Sentences with phrase «what journalists like»

Crossan is what some journalists like to call a «quote machine.»

Not exact matches

Charles Duhigg, staff writer for The New York Times and author of The Power of Habit, answers questions from readers on Quora on topics ranging from how to develop a blogging habit to what it's like to work as a journalist.
Don't scatter bias in here; just lay the facts out for what you are pitching (think about it like a journalist would, and cover the who, when what, where, why and how).
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.
You sound just like those ignorant journalists on the Today Show from the 90's sarcastically opining «what is the internet anyway».
He tells the story that one year in mid-December a journalist from the local newspaper rang him and asked: «What would you like for Christmas?»
«There are whole areas where there is fighting that is forgotten because there is so much of it, whole areas which depend on the likes of James Foley and Steven Sotloff [the US journalists murdered after being kidnapped by Isis in Syria] to show some light on what is happening.»
As a matter of fact, the last interview I saw he got properly drilled (not like the fake sports journalist or pundits here) regarding his lack of recruitment in defence and NEVER «announce» what were the objectives!!
i completely agree with you, arsenal fans might be the most present online but i truly believe that they are some of the most clueless when it comes down to the game, they slam the manager based on what they read in the papers, on websites as if it were the gospel truth some of them would like to think they, d do a better job than wenger and our players, they post a lot of comments and don, t even know the positions of some players even when we win comfortably they, re never satisfied oh also they love the usual cliches used by the so - called journalists / pundits.
Once properly vetted, your money usually buys you first or secondhand access to information most fans (or journalists) would kill for: player run - ins with the law that go unreported, what certain coaches are really like, what kind of power an A.D. or president really has, and most importantly, who really is in charge of your football program.
when LVG put United above Bayern, Barca and Ajax as the biggest club in the world that sum up the man - bastard journalist even have the cheek to ask if Man City big enough bigger than United he told them City would take centuries to become like United so what is not to love about the Big Man!!!
The Italian journalist claimed that Gotze's dad has held talks with Spurs and likes what he sees.
Journalists (particularly commentators like Hugo Young) want to write in a way which reflects what politicians are actuallythinking, rather than what they are constrained to state publicly.
«I don't want you to talk to me in these times... Do you know who I am, do you know what I have created in this life of mine for a journalist like you to tell me that I am incompetent.
What they do is out in the open and possibly recorded by accidental citizen journalists, like myself.
Some undercover CNN journalists showed what looked like migrants from West African countries being haggled over as «merchandise» by smugglers operating in what has become a haven for illicit trafficking networks.
Also there are laws around what you can and can't say as journalists on days like this which we frankly don't understand, so we tend to just stay on the safe side and shut up.
Journalists like myself will be interested to hear your response to the question Josh addresses to you at the end of the film: «Governor Cuomo, what color will the sky be over New York?»
What Afineevsky meant by this answer is unclear, much like the statement that he is «a filmmaker not a journalist,» which Radio Free Europe said he gave in response to charges that he oversimplified the narrative.
The statement which was aimed at confirming what happened with respect to the reported burglary incident said «Following series of enquiries from journalists and other concerned Nigerians on the extent of the reported vandalisation and theft in the house of former President Dr. Goodluck Jonathan located in Gwarinpa Abuja, we therefore would like to make the following clarifications:
Not just the journalists who viewed the entire project as a cynical publicity exercise to cement a future leadership bid, but those who took a long hard look at Mr Davis» voting record and didn't like what they found.
I wonder what he thinks of left - leaning journalists like Steve Richards who appeared as guests on yesterday's Today programme.
Normally when a political party accuses a news organisation or journalist of lacking impartiality, what they're really saying is «you're not reporting us in the way we'd like».
Citizen - journalists chosen by Decision» 08, contest for «Why are you a Democrat / Republican,» what do pollworkers of the 21st Century look like?
