Sentences with phrase «something journalists like»

It's hard to believe now, but Twitter started out as a curiosity, something journalists like myself used rabidly along with a few hardcore tech enthusiasts.

Not exact matches

Former Uber CEO Travis Kalanick had similar advice, adopting what journalist Brad Stone refers to as «Travis's Law» to guide his company through its regulatory battles: «It went something like this,» Stone writes in The Upstarts.
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.
Now wenger is actually making it look like he did something great by playing Ozil in the middle, fans, journalist, the media and even our enemies have been saying thats where ozil should play.
At debates and dinner parties, commentators, journalists and academics usually say something like this: «Yes it is close now but as polling day nears people will shift toward Remain».
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».
If scientists are like «journalists» — doing hard, original research — then we are something like «bloggers.»
Investigative health journalist Nicolas Pineault used to think this all sounded like something only crazy people wearing tinfoil hats would say.
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.
The stories follow Tin Tin who is a young journalist, and adventurer, as he continually stumbles across mysteries that leads him on grand adventures that eventually has him averting the world from being taken over by some crazy man, or something like that.
Many automotive journalists fancy themselves design experts, often examining a new car's looks almost to the point of absurdity, from the quality of the paint finish to the dash - to - axle ratio, and when we find something we don't like, it's blacklisted for eternity.
DIGITAL EDITOR ANDREW STOY: Sometimes you forget how good you have it as an automotive journalist until you get into something really basic like this 2014 Mazda 2 Touring.
If you're looking for a premium experience in a car with extra practicality, the 328d xDrive Sport Wagon is worth a look, and what feels like isolated steering to this automotive journalist might feel like something else to you.
What SEEMs like a war, an attack, even to very smart, well - meaning people in such industries, then, is actually something quite different — it's a giving - away of the industry's key capabilities, which may never have looked like weapons to anyone until they suddenly were in the «wrong» hands — the writers» or musicians» or citizen journalists» hands.
@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.
«Plus that would absolutely tank the Metacritic score, which is something real games journalists like me enjoy doing,» he added.
Journalists and editors like stories that surprise, that give something «new» to the subject and are therefore likely to be interesting enough to readers to make them read past the headline.
Gelbspan's oft - repeated narrative includes a line that goes something like, «I'm a journalist, not an environmentalist.
This journalist also mentioned that the Antarctic peninsula had warmed «39» (or something like that) degrees.
But science that «proves» something that journalists, commentators and policy bods like to think was blatantly obvious can also command more than its fair of column inches.
You're used to working largely under the radar, to the point that meetings have something like the feel of family dinners: people know you're sitting down at the table, but aside from journalists and green groups, not too many pay close attention to what's actually being served.
If it really wanted to, Twitter could not only use its own algorithms to generate aggregated content in interesting ways, it could start to accumulate a suite of tools that allow users and even journalists to do the same — whether it's something like Storify or Storyful (which has a paid - for Pro version that helps media companies verify and fact - check the content they are collecting) or another curation / discovery service like Prismatic or Percolate, or even a consumption and recommendation app like Flipboard.
The most common reason is that they've been inspired by something they read, watched on TV or heard on the radio, and would like a creative role such as journalist, television researcher, -LSB-...]
(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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