Tips for Writing Journalists / Reporters!!
─୨ৎ─ Curiosity is cute, but it’s not enough for a whole character. Why do they need the truth so badly? Maybe they believe information protects people. Maybe they grew up around lies. Maybe they want power after years of feeling ignored. Maybe they’re trying to prove they’re not just “the kid from that small town.” Maybe they ruined someone once by getting a story wrong and now truth feels like a debt. A reporter who digs because “plot” is fine. A reporter who digs because stopping would mean betraying their whole self is better.
─୨ৎ─ The story they publish is never just information. It has ALWAYS consequences. A journalist can expose corruption, save people, ruin careers, destroy families, trigger lawsuits, get someone fired, make someone unsafe, or force a town to admit what it buried. That’s the scary part. They might be right and still cause damage. They might be ethical and still hurt someone. Don’t make journalism feel like “they found the truth, yay.”
─୨ৎ─ Sources are relationships!! A source might be scared, proud, angry, guilty, using the journalist, trying to protect someone, trying to confess without confessing, or giving only the version that makes them look good. Some sources want justice. Some want revenge. Some want attention. Some want to leak one thing while hiding ten others. A good reporter character knows every source has a reason for talking, and that reason matters as much as the information.
─୨ৎ─ Deadlines change the whole mood. A journalist may not have six peaceful weeks to think. They might have four hours, a dying phone, one editor asking for copy, one source ghosting them, and a legal team saying “please do not get us sued today.” Deadline pressure makes people sharper, meaner, faster, sloppier, funnier. Your reporter can care deeply about truth and still make a bad call.
─୨ৎ─ A good editor asks the hard questions: “How do you know?” “Who confirmed this?” “Are we being fair?” “What’s missing?” “Why now?” A bad editor chases clicks, protects powerful friends, or buries stories that matter. An editor can be mentor, antagonist, parent substitute, moral compass, coward, genius, or exhausted adult trying to stop the newsroom from legally exploding. The journalist may write the story, but the editor often decides what survives.
─୨ৎ─ Journalists need proof, not just belief. They can believe the victim. They can know the politician is lying. They can feel the company is hiding something. But publishing requires evidence: documents, records, recordings, witnesses, photos, timelines, data, confirmation.
─୨ৎ─ Local journalism is different from national journalism. A small-town reporter may write about school boards, missing funds, local deaths, restaurant openings, court cases, storms, sports, council meetings, and the mayor’s extremely suspicious nephew. They might know everyone they report on. They might run into a source at the grocery store after publishing something ugly. In local journalism, the story doesn’t disappear after publication. It sits three tables away at breakfast.
─୨ৎ─ Anonymous sources should cost something. Using anonymous sources can protect people, but it also asks the reader to trust the journalist. Why does the source need anonymity? Could they lose their job? Get hurt? Face legal trouble? Are they credible? Do they have evidence? Anonymous sources should create pressure: the journalist knows who said it, but the public doesn’t, and if it’s wrong, the journalist’s name is on the damage.
─୨ৎ─ A journalist’s phone is basically a crime scene. Unread messages from sources. Voice memos. Screenshots. Notes app chaos. A half-written draft. A contact saved under a fake name. Three missed calls from their editor. A recording they keep replaying because something sounds off. Photos of documents taken badly under fluorescent lights. Their phone is their office, evidence locker, anxiety machine, and emotional support rectangle.
─୨ৎ─ Conflict of interest is a big deal. Can they report on a company their sibling works for? A politician they used to date? A school they attended? A criminal case involving their friend? Maybe they disclose it. Maybe their editor removes them from the story. Maybe they hide it because the story matters too much to them. This is perfect plot fuel because the journalist’s desire to be involved can directly clash with professional ethics.
─୨ৎ─ Journalists notice what people avoid saying. A politician says “mistakes were made” instead of “I made mistakes.” A company says “we take this seriously” instead of answering the question. A parent says “she was troubled” instead of “we didn’t believe her.” The language people choose under pressure tells the reporter where to push.
─୨ৎ─ They should have a beat. A beat is the area they cover: politics, crime, culture, sports, health, entertainment, courts, education, business, climate, war, tech, local government. A crime reporter has different sources than a music journalist. A health reporter asks different questions than a gossip columnist. A political reporter knows different lies than a fashion journalist. Pick the beat. It decides their contacts, habits, knowledge, and blind spots.