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February 3, 2012

Press Gazette launches News-Day, 8 February 2012, A Day in the Life of British Journalism

By Press Gazette

It’s the big story that journalists ignore. Their own, writes Press Gazette contributing editor John Dale.

Press Gazette is urging journalists to send us a snapshot of your work – in newspapers and magazines, TV and radio, and online – for a unique narrative of one 24-hour news cycle, from 6am Wednesday 8 February, to 6am the next day.

It could be a killing in Kircaldy, a council in Cleethorpes, a murder in Mayfair, a funeral in Fishguard – or a paparazzi working out of Hollywood. No story is too big or too small. Celebrate the richness of our work, nationwide.

News-Day. 24 hours, one million stories: A Day In The Life Of British Journalism

To participate, just send us a summary – 100-500 words, or whatever you wish – describing what you did during the 24 hours starting 6am Wednesday February 8: your news jobs, stories, features, photos, mishaps, interviews, events, meetings, humour, even an office party. Our article will be a 24-hour narrative so please give timings, following this format:

06:25  Bacon butty at desk. Police calls. House fire, Hunslet. Rush off. Neighbour rescues family…(More here)

11:07  Late at press conference, Leeds police hq. Man’s body in canal. Accident or murder?….(More here)

12:24  Coffee with councillor about new shopping centre plan. Fobbed off. Send email. Waiting for reply…(More here)

12:36  Call woman about breast surgery disaster…(More here)

02:45  Confront local MP on doorstep. Ask him about new shops plan. He talks jobs instead. Woman shouts at him and I follow him to car. Like council leader, he fobs me off…(More here)

03:15  Crown Court. Photograph grandmother acquitted on shopping fraud…(More here)

06:00  Fashion and cosmetics promotion…(More here)

09.10  Agree splash headline. Flying pizza decapitates mayor…Celebrate in office pub…(More here)

Okay, no one’s going to be that busy! But your team might be. You might break a world exclusive or have a quiet day (we still want to hear) Include colour and emotion. Rushed breakfasts. Watery coffee. Lunch at desk. Lunch with contact in greasy spoon/posh restaurant. The perils of alcohol. Quotes. Being married to the job. Story spiked – misery! Story splashed – ecstasy!

We will thread your contribution into a third-person narrative. If there is an illustrative photograph – preferably of you doing your job – please email that too.

We also want to hear from overseas journalists supplying British news media, whether you’re a paparazzi in Hollywood or a war reporter in Helmand or a correspondent in Chengdu.

Press Gazette will publish its News-Day special report in the March issue, with coverage also appearing online. It will give an unprecedented insight into the role and the dimensions of the news industry across Britain and Ireland, how we really work, how we enrich our society and culture, and how we make a huge difference to the lives of every man, woman and child, on an hour-by-hour basis.

It will be entertaining, enlightening and intriguing and, at this time when journalism is under profound scrutiny, point to answers to the questions being raised at Lord Justice Leveson’s inquiry. But we are not doing it for him. We are doing it for ourselves out of the pride we take in doing the greatest job in the world.

24 hours, one million stories: A Day In The Life Of British Journalism will be an unashamed celebration. It will also promote you and your organisation among your many peers who will be participating alongside you. Instead of reporting the news, you can star in it. Don’t miss out.

Please mark Wednesday February 8 in your diary. Tell your colleagues.

Email your contributions (as soon as possible after the date) to johnkdale@msn.com

To spread the word via Twitter, and follow the action on the day, use the hashtag #news_day.


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