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Real-Life Activities

Real-Life Decision Making

You live in a large city. A couple of years ago, the local police service hired its first female police chief. You think it would make a great article for Conrad, a national magazine.

You submit a story proposal to Conrad's editor. Your focus is on how the police chief has redesigned the police force. There has been controversy in her tenure thus far, but you don't plan to focus on it.

The editor accepts the proposal. You finish researching the story and interview many sources, including the police chief herself. You're almost finished the article when Conrad's editor quits.

The new editor looks at your story. He doesn't like the focus. He wants you to change the focus and write more about the controversy. He's only willing to pay you your original fee, so you won't be paid to redo the research and interviewing. You'll be using your sources' quotes for a different type of story than you told them it would be.

If you don't change the story, Conrad won't run it. You could request a "kill fee." That means the editor would pay you a percentage of what you would have received if the story were published. Most publications will pay kill fees if circumstances change so that they no longer want the story.

What do you do?