The requirements of actual reportage, subject and style, vary from paper to paper. For example, the British Daily Mirror arranges its news and features under three headings: Women, Babies, Animals. A staider publication might not consider any of these categories particularly newsworthy. Again, the less sensational the paper, the more you will be able to set down your ideas in a fairly logical, balanced fashion and the less you will be pressurised into a set mould-with the sole proviso, of course, that you do not upset the editor.