"Eleven Questions About Explainer Journalism"
From The Awl:
What is an “explainer”?
There are a lot of things out there to read. Some of them are long. Many
involve complex, nuanced ideas. That doesn’t have to be the case. When
it is the case, it’s a failure of journalists to make news engaging and
accessible. An explainer is an article that breaks down an important
topic into just the things you care about and need to know. It's unlike
all other kinds of articles in that way. If you still can’t understand
it, that’s on us. That’s our bad.
How do I know what I care about and what I need to know?
Explainers tell you. We are all over this. All you have to do is read
words and then click a button to share with your friends. (Facebook is
better than Twitter.) Don’t like words? There will be simple charts and
neat vids. It’s that simple.
Huh I don’t get it?
That’s fine! We didn’t think you would. Traditional media outlets aren’t equipped
to explain most topics to people like you. Let’s see if we can break it
down further—just the basics now. What is it you really need to know
about explainers.
I don’t know.
Oh, sorry! That was rhetorical. I mean, that was a statement that might
have sounded like a question, but it was not. Okay. Now, try and
remember the last time you read a news article in its entirety. See, you
can’t. You never have. Or the last time you thought, “I understand
what’s happening in the Ukraine well enough to make a smart comment
about it at a party.” You can’t. Obviously nobody explained to you not
to say "the" Ukraine either. Understanding all you need to understand
would take literally hours of reading about history. You’re going to
click away to watch dogs on treadmills. Who says you can’t have both?
Can dogs on treadmills explain international conflicts?...
...
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