When “the latest” isn’t late enough…

Memorandum

From:  Bud Veazey

To:  Reporters, producers, anchors, promotions

Re:  “the very latest,” et al

A good writing teacher will tell you, “Never use two words when one word will do.” TV reporters and writers turn that rule on its head. Take “very latest” for instance. How many times have you heard an anchor tell you he or she will have the “very latest” on a story after the commercial break or that reporter John Doe has the “very latest” from the scene?

Shouldn’t “latest” be enough? What’s the difference between “very latest” and “latest?” Am I getting my money’s worth when I’m getting only the “latest” information?

I recently heard a reporter refer to a “brazen and bold” robber. Why not just “brazen?” Why not just “bold?” Aren’t the two words synonyms?

Get yourself a six-pack and take a sip every time you hear an unnecessary or redundant adjective in a TV newscast. You’ll be knee-walking drunk by 7 p.m. (Okay, I exaggerate. I once wrote TV news and habits of hyperbole are hard to break.)

In another place: Bud Veazey

After decades of reading and correcting TV news copy, I came to the conclusion that it must be a rhythm thing, sort of like the iambic pentameter of reporter tracking. Perhaps reporters and writers throw in superfluous adjectives and adverbs for the same reason producers insist on three teases on a break—it just feels right. That’s the reason you’ll see a tease for a 15-second video of a car wreck in Seattle. The story is hardly worthy of advance promotion, but a producer needed a third tease to maintain the rhythm.

Don’t get me started on “young child,” “very unique,” or “completely destroyed.”

Until his retirement in 2007, Bud Veazey was assistant news director at WAGA, where he wrote memos like this regularly (minus the “take a sip” challenge, unfortunately…).  Veazey now creates and restores guitars.  Visit his ebay page here.

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8 responses to this post.

  1. Posted by TV Ripe on December 1, 2009 at 5:38 pm

    The Weight (Bud Veazey)

    (starts on C, originally in A [capo 9 or detune])
    C Em F C
    I pulled in to Nazareth, I was feeling about half past dead.
    C Em F C
    I just need some place where I can lay my head.
    C Em F C
    Hey, Mister, can you tell me where a man might find a bed?
    C Em F C
    He just grinned, shook my hand, “No” was all he said.

    :
    C G F
    Take a load off, Fanny.
    C G F
    Take a load for free.
    C G F
    Take a load off, Fanny.
    F C
    And… you put the load (put the load) right on me.

    |C C/B |Am Am/G |F % |% % | x2

    Reply

  2. Posted by mike daly on December 2, 2009 at 12:10 pm

    Bud, I never asked before, but Any Aversion to Alliteration?

    Reply

  3. Posted by LBJ on December 2, 2009 at 8:13 pm

    Dedicated, Determined, Dependable

    Reply

  4. Posted by tvb on December 3, 2009 at 12:33 pm

    Just make sure you tune in tomorrow morning at 5am.

    Reply

  5. Posted by BoddagettaFlyer on December 3, 2009 at 4:15 pm

    “An autopsy will be done. to determine the cause of death.

    Reply

  6. Posted by wxruss on December 3, 2009 at 7:19 pm

    I should have read this article before I wrote my copy for the six. My package included the phrase “white snow”… duh?!

    Reply

  7. Posted by Dale Russell on December 3, 2009 at 8:39 pm

    Boy, we miss Easy Veazey around here!!!

    Reply

  8. Posted by scott hedeen on December 8, 2009 at 7:48 pm

    Nice to see that someone is playing “The Weight” on a guitar these days. Talk about redundant… let’s hear it for a news director who can play.

    Maybe news could use a little James Blood Ulmer.. or Doc Watson. (save… Chet Akins or McLaughlin for the weather departments….). Me? I always thought i drew my news style from Cheetah Chrome and Brother Wayne Kramer… (too bad i came off more like Ace Frehley… all flash and smoke… little substance!)

    Reply

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