
Some journalists ignore it until it pounces at them. Others pursue
it like a skilled hunter. For some, it's a full-time job. For others,
it's an occasional factor in the occasional story. For all, it's a
powerful force that can enhance coverage of almost any topic. However
you came to report about religion in the mainstream media, you're
in the right place. You may be a newcomer to the religion beat, a
student or a veteran journalist who keeps encountering religion in
stories. You may work in print, broadcast, radio or on the Web. This
booklet will guide you through the basics of reporting on religion,
pointing you to important resources and considerations and warning
you about potential pitfalls. It will help ease your way into what
many of us think is the best beat in the business.
We
also hope this booklet convinces you that religion can enrich your
stories by explaining people's motivations and providing details
that can transform run-of-the-mill reports into surprising or provocative
narratives. Religion shapes people's actions and reactions in very
private and very public ways across the range of news and features.
Without it, you're often not getting the whole story.
Religion
journalism like journalism in general is undergoing
seismic shifts because of changes in the news business as well as
changes in society. To keep this guide from being outdated as quickly
as yesterday's news, it resides on the Web on the Religion Newswriters'
home page, www.RNA.org.
Check there for updates and for the Religion
Newswriters' Resource Library, which offers extensive resources
for religion reporting.
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EDITOR
Debra L. Mason
Religion
Newswriters
AUTHOR
Diane Connolly
ReligionLink Editor
DESIGNER
Jamie Huckaby
COPY EDITOR
Mary Gladstone
PROOFREADERS
Katie Beverly
Tyra Damm
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