limited to just news segments during television reporting or articles in a newspaper. The human-interest frame is used in many different formats with no restricting time frame. The human-interest story is not just restricted to news reporting as there are
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Human-interest stories and the emotional response they receive from consumers can often have an impact on the society in which their story is relevant. Scholars have detailed how there are cases where human-interest stories have "increased the attribution of responsibility to the government". This
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The human-interest story has been used by the mass media to give hope and inspire its consumers. Profile pieces on certain individuals and groups have inspired evolution in the public's perception of a "hero". Scholars Winfield and Hume explore how heroes have evolved from cultural figures such as
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The content of a human-interest story is not just limited to the reporting of one individual person, as they may feature a group of people, a specific culture, a pet or animal, a part of nature or an object. These reports may celebrate the successes of the person/topic in focus, or explore their
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and are often used as a form of light-hearted news to end a broadcast after the "hard news" reporting. Televised human-interest stories often encompass interviews, and the reporting of information relevant to their topic, in order for the consumer to understand the situation and relate to its
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content. Within television reporting the human-interest frame can take many forms. It may be a short segment at the end of a news bulletin, a review of a current event from the human-interest frame or there may be entire reports dedicated to one particular human-interest story.
231:. The wide consumption of the human-interest story has led to its prevalent reporting throughout the mass media, and its content varies across these different forms of media, although it maintains the goal of drawing an emotional response from the consumer. 101:
programming. Human-interest stories have been labelled as fictitious news reporting, used in an attempt to make certain content appear relevant to the viewer or reader. Human-interest stories are regarded by some scholars as a form of journalistic
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describes the purpose of the photo blog as being able "tell the story of the person right in front of me". The stories often evoke emotion from the reader and make them enjoy, sympathise or relate to the stories being told.
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are becoming increasingly popular digital media forms where consumers are obtaining human-interest news. The prevalence of human-interest stories on social media is demonstrated through the popularity of the photo blog
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illustrates that human-interest stories are furthermore often used in the news coverage of irregular immigration, although the frequency differs from country to country. Human-interest features are frequently
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Valenzuela, Sebastián; Piña, Martina; Ramírez, Josefina (2017-08-28). "Behavioral Effects of Framing on Social Media Users: How Conflict, Economic, Human Interest, and Morality Frames Drive News Sharing".
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this view is supported as the article's publisher Chloe Smethurst explains that the over exposure of human-interest stories have led real pieces of news to be discouraged or taken less seriously. However,
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to report its stories and is a producer of human interest stories. The program often features human-interest stories on prominent sporting figures, celebrities, controversial figures and criminals such as
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Human-interest stories may be "the story behind the story" about an event, organization, or otherwise faceless historical happening, such as about the life of an individual soldier during wartime, an
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Human-interest stories are also presented/ published in other forms of media such as digital media; consisting of websites and social media networks. Popular social media formats
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of a story, with the findings revealing that the human-interest frame increased Facebook shares by 33% compared to articles not utilising the human-interest perspective.
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s interview with September 11 survivor Michael Wright portray the American hero as an ordinary person with an inspiring story or profound success.      
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utilised research, interviews and his own experiences to formulate his work, all of which are instruments of standard practice for modern journalists.    
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troubles, hardships. The human-interest story is usually positive in nature, although they are also used to showcase opinions and concerns, as well sometimes being
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reporting of current events and often provide a light-hearted segment for the consumer to enjoy towards the end of a news bulletin or within a newspaper.
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Human-interest reporting arose in the first decade of the 20th century. Originally devised by women, the journalists writing them were initially known as
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is a widely known American news program that has been adapted in other countries such as Australia and New Zealand. It is a program that often utilises
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Gallagher, A. (2018). Profile Pieces: Journalism and the Human Interest Bias by Sue Joseph and Richard Lance Keeble. Journal of Magazine Media, 18(2).
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Winfield, B. H., & Hume, J. (1998). The American Hero and the Evolution of the Human Interest Story. American Journalism, 15(2), 79–99.
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in an emotional way. It presents people and their problems, concerns, or achievements in a way that brings about interest, sympathy or
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which often do not detail the story in the same manner as a newspaper and are often the subject to journalistic manipulation.
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Gallagher, Aileen (2018). "Profile Pieces: Journalism and the 'Human Interest' Bias by Sue Joseph and Richard Lance Keeble".
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labelled "#SaveHakeem", asking for his release, garnered over 60,000 signatures. al-Araibi was released in February 2019.
