Sentences with phrase «about headline writers»

Jack Maloney: I think you have a fundamental misunderstanding about headline writers.

Not exact matches

Can u imagine following n believing what those headline grabbing, liars, shyte story writers are saying about Arsenal?
As for your question about the mouse study, you have to ask the writer or subeditor who came up with the headline.
Now The Guardian reports, in an item with a fantastic headline («Schrader to direct death camp clown tale» — sounds like a great name for a Northwest band) that Paul Schrader will direct Jeff Goldblum in an adaptation of Israeli writer Yoram Kaniuk's novel «Adam Resurrected,» about a clown who entertains Jews on their way to the gas chambers.
The Atlantic piece ends by reminding us that «the absence of women film critics has been in the news recently thanks to Meryl Streep, who questioned in October how having so few women writers might affect the reception of female - centric films,» while noting that «There are no headlines recently about the representation of other races or sexual orientations, though they deserve many of their own.»
A Quiet Place may seem a far cry from Krasinski's previous work as a writer / director, but it shares the same concerns for the working class as 2012's Promised Land (which Krasinski cowrote and costarred in) and builds on the concerns about parenthood from 2016's The Hollars (a film Krasinski headlined and directed).
Despite headlines about record - breaking deals — most recently for a slice of One Direction fan fiction, which earned Anna Todd a mid-six-figure deal with Simon & Schuster — the «vast majority» of writers receive advances that are well below the level that would make them equivalent to a salary, said Smythe.
From the desk of the Devil's Advocate... Posing a question in a blog headline typically means the writer of the post already knows the answer and will deign to share it only if you click on his or her... [Read more...] about How Much is a Credit Inquiry Worth?
How does your «they certainly aren't interested in uncertainty» differ from my «frankness about the uncertainties won't please the headline writers»?
Frankness about the uncertainties won't please the headline writers, but is essential to the credibility of climate science.
(It is not just about adapting to climate change, despite the headline; always remember, writers don't control headlines.)
The headline and editorial writers are having a wonderful time inventing claims about how novel and definitive the report will be.
This is the lazy standby for the headline or opening sentence of an article that talks about three separate phenomena related in some way not readily evident to the writer.
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