3 selected speech examples for good reporters to tell good stories. Telling good stories well requires skill, and good stories have flavor.
Below, I have selected 3 sample speeches for good reporters to tell good stories. You are welcome to read and appreciate them.
Chapter 1: Day 136 Following a rapid ringing sound, I habitually picked up the hotline on my desk.
This day is May 16, 2011. This day is the 136th day since I returned from studying at Communication University of China.
During my two years in Beijing, I saw so many big scenes that when I returned to my hometown again, I felt somewhat unwilling to do so.
As a young reporter, I sometimes complained about the gap between my dreams and reality.
But after receiving this call, I slowly changed.
The caller was Dean Ma from the School of History and Culture of Longdong University.
She told me that there was a girl named Cao Yuexia in the college who ranked among the best every year. However, from the day she entered the school, she was using a cane and it was very difficult to walk.
Recently, her condition has become more and more serious and she has to attend classes in a wheelchair.
According to the regulations of the college, Cao Yuexia needed to take a break from school to receive treatment, but she just cried and refused to leave school.
Dean Ma discussed with me that I could go to this student’s home with her this time.
This is a small mountain village called Guanting Village. The mountains and ravines here are deep and transportation is inconvenient. Cao Yuexia is the only female college student here.
The person who greeted us when we went out was her sister Cao Hongxia. This 22-year-old girl looks only as tall as a seven or eight-year-old child.
Hongxia told me that she had been suffering from this disease since she was born, and her legs gradually became deformed, and she was eventually unable to walk.
Her parents took her everywhere to seek medical treatment, and she was still in debt.
What was even more unexpected was that since junior high school, Cao Yuexia also suffered from a disease similar to her sister.
This rugged mountain road would only take others an hour to walk, but it would take her half a day.
?Brother Tian, ??look, this road is the ladder of my dreams.
When I was in junior high school, I had to walk every day. In high school, I walked there and back once a week. But now, I can't walk anymore.
Cao Yuexia told me with tears in her eyes that several times when she was halfway through the walk, her feet hurt terribly.
Looking at the endless mountains and thinking about the unreachable college dream, she really wanted to throw down her crutches and go back.
However, when she thought of her sister who was still at home eagerly waiting for her to go back and teach new knowledge, when she thought of her mother who was the only labor force in the family, when she thought of her father who had been seriously ill for two years and still went around raising tuition fees for her, she no longer wanted to
Fa winced.
This is a family that has suffered many misfortunes, but it is also a strong family.
Faced with poverty, they did not wait or rely on it, but used their own efforts to change the current situation of the whole family step by step.
My elder sister Hongxia, in order not to cause trouble to her family, learned to walk with her hands and learned to wash and cook. She was so talented that she never gave up her thirst for knowledge.
When her younger sister was reading in the classroom, she squatted outside the window and read along. When her younger sister was doing homework under the lamp, she flipped through the pages of the book.
In this way, she followed her sister and completed all the courses from elementary school to university bit by bit. She had never been out of the mountains and had already given wings to her imagination.
I quietly asked Cao Yuexia why she was unwilling to accept help from the big guys.
She said she was sorry and didn't want others to look at her with sympathy.
Because when she was at her lowest self-esteem, it was her sister who embroidered pairs of insoles and asked her father to sell them at the market, and then gave them to her in exchange for some pocket money.
He also told her that there is no shame in being poor, and it doesn’t matter what other people think of her. What’s important is not forgetting her original intention.
Never forget the original intention, these four short words quickly opened up Cao Yuexia's heart.
She told me that dreams are not only a kind of strength, but also a kind of responsibility.
She hopes to use responsibility to support the family and, like her sister, use an optimistic attitude to realize her true dreams.
Yes, a real dream.
As a reporter, isn’t my dream the same? This barren land needs me. I want to use my pen and lens to accurately report their lives and spread their stories further.
A few days later, my program "Sisters" was broadcast.
In just one week, donations from all walks of life reached more than 24,000 yuan.
We also submitted it to provincial media for broadcast and continued to forward it through Weibo and websites, making the story of the two sisters spread across the country.
At the same time, more and more colleagues have started a relay of love with us, and reports after reports tell more stories about children in mountainous areas.
Teachers from the city came, college students came, caring companies and charity organizations came.
Everyone gathered together with warm love, and the dolls' eyes lit up.
Two years passed in a flash. With our continued attention, Cao Yuexia's condition improved steadily, and she successfully completed her thesis defense. She returned to the village with full gratitude and became a primary school teacher.
Her sister Hongxia also touched a young man from a neighboring village with her optimism.
I am a college student who will gra