Sentences with phrase «something about journalists»

Not exact matches

Think about it — a certain amount of anxiety about getting the job done is often the motivating factor that actually gets college students to buckle down and study for exams, or gets journalists to finally send something to their editor.
About this same point in time, the journalists that focus specifically on the venture capital industry noted something quite profound.
Online, my social - media universe was filled with journalists and Jewish communal professionals, rabbis and professors and nonprofit workers, all of whom knew that a Tablet writer had said something offensive about the Harvey Weinstein case — but outside my front door, I encountered people who didn't inhabit my social - media universe.
He told the audience that if they want to do something to help journalists, they should support blog TechDirt and its founder Mike Masnick, who is being sued by the same lawyer who led Hogan's lawsuit against Gawker over stories TechDirt published about Shiva Ayyadurai, who claims to have invented email.
Without one, you'll find that either you spend the whole day answering questions about the story so that a journalist has enough details to write something interesting, or it just won't get picked up because it's too much like hard work for an already busy reporter.
As journalists are wont to do, Gawronski, who is writing a book about John Paul, tries to get the Pope to say something newsworthy, i.e., controversial.
I spoke to a journalist a while back who told me that the hardest part of his job is to write about something without it been affected by emotions.
our pathetic story about arsenal title contenders fade away in a month... and all those shitty players always come out and say how arsenal is fighting for the title (arteta, giroud etc...) time for a new menager, one who will not speaking to the journalists how transfer window should shot down earlier but he is the only one trying to do something in the last day of the transfer window or he is pretending that he is doing something, but no... he flew to the france to be a pundit for france game... I am sick and tired of this man, can't stand it anymore...
I want Chelsea to win big matches playing attacking football with a high defensive line, and I want it to happen so lazy fans, bloggers and journalists alike can put on their thinking caps and figure out something else to talk about.
Apart from the official confirmations or deals that are being agreed, which gives something to discuss about, I personally find interest when any reputed journalist contradicts any report that have created a sensation in the transfer market.
«Look, if a journalist hears something, he researches and writes about it.
As a journalist writing about health issues, I realised that something had to be done to encourage tummy time again.
Gordon Brown just opened a major oil conference in Central London, and he'll be looking to sell that (he always arrives at these thing with two sentences he wants imprinted on everyone's brain, and faces a roomful of journalists who want to talk about something else).
Second point which may not directly answer the question but serves as evidence of: A --RRB- Assad using it for terrorizing the people B --RRB- For those who still deny that Assad done it is: This video of shameless (mind you, he has a verified twitter account) Syrian journalist who is openly threating that «Something Very Special and powerful» is about to come (just hours before the Chemical Attack), plus there is also a leaked phone tape which is allegedly of Suheil - al - Hassan ordering military to go all attack
But from an entirely impartial perspective, as a journalist for a prominent political website which rarely goes down to street level, there does seem to be something terribly unhealthy about the way protest policing is conducted in Britain today.
Pro-Labour political journalist Michael White, writing in The Guardian, commented, «There was something magnificently brave about Michael Foot's campaign but it was like the Battle of the Somme».
But more than just a 90 minute visual buffet, the film shows what it's like to be a journalist at the top of your game, doing something that you love, and that makes a major difference in the lives of those you write about.
Inspired by the podcast StartUp, the comedy, written by Tarses, stars Zach Braff as Alex Schuman, a brilliant radio journalist, husband and father of two who is about to do something crazy: quit his job and start his own company.
@static5245 you don't need to download the patch for the PS4, when you buy the console you can plug all your stuff in and turn it on put a game in and start playing, you don't need the update whatsoever to play games... so no... clearly there was never DRM... I think guys like Adam Sessler are upset over something completely different and it has to do with them being able to record video for reviewing games, there seems to be an issue with that right now, either that, or only a select group of gaming journalists are being aloud into this Sony Preview event, naturally people are gonna be pissed because it gives every other journalist an edge over them making it harder for them to attain readers intern messing with their lively hood, but thats about it, and GT seems to be nothing but excited about the PS, teasing stuff for the VGA's it seems.
As for me, after ten years of working as a part - time games journalist I started to feel less and less excited about writing about other people's work and more keen to try my hand at making something.
I am not the first to suggest that Extraordinary Popular Delusions and the Madness of Crowds, the study of price bubbles and other mass misconceptions written by the Scottish journalist Charles Mackay in 1841, has something to say about present circumstances.
Thirdly, though we are trying to do something about it here, most journalists are not experienced enough in scientific topics to be able to place new results in context without outside help.
A month ago, I was chatting with journalist John Fleck about his (terrific) new book on water policy in the American West, and he mentioned something that seemed deeply relevant to climate policy.
Scientists, journalists and politicians are all vulnerable to the view that debates about science consist merely of arming the argument about «What is to be Done» with the imperative: «Something Must be Done about...».
For instance, because of some of the things on this list, Americans are more likely than they were in previous years to accept the possibility that science has something to say about the Earth's climate and the changes we have experienced or that may be in the future; journalists are starting to take a new look at their own misplaced «objective» stance as well.
Yet any institution that so many journalists call their home should have been able to find something to say about it.
Journalists think their job is to shame ordinary people into silence lest they say something politically incorrect about the scale and pace of European immigration.
He recommends that when you find journalists who are covering something very specific that you can credibly say something about, you should offer your assistance.
That's journalist Ryan Avent talking about why he's reluctant to do something that would help his personal life even though it would have a minimal effect on his professional one.
But something seemed not right about these two Twittering lawyers to journalist and true crime author Cathy Scott.
The academics and the journalists cared about the sliver that involved something else — and of that, the small portions that led to published appellate opinions.
A couple of more points I would add: As the journalist describes the content of the piece he or she is writing, think about providing a «sound bite,» something clever, short and sweet, which is quotable and if sufficiently clever will find its way in to the headline or a sidebar quote.
And you're right about journalists having an agenda — something more common and more extreme these days and not any more acceptable.
(The tabloid journalist still lurking in me wanted to call the blog something like «Forgetting to tell DD about cheating» but I decided that was a bit too naughty.
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