Sentences with phrase «good hatchet job»

Not exact matches

The world will be 100 times better because Mix's flowing locks will help us forget about the hatchet job that recently happened to Luka Modric's hair.
This wasn't the hatchet job of his recent Newsnight appearance, but even when the Prince of Darkness is on his best behaviour he can't help sounding as if he is damning the Labour leader with faint praise.
In this new day of viral marketing, any publicity is good publicity, including this Newsweek hatchet job article.
In the seven years since the launch of WikiLeaks, Julian Assange has done such a good job of besmirching his own name that no hatchet job could ever be as effective as the truth: Julian Assange comes across as an unempathetic self - aggrandising egotist.
I'm talking about Michael Winerip who, to the best of my knowledge, is the single worst education reporter in America, infamous for biased hatchet jobs on NCLB, Bloomberg and Klein's reforms, and anything else associated with genuine reform (if anyone is aware of someone worse at a major publication, please let me know — maybe I'll start a Reporter Hall of Shame...)
As noted in last week's post, if a writer takes to social media to do a hatchet job on an agent or editor and doesn't back up what they are saying, well, that author comes across as a prima donna and only does himself harm.
Others have done a better job with the Hatchette hatchet job attempt on Amazon (and damn, unless they're aiming for authors and readers they're really doing a shitty job of it).
Others have done a better job with the Hatchette hatchet job attempt on Amazon (and damn, unless they» re
Reviewers grin gleefully and ready their knives for yet another hatchet job, preparing to fillet what is likely to be a boring, repetitive trudge, filled with well - worn mechanics, brainless button mashing, QTEs, endless fetch quests.
Or is it better, as social media does its gruesome hatchet job, to recognize the apparent hopelessness of the situation, no matter what the facts are, to accept defeat and slink away in silence, as so many of those who are accused seem to do even if the allegations don't seem particularly credible?
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