Ashes1396 said:
I've done that as well.
Pretty sure this falls under house styles. If you have ever read the Daily Mail here in the UK, that this how they write their stories a lot of the times.
Ironically, it's because they are such a right wing paper, that they kind of have to do this. Fox news does this on their news chanels as well. Always working up to stories.
AP is pretty huge.
Surely you must have seen this style used many different times?
Normally they do this with older news, like court coverings or something.
In high school, I was the "wire runner" back in the day for the local paper while I was on shift part time. My job was to take all the printouts of the stories that came across the wires, (we actually still had these back in the day) tear 'em off, and run them to the appropriate news desk. So I read pretty much ever AP, UPI, and Reuters story that came off the wires for about 20 hours a week for two years.
I also worked for a newspaper while still a college student that used the "AP Style Guide."
I'm a photographer now, and not in photojournalism, but I have college buddies who are, and I'm tuned into the world of journalism with many personal relationships. So I'm very familiar with how the AP style works.
They've changed a bit over the years, not strictly using the Inverted Pyramid anymore, but definitely still sticking with the "summary lead" structure (based on the pyramid) in hard news stories. A couple years ago, Tom Curley, the CEO of the AP said the pyramid was dead, but not really dead...and that they were going to a "summary lead" style he called "bulletins," which he described as closer to the radio news style than before. Still, it's supposed to be very "summary lead" oriented.
I could rattle around about this for hours, but since this kind of thing is probably just interesting to you and I, I'll leave it at that. The AP is very influential here in the US though, and there are many resources, online and in print, that you can look at if you are still interested.