Sentences with phrase «tabloid fodder»

The phrase "tabloid fodder" refers to news or information that is considered sensational, exaggerated, or gossipy, usually found in tabloid magazines or publications. Full definition
Bloom became tabloid fodder after her arrest made her high stakes, celebrity - filled poker games big news.
In Oklahoma City, he's suddenly relevant again for basketball reasons, not just tabloid fodder.
Go ahead and feel marginalized by big money, although Jeff Koons, balloon dogs, and auction prices are in the end only tabloid fodder and footnotes to the present.
White Dee is now tabloid fodder, a minor celebrity who, says The Sun, has hired a fitness trainer to «get a body like Kelly Brook» and has hopes of cracking America.
He did not break the informal «back to basics» code that sexual and personal immorality are only pertinent tabloid fodder where you, as John Major did, make the upholding of moral fibre a part of your political agenda.
UPDATED, Aug. 3, 2:35 p.m.: The breakup of Linda and Harry Macklowe after 58 years of marriage became quick tabloid fodder.
So it's not exactly a scandal that the former governor and failed candidate for comptroller is now reportedly dating Bill de Blasio spokeswoman Lis Smith, but it sure is good tabloid fodder, as the New York Post and Daily News demonstrated with competing reports on Spitzer's new romantic life.
But at the end of the year, it turns to what it calls «light - hearted fare and satire» — also known as silly tabloid fodder.
I found talking to my besties who are new Mums really helped me decipher what's real, and what's crazy unrealistic tabloid fodder.
All this from a work that takes tabloid fodder and shapes it into nothing less than a comic touchstone.
The divorce between Prince Charles and Princess Diana involved infidelity on both sides and became routine tabloid fodder.
And while he's dropped a few hints about some projects in the works — including an upcoming docuseries about the real tragedy behind the actions of»90s tabloid fodder Lorena Bobbitt — Peele's been extremely tight - lipped about what his next feature film project might be.
Another questionable item concerns how humans were able to deduce the creatures» limitations prior to their rampant depletion (at least if tabloid fodder is any indication)... so the film's resolution feels a bit like M. Night Shyamalan's Signs (2002) and those hydrophobic aliens trying to colonize a planet mostly made of water (and speaking of printing techniques, how Evelyn has a calendar to mark her due date well over a year into isolation also seems suspect).
In composing the song, Stevens says he felt a «conviction to write something with dignity and grace, to pull back the ridiculous tabloid fodder and take stock of the real story of this strange and magnificent American hero».
In Aaron Sorkin's new film Molly's Game, the first outing as director by the renowned writer, we swiftly learn that his take on her story is anything but tabloid fodder.
Less successful were 2005's smash hit «Mr. and Mrs. Smith,» better known for the endless tabloid fodder it inspired, and the massive 2008 flop «Jumper.»
The art world can also produce tabloid fodder worthy of Hollywood as seen in the headline «Isa Genzken Says She Became An Alcoholic After Her Divorce From Gerhard Richter.»
Covering topics including politics, tabloid fodder headlines and general advice on life it's a playful and energetic installation to explore.
His highly refined interests in kitsch, scatological humor, porn, tawdry glamour, serial killers, and other tabloid fodder anticipated by decades the zeitgeist of our time.
This most recent version was produced just before the apex of Lohan's critical and commercial success, which began to sharply decline only a few years later as partying and legal troubles transformed her into unrelenting tabloid fodder.
Emin recently flew to the U.S. for an operation to reduce her breasts from a 34G to a 34DD, more tabloid fodder.
Such alleged crimes, of course, make great tabloid fodder — the New York Post called Gibbons «a wacky former MIT professor.»
But our criticism went beyond tabloid fodder; it pointed to the persistent gap between public postures and personal acts — a breach that carbon taxes could help repair.
While the docket may not provide much tabloid fodder, it includes plenty of cases with meat for lawyers.
Here's a quick listing some of central midfielders who were transferred in the summer, made available for transfer, or were linked to moves in what was more than just tabloid fodder: Luka Modric, Scott Parker, Charlie Adam, Jordan Henderson, Raul Meireles, Mikel Arteta, Yohan Cabaye, Arturo Vidal, Andrea Pirlo, Antonio Nocerino, Alberto Aquilani, Gokhan Inler, Riccardo Montolivo, Fernando Gago, Lassana Diarra, Nuri Sahin.
As the nation teeters on the brink of WWII, a nearly bankrupt NAACP sends Thurgood Marshall (Chadwick Boseman) to conservative Connecticut to defend a black chauffeur against his wealthy socialite employer in a sexual assault and attempted murder trial that quickly became tabloid fodder.
«Completely absent from «Journey» is any mention of Jackson's later status as tabloid fodder, from the allegations of child molestation to the accusations of general weirdness,» notes the New York Times.
Client # 9, the Mayflower Madam, and now the UES Millionaire Madam are tabloid fodder.
Long before Amy Winehouse and Pete Doherty became tabloid fodder, Richard Burton, Richard Harris, Peter O'Toole and Oliver Reed set a gold standard in celebrity bad behaviour.
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