When publishing a page, it is empirical to capture a story that harbors honest emotion. Both of these stories involve two very passionate people who selflessly help animals around them, despite the consequences. The personalities of the two subjects could not be more different, yet they are distinct in their setting. Knight does a solid job of capturing Sean’s emotion and stature with the help of her photographer Jessica Bal, as  the descriptions depict the main character very accurately. The zany behavior of Bernie Goetz is exemplified through the words of Molly Socha, and further solidified by her Photographer Colleen Frakes as she gets Goetz so candidly deep in thought as he feeds the squirrels. These stories bring to life the two subjects by capturing their personality so well both showing and telling.

Another feature to a good published post, is shattering the readers expectations. What both writers did so well was frame their subject first in bizarre terms. Sean, too quiet of a person who commands respect of so many animals, or Bernie, a “vigilante” who was infamously known for shooting a group of black men as they tried to rob him. Neither person is highlighted immediately, giving the reader the chance to create some sort of expectations of stereotypes that will only be shattered within the next several paragraphs. Every reader likes a twist, and when the potential villain ends up being the hero, everyone is a winner.