Jarrod Kimber – Fans – Laptops: The Sports Writing Course
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Description
Laptops – Fans: The Sports Writing Course
How to Turn Your Sports Fanaticism Into Passionate Writing
This is a course on writing about sports.
I never finished high school, never went to college, never worked for a newspaper, had no genuine contacts, began off not knowing anyone in the sport I was writing about, and didn’t have a single journalist acquaintance. So, like the Unabomber, I wrote and wrote and wrote some more. I wrote my way into a strange position as a worldwide writer at ESPNcricinfo, one of the world’s largest sports websites.
I wrote like no one else because I didn’t realize there were many ways to write about sports. Because I didn’t comprehend news cycles, I wrote about topics that were important to me. And I wrote – a bit of myself in each article, since no one could stop me. This all means that I’ve made a profession out of writing about sports that is unlike any other.
This course is my attempt to reverse-engineer my writing.
The course is divided into two parts: theory and practice. There are more than two hours of lectures, but there are also numerous checklists and hints to show you how to think, prepare, and write, as well as a practical component in which you must integrate my teachings – who you are.
I’ve tried to make it as applicable as possible, so that if you find yourself in a press box the following day or writing a feature from your living room, you can use what you’re learning.
This is not a school on how to break into the business; most of them are a little shady, and I don’t want you to assume that by taking this course, you’ll suddenly become the Times’ main sports writer. This course will show you how to take who you are as a fan and utilize it to become a sports writer.
The following topics are covered:
What you stand for as a writer
How to Consider Athletes and Teams
What kinds of articles may you write?
Where can I locate sports stories?
The contemporary sportswriter’s tools
An Interviewing Handbook
A step-by-step approach to long-form writing.
Writing and data
And there’s the Giant Lizard Theory.
This training is for everyone, whether you graduated to Oxbridge, now work at the Guardian covering Premier League, or are an illiterate 57-year-old plumber who has always wanted to share her opinions about Handball trends. This course is for anyone who wishes to improve their sports writing skills.
While I am primarily a cricket writer, the lessons I have learned may be applied to any sport, and in fact, possibly outside of sport as well. I’ve won a prestigious award, helped present a Guardian masterclass this year, written for a slew of major publications around the world, and am hopefully still in my prime, not some old guy with patches on his elbow reminiscing about how great sports writing was when people chewed cigars and worked with one finger on a typewriter.
I am a working writer who is always learning, attempting to improve, and utilizing my work, my failure, to assist you.
Sports writing has never been greater with the advent of the internet and cable television. I want everyone of you to write something as good as you are capable of writing. It doesn’t matter whether you all become David Remnick, but it does important to me that you feel that thrill when you complete a narrative about which you’re so enthusiastic on the page.
Let’s start writing.
Your Professor
Mr. Jarrod Kimber
I dropped out of high school and attempted two higher learning courses, one of which I dropped and the other which I failed. And at the age of 26, I left my secure job with Qantas to pursue a career as a filmmaker.
So, at the age of 27, I was parking cars and doing film work in Melbourne. Oh, and I established a cricket blog called cricket – balls that year.
I am now 37 years old, I have four books, my documentary is available globally on Netflix, I had my own radio show in the UK, a podcast – the Bugle’s Andy Zaltzman, I’ve commentated cricket for ABC, BBC, and talkSPORT, and I’ve traveled to India, Australia, New Zealand, South Africa, England, Ireland, Hong Kong, Sri Lanka, UAE, US, and Jamaica through work.
In addition, I work as a global writer for ESPNcricinfo, the world’s largest cricket publisher.
I have few genuine abilities; fortunately, writing and speaking are two of them, and I’ve exploited them to make a living.
Curriculum of the Course
The First Section
Preview
Starting Over (4:38)
Start
Why do you care about sports? (2:49)
Start
The participants (6:14)
During the game
Start
The press room (11:20)
Start
It’s game time! (7:57)
The Sport Story
Preview
Sport is a story (6:11)
Start
Pieces of many types (10:16)
Start
Stories in pieces (0:40)
Garfield in Afghanistan
Start
original Afghan (1:00)
Start
Afghan Remake (2:08)
Start
Garfield the Afghan (1:54)
In search of the truth
Start
News (3:41) (3:41)
Start
Data (3:28) (3:28)
Start
Interviews (7:32) (7:32)
Making a First Impression
Start
Specialisation (3:25) (3:25)
Preview
Experiment with new stuff. (3:26)
Start
Locate your group (1:17)
Start
Pitching (4:11) (4:11)
Start
Contacts (4:30) (4:30)
Start
Other forms of media
How to Locate Stories
Start
Discovering tales (5:19)
Planned features
Start
Read Greg Norman’s Article (0:42)
Start
Mindmaps, ideas, and research (6:02)
Writing abilities
Start
Actually Composing (4:28)
Editing capabilities
Start
Editing (5:11) (5:11)
Start
First Paragraphs (4:19)
Start
Taking aim at the shark (1:30)
Start
Structure (3:05) (3:05)
Start
Theory of the Giant Lizard (5:44)
The last 100 words
Start
The final 100 words (1:35)
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