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Within Western media, the human-interest story gained notoriety when these profile pieces were published in the American
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and analyst for the Special Broadcasting Service, used the human-interest frame to advocate for Bahraini footballer
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Television reporting is the most popular form of news media and human-interest stories are common within news
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Parks, Perry (2019-02-05). "An unnatural split: how 'human interest' sucks the life from significant news".
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and sympathy from the reader and try to make them understand how difficult life can be for some people.
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utilize the human-interest format in their works. An article titled "Invisible Child", written by
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posts photos of New York citizens with an accompanying story about their life, and founder
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Boukes, Mark; Boomgaarden, Hajo G.; Moorman, Marjolein; de Vreese, Claes H. (2014-11-21).
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Beyer, Audun; Figenschou, Tine Ustad (2018-05-15), "Media hypes and public opinion",
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Hughes, Helen. (Ed.). (1980). News and the Human Interest Story. New York: Routledge.
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pieces within newspapers. Human-interest stories are also published in magazines and
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Human-interest stories are sometimes criticized as "soft" news, or manipulative,
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because the stories were often written to elicit sympathy for their subjects.
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Keller, Ron J. (2009-02-09), "Lincoln, Abraham, in African American Memory",
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series and feature-length movies that follow the human-interest frame.
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Covering America : a narrative history of a nation's journalism
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Trilling, Damian; Tolochko, Petro; Burscher, Björn (2016-07-10).
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in the reader or viewer. Human-interest stories are a type of
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Duncan, Melanie L. (2016-03-21), "Pew Research Center",
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Newspaper publishers of significant notoriety such as
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Human-interest stories are communicated through the
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1452: 1450: 1447: 1444: 1442: 1439: 1437: 1436:Fact-checking 1434: 1432: 1429: 1427: 1424: 1422: 1419: 1417: 1414: 1412: 1409: 1407: 1404: 1402: 1401:Collaborative 1399: 1397: 1394: 1392: 1389: 1387: 1384: 1382: 1379: 1377: 1374: 1372: 1369: 1366: 1362: 1359: 1357: 1354: 1350: 1348: 1344: 1337: 1334: 1332: 1329: 1327: 1324: 1322: 1319: 1317: 1314: 1312: 1309: 1307: 1304: 1302: 1299: 1297: 1294: 1292: 1289: 1287: 1284: 1282: 1279: 1277: 1274: 1272: 1271:Entertainment 1269: 1267: 1264: 1262: 1259: 1257: 1254: 1250: 1246: 1239: 1236: 1234: 1231: 1229: 1226: 1224: 1221: 1219: 1216: 1214: 1211: 1209: 1206: 1204: 1201: 1198: 1194: 1191: 1188: 1184: 1183:Writing style 1181: 1179: 1176: 1172: 1168: 1160: 1157: 1155: 1152: 1150: 1147: 1145: 1144:Meteorologist 1142: 1140: 1137: 1135: 1132: 1130: 1127: 1125: 1122: 1120: 1117: 1116: 1112: 1108: 1104: 1097: 1092: 1090: 1085: 1083: 1078: 1077: 1074: 1067: 1063: 1059: 1056: 1053: 1050: 1045: 1041: 1040: 1028: 1024: 1018: 1010: 1006: 999: 997: 988: 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57: 55: 51: 47: 43: 42:feature story 39: 35: 27: 26: 21: 2320:Technophobia 2308:Technophilia 2151:Echo chamber 2009:Rage farming 1793: 1789:Infotainment 1635:TV and radio 1567:Infotainment 1557:Fifth Estate 1454:Interpretive 1406:Comics-based 1154:Photographer 1026: 1017: 1008: 962: 958: 948: 939: 893: 889: 883: 849: 843: 813:(1): 38–60. 