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Welcome to the Steno Wizard's Realtime Journey!






Remember when life was simple and all you had to do was make a selection on what your steno really meant? Those days are long gone.





Reporters must get themselves into top realtime form to compete in today's job market. This is my contribution toward ALL of us reaching the realtime goal.



My Steno Wizardry concept is based on the idea that writing realtime actually doesn't require magic -- just hard work, determination, and a little bit of FUN imagination.



My hope is my sharing of the ideas I've incorporated into my realtime journey will assist you in yours.



Wednesday, May 13, 2015

In the news today

Today's news...

Amtrak

Today's briefs...

derail TKRAEUL
derailed TKRAEULD
derails TKRAEULZ
derailment TKRAEUPLT

Philadelphia TPEUFL
New York City TPHOERBGS (changed from theory brief due to "no," problem)
Washington WA*UG
Washington, D.C. WA*UGDZ

rescue REFBG
toppling TOP/-LG
-mile-per-hour PH*EURP (defined to attach to the number prior)
mangled PHAPBG/LD

NTSB N*T/S*B
passenger PAENG
passengers PAENGZ

Friday, May 8, 2015

Here's a few new words

Some words that I had to finger spell a portion of to get perfect translation while on the air and are now added to my personal dictionary.

lampoon, lampooning, lampoons, lampooned

Polarization.  I don't understand why I can't seem to write it consistently, but I'm working on it!

En route.  I would have thought I'd had it in there already, but NOOOOO!

I've now added as a result the following words just in case since I'm also familiar with them --
en banc
en bloc
en masse
en garde

Sharing!

Onward and upward!

Thursday, May 7, 2015

A simple captioning brief idea

An experienced captioner shared with me her method for writing a show's name with the appropriate quotation marks.   For each show's dictionary, she defines the stroke SHO*E.  For example, "Today in New York" is SHO*E and is input into that station's dictionary, WNBC.  "Newsline" is SHO*E for the NHK broadcasts.  "AMHQ" is SHO*E for The Weather Channel.

A simple solution that works.  You definitely need to make sure your appropriate dictionaries are loaded and in the proper order so you have no on-air disaster...

I also write WEB/WEB for a station's website and define it into that show's particular dictionary. 

Wednesday, May 6, 2015

Gesundheit

While on the air, one of the news anchors sneezed -- a first for me.  Of course, no one said "Bless you" -- why would they?  Those words are in my dictionary.  Ha! 

Gesundheit!  It has now been added with about 7 different ways I may write it when I can't figure out the true spelling.  GA-ZUND-HYT, GE-SUN-HYT, GE-ZUND-HYT, etc.   I hope I don't find a new way when it comes up again on the air!


Saturday, May 2, 2015

Briefs added to the repertoire in the past year!

While watching the Kentucky Derby, thought I'd share some one-stroker briefs... 

Derby TKAERB

victory SROEURBGT

championship KHOEUP

delivery TKHRAEFR

running R-G

winning W-G

spinning SP-G

Louisville HRAOUFL

unique TPHAOEBG

AND an important entry for your captioning dictionary, HA*G - defined as #~ -- hashtag with a delete space.