Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight
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Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight
Social marketing, PR insight & thought leadership - from The PR Coach
Curated by Jeff Domansky
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5(ish) Questions: The creators of 'visual narrative start-up' Primer Stories

5(ish) Questions: The creators of 'visual narrative start-up' Primer Stories | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it
Anyone who’s taken a shortcut and skipped the primer while painting a room knows the kind of results you can get. Uneven. Unpolished. The primer sets the stage for a beautiful wall.

That’s kind of the idea behind the storytelling website Primer Stories, says Tim Lillis, one of the creative minds behind the site, which mixes medium-form written pieces with lots of eye-catching visual effects.

He thinks the stories should be just long enough to prime readers on the subject – about 1,000 words — while also acting as a primer of intellectual paint.

Story topics can be ambitious, but Lillis and co-creator Joe Alterio were intent on crafting narratives that are digestible for both longform lovers and listicle lushes.

“We realized that somewhere along the line, the important ideas were losing the battle of marketability,” Alterio says. “So, how do we give them a little bit of that flash while still retaining that core, essential part of the idea?”
Jeff Domansky's insight:

Refreshing approach to storytelling and journalism.

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“Why’s this so good?” No. 13: Gene Weingarten peels the Great Zucchini – Nieman Storyboard - A project of the Nieman Foundation for Journalism at Harvard

“Why’s this so good?” No. 13: Gene Weingarten peels the Great Zucchini – Nieman Storyboard - A project of the Nieman Foundation for Journalism at Harvard | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

Great writing and storytelling inspiration for all...

 

The Great Zucchini has a secret. And in “The Peekaboo Paradox,” Gene Weingarten exhumes the history that haunts the most popular children’s entertainer in Washington, D.C. The story, which ran in January 2006, is the best thing ever written by the Washington Post’s two-time Pulitzer winner. (Surprisingly enough, Weingarten agrees with this statement.)

 

“A children’s performer? Really?” you might wonder as you start the piece, but Weingarten is already there, waiting for you....

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Innovative Storytelling, Engagement Reflect Trends in Newsrooms

Innovative Storytelling, Engagement Reflect Trends in Newsrooms | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it
Innovative storytelling, audience engagement, and financial flexibility are key ingredients for newspapers to cope with pressures from competitors, budget constraints, and the speed at which technology is changing."It came as no surprise when The New York Times took home a Pulitzer for 'Snow Fall' - the immersive multimedia package impressed journalists and web designers alike with its seamless integration of text, audio, videos, photos and interactive graphics."The comments in "Trends in Newsrooms 2013," the World Editors Forum's report on the state of the news industry, about the attention-grabbing content, underlined the importance of stories that jump out at readers....
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The New “I” In Journalism - Stefanie Botelho @ FolioMag.com

The New “I” In Journalism - Stefanie Botelho @ FolioMag.com | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it
Is integration of the personal narrative helpful or harmful in reporting?

 

Just like the magazine industry itself, reporting styles are evolving. Aggregated and link journalism is plentiful; yellow journalism will most likely never go away; long-form journalism holds a nostalgic power, despite increasingly Tweet-ified attention spans; and now, the era of “me” journalism appears to be here for the long haul....

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