810: 806: 793: 768: 764: 757: 748: 738: 723: 714: 704: 695: 685: 659: 653: 627: 621: 612: 603: 570: 566: 560: 533: 527: 519:Zazzle Media 518: 508: 499: 462:. Retrieved 455: 394:Craig Foster 392: 388: 377: 370: 368: 364: 351: 341: 335: 320: 306: 292: 290: 271: 247: 246: 238: 221:social media 186: 173: 165: 158: 147: 141: 136: 129: 116: 112:Terry Morris 104:manipulation 96: 88: 72: 58: 37: 31: 23: 2084:Moral panic 2014:Screen time 1848:News values 1784:Gatekeeping 1726:Externality 1514:Underground 1431:Explanatory 1356:Adversarial 1321:Video games 1276:Environment 1218:Attribution 1213:News values 1208:Objectivity 1139:Copy editor 464:October 17, 317:Other media 274:print media 268:Print media 241:programming 177:documentary 132:sob sisters 2298:Social bot 2288:Sealioning 2046:Conformity 1831:Propaganda 1816:Media bias 1809:Soft media 1620:Newspapers 1612:News media 1577:Media bias 1479:Non-profit 1464:Multimedia 1386:Churnalism 1311:Technology 1223:Defamation 1170:Profession 1103:Journalism 433:References 398:footballer 249:60 Minutes 225:newspapers 197:television 195:; such as 189:mass media 126:Background 108:propaganda 50:motivation 34:journalism 25:60 Minutes 1984:Infodemic 1918:Clickbait 1885:Attention 1741:Cognition 1630:Magazines 1547:Fake news 1469:Narrative 1449:Immersion 1411:Community 1381:Broadcast 1124:Columnist 987:145303009 979:1077-6990 918:149666020 910:0163-4437 876:235159090 835:148469329 827:1077-6990 785:0021-9916 595:192013019 587:2576-7895 552:793012714 327:Instagram 282:editorial 183:Varieties 92:hard news 61:interview 54:soft news 2340:Category 2313:Neophile 1940:Phubbing 1858:Hot take 1746:Mismatch 1664:– 1640:Internet 1529:Watchdog 1421:Database 1376:Blogging 1371:Analytic 1361:Advocacy 1296:Politics 1286:Medicine 1261:Business 1058:Archived 749:CBS News 421:See also 410:Interpol 406:Thailand 361:Reaction 355:virality 323:Facebook 286:tabloids 217:websites 213:internet 139:magazine 2273:Griefer 2079:Mobbing 1913:Chumbox 1865:Spiking 1666:Outline 1509:Tabloid 1484:Opinion 1391:Citizen 1331:Weather 1316:Traffic 1301:Science 1281:Fashion 1203:Culture 1187:Five Ws 1129:Blogger 1068:website 1064:on the 1029:. 2019. 427:CrĂ´nica 331:Twitter 272:Within 166:Esquire 120:exposĂ©s 1524:Visual 1504:Sensor 1347:Genres 1306:Sports 1193:Ethics 1134:Editor 1066:UNICEF 985:  977:  916:  908:  874:  864:  833:  825:  783:  674:  642:  593:  585:  550:  540:  385:Impact 2144:Youth 1706:Media 1519:Video 1489:Peace 1441:Gonzo 1396:Civic 1336:World 1291:Music 1248:Areas 1110:Roles 983:S2CID 914:S2CID 872:S2CID 831:S2CID 803:(PDF) 591:S2CID 573:(2). 457:Salon 310:' 229:books 201:radio 169:' 84:rerun 40:is a 1708:and 1416:Data 1266:Data 1256:Arts 1178:News 975:ISSN 906:ISSN 862:ISBN 823:ISSN 781:ISSN 672:ISBN 640:ISBN 583:ISSN 548:OCLC 538:ISBN 466:2011 329:and 205:film 203:and 67:, a 46:pets 36:, a 1326:War 967:doi 898:doi 854:doi 815:doi 773:doi 664:doi 632:doi 575:doi 280:or 106:or 32:In 2342:: 1025:. 1007:. 995:^ 981:. 973:. 963:92 961:. 957:. 938:. 926:^ 912:. 904:. 894:41 892:. 870:, 860:, 829:. 821:. 811:94 809:. 805:. 779:. 769:67 767:. 747:. 713:. 694:. 670:, 638:, 589:. 581:. 571:18 569:. 546:. 517:. 498:. 486:^ 474:^ 454:. 440:^ 325:, 264:. 219:, 211:; 207:, 56:. 2128:/ 2043:/ 1698:e 1691:t 1684:v 1626:) 1622:( 1583:) 1579:( 1367:) 1363:( 1199:) 1195:( 1189:) 1185:( 1095:e 1088:t 1081:v 1011:. 989:. 969:: 942:. 920:. 900:: 856:: 837:. 817:: 787:. 775:: 751:. 732:. 717:. 698:. 666:: 634:: 597:. 577:: 554:. 521:. 502:. 468:. 90:"

Index


60 Minutes
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feature story
pets
motivation
soft news
interview
natural disaster
random act of kindness
American Behavioral Scientist
evergreen content
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Terry Morris
exposés
sob sisters
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The New Yorker
The Life of Samuel Johnson
James Boswell
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