Sentences with phrase «blared the headline of»

«Yahoo Plans to Say It Is Exploring Strategic Options,» blares the headline of a Wall Street Journal story published 40 minutes ago.
«JUST AS CREEPY as it sounds,» blared the headline of an article in The Huffington Post describing DeepFace a week after it came out.

Not exact matches

«Sitting is the new smoking,» headlines have blared, as a parade of scientific research has uncovered the truly terrible effects of having your backside planted in one place all day (including making you not just sicker but also dumber).
Consumer confidence hit a five year high this month, the headlines blared in response to the release of the most recent University of Michigan Consumer Sentiment Index.
«Jeffrey Gundlach Celebrates Anniversary of Getting Fired in Cockiest Way Possible,» blared the headline at New York magazine's «Daily Intel» website, which reported that asset manager TCW fired the star bond investor three years ago Tuesday.
I was a journalist, writing story after story, day after day, focusing my brain on the words at hand even as scanners scratched and top - of - the - hour headlines blared on the competing networks.
Particular «highlights» included the blaring headline declaration, which filled half of page 9: «No one else on the planet comes close to our genius».
«Lights all askew in the heavens,» blared the Nov. 9 New York Times in one of the most famous science newspaper headlines ever.
«Scientists Fear a Revolt by Killer Robots» blared a headline in The Sunday Times of London, crystallizing the minutes of last year's International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence in Pasadena.
When the National Enquirer broke the news of Charlie Sheen's HIV diagnosis, the story was already misleading: «Charlie Sheen AIDS Cover - Up,» blared the headline.
Though headlines blared Judge lets buyer ditch deal on condo and B.C. court rules pre-sale condo contract invalid, the fact of the matter is that Bastion Coast is little more than the application of pre-existing law.
On the front of your policy pages, there is this blaring headline in all capital letters:
«Anyone can fly the Skycar,» the headline on the January 1991 cover of Popular Mechanics blared, teasing the possibility of a future where everyone could own their own «flying car.»
The headlines in most of the nation's major newspapers last week blared, «Nearly 40 % say marriage is becoming obsolete.»
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