Sentences with phrase «liked as a columnist»

Though I think I was liked as a columnist for RealMoney, I don't think that most of the stuff that I have blogged would have made it there.

Not exact matches

Besides these closely held and trusted relationships, we also look to online influencers — everything from shopping sites and corporate websites to journalists and columnists to sites like Yelp, Angie's List and Care.com — as credible and reliable sources.
As Bloomberg columnist Shira Ovide put it, Amazon founder and CEO Jeff Bezos «doesn't abide by the conventional rules of business like... turning a profit.
Shapiro started his career as a syndicated conservative columnist at the age of 17 but wrote a critique in February of Parkland activists like Hogg and Gonzalez, pointing out their youth and saying, «Children and teenagers are not fully rational actors.
Their reasoning is that like King David, Donald Trump has committed adultery, and like King David (or President Franklin Roosevelt, as one columnist wrote), Trump can be a great (and moral) leader even after having committed adultery.
In a pair of particularly venomous columns National Journal editor and Washington Post columnist Michael Kelly not only derided antiwar protesters as those «unhappy people who like to yell about the awfulness of «Amerika» or international corporations or rich people or people who drive large cars,» but he also attacked pacifists as «liars,» «frauds» and «hypocrites,» whose views are «objectively pro-terrorist» and «evil.»
I think she was so successful as an advice columnist because she kept up with the changing times (she realized that Viagra may be useful for some men), was courageous and not afraid to take controversial and unpopular views (like to accept and support gays), and was compassionate (she personally called some people on the verge of suicide rather than just responding to them...
Many people saw this as Johnson positioning himself for a leadership challenge, [11][12] although some commentators, like Newsnight's political editor Nick Watt and columnist Iain Dale, argued this was the wrong interpretation and that Johnson's motivation was to assert his influence in Brexit negotiations.
It sure seems like it's gonna be that, as Downey's Los Angeles Times columnist, Steve Lopez, ever on the search for a good story, meets cute with Foxx's schizophrenic street person Nathaniel Ayers as the latter is playing, and playing surprisingly well, a two - stringed violin in a public park.
Flipping back and forth through time as Walls (Larson), a popular New York gossip columnist working in a posh Manhattan office circa 1989, ruminates about her and her family's nomadic life thanks to the wandering needs of her gypsy - like father Rex (Woody Harrelson), the movie is shaggy - eared melodrama that never earns the emotional connection with the audience it so clearly is aiming for.
The panel includes Kenneth Atchity who is an author, Hollywood producer, literary manager, editor, speaker, writing and career coach, columnist, book reviewer, and brand consultant, New York Times Best - selling author Heather Graham, Orna Ross, a former literary agent and founder of the Alliance for Independent Authors, as well as BooksGoSocial founder Laurence O'Bryan alongside a host of acclaimed authors, writing professors and publishing insiders to discuss topics like the Critical Elements of Storytelling, the Evolving Business of Publishing, and the all - important Book Marketing Secrets.
In fact, columnist Brandon Griggs of the Salt Lake City Tribune points out that everyone is seeking a blurb for his or her book, and even well - meaning blurbers (that is, those who genuinely enjoy a book and want to support it, as opposed to those authors who are just seeking promotional opportunities for their own books) tend to look like, well, «blurb whores» if they endorse more than fifty books.
I liked the editorial freedom, though, and liked the broader interaction with many voices across the internet, rather than only RealMoney columnists, good as they were.
As a personal finance columnist for Vogue magazine in the early 1970s I couldn't write about plebeian things like buying your first home.
But when sex advice columnist Dan Savage, who writes numerous posts about pitbulls behaving badly with titles like, «Pit Bulls Should be Boiled Alive like Lobsters and Fed to Their Idiot Owners,» and compares these domesticated canines with wild tigers, he's doing the exact same thing as Drudge.
I also read another of Brett Arend's columns, this one (in TheStreet.com) dealing with U.S. energy policy (such as it is), and realized that he may not be your typical WSJ oop - ed page columnist; I have to wonder if an essay like the latter would ever run in the WJS.
You are literally not allowed to exist as a person (unless you are a columnist like Tom Friedman or George Will or Dave Barry or write first - person accounts for the New Yorker... unless you are expressly, overtly you).
I especially would like to see Guardian columnist George Monbiot barred from the cruises, as he has done nothing but write scare stories about the fate of the world.
I especially would like to see Guardian columnist George Manbiot barred from the cruises, as he has done nothing but write scare stories about the fate of the world.
And as I said there are consequences from hiding away from BoM and CSIRO and behaving like sneaky little 5th columnists.
I would like to extend an enormous thank you and warm hug to LTN Editor - in - Chief Monica Bay, who brought me on as a columnist shortly after she became editor.
Meanwhile, the patent system as a whole is under scrutiny by the Supreme Court and by columnists like Gordon Crovitz, who wrote in the Wall Street Journal this week:
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