We need to make sure that we are in control over the things that affects us.Anytime there is flood and people loose their life, most of the blame goes to sitting presidents.I am not saying that the central government does not have responsibility to ensure that enabling environment is created.They have a great work to do but as citizens what is our quota?When you move around Accra, sometimes i becomes angry within myself because i am in doubt as to whether our sanitation laws exit.People because of the tax they claim they pay waits for zoom lion workers to come and clean the choked gutters before our houses and shops either than that, it will remain like that.Is it modernity or civilization that has turned us to forget our traditional values or duties of ensuring that our environments is clean?Everybody in our Ghanaian setting knows the responsibility of men and women in making sure that our environments are clean not waiting for flood to occur and we start blaming sitting presidents.To the media, though your responsibility is to keep governments on it toes, you equally have a mandate in educating the public of what we are expected to do as citizens in other to ensure that our dear nation is a better ecosystem for all of us to live.The attention of the media should be shifted from making politicians popular to making us aware as citizens of our responsibilities.I sometimes get confused to hear journalists calling opponents to comment on issues concerning the sitting governments and the only thing that comes to my mind is what do the journalist want to hear from the political opponents?Nothing.They will end up criticizing without giving an alternative.The media should rather resort in questioning people directly to where the problems are coming from.Let us build our institutions.When it comes to energy issues.Citifm will call Hon.KT Hammond who was a deputy minister living who he worked under (His boss at that time) and I always become confused because what can we expect from him?nothing.
David Cameron's keynote party conference speech today not only ends what has been portrayed as a winning week for the Tories, but it also brings to a full stop the sight of journalists travelling like tour groups with wheelie suitcases and laptops in tow as they hop from venue to venue to check the political view from Bournemouth (Lib Dems), Brighton and Hove (Labour) and the Manchester (Conservatives).
The Taste of Tomorrow By Josh Schonwald When journalist Josh Schonwald first heard of cobia, a steaklike fish that some in the seafood industry say will soon become a culinary staple, it got him wondering: What will the cuisine of the future taste like?
Using medical texts from the era to figure out what to eat (it includes foods like fresh eggs, figs, grapes, and red wine), one journalist found it surprisingly easy to eat the medieval way.
Wow what a journalist, I would like to tell all women never to lose their inner «child».
Am camiro, simple curdly, caring and loving, i like watching soccer and aslo a chelsea fan, i need a guy that knows what he want to check me out.Am a freelence journalist, practised for just 2 yrs now, i wish my dreams comes through... read more
Veteran game journalist Geoff Keighley joins Kotaku Splitscreen this week to talk about what it's like to produce The Game Awards, how he decides which trailer to debut, and the hilarious request he got from the people who make Doritos.
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.
It's the pseudonym Edward Snowden used when he first approached, over the Internet, documentary filmmaker and muckraking journalist Laura Poitras, hoping to find someone trustworthy and with a pulpit who could share with the world what he'd discovered about the outrageous mass surveillance the NSA is engaged in that makes Big Brother look like an amateur.
At a roundtable interview, DeWitt discussed her research for the role, how playing a real - life person informed her approach to the character, what it was like meeting the real Sue Webb, what she enjoyed most about working with Renner, what she learned about journalists and their determination to get to the truth of their story, her new film «Men, Women & Children» directed by Jason Reitman, and her upcoming projects: Joe Swanberg's «Digging for Fire,» Sam Raimi's remake of «Poltergeist» with Sam Rockwell, and a small part in the TV mini-series «Olive Kitteridge.»
While there are some things to admire, I found this one to be a boring display of what I like to call «critic bait»: a movie targeted at film journalists who will believe anything put onscreen from these two is worthy of never - ending praise.
Evidently, he liked what he saw: a tribute to the crusading investigative journalists who brought the Pentagon Papers to the public, despite threats of jail time and worse from the Nixon White House, and a sympathetic portrait of a woman, The Washington Post's Katharine Graham, who in the course of this episode assumed the full authority that men had thought she couldn't wield.
Lanie learns about what is important in life, but just in case somebody isn't paying attention, Herek shouts loudly in scenes like the one where she interviews a Barbara Walters - type journalist (Stockard Channing, The Business of Strangers, Where the Heart Is).
Journalists like to cover what's happening inside a school's four walls.
Students will learn what it is like to be an investigative journalist.
There were so many opportunities in 2016 for education journalists to link general issues like immigration and foreign policy to what's going on in schools, and no shortage of reporters and editors eager to jump in:
-- As one of the few enthusiasts lucky enough to own an example of the Pegaso Z102, Douglas Blain reveals what this Spanish rarity is really like to live with / Auto - biography: Alain de Cadenet — Matthew Bell meets the racing driver, pilot, journalist and television presenter to learn about his cars and competition career as well as other, lower - octane interests / RĂ©tromobile 2015 — Bigger, bolder, busier and better than ever, the popular Paris show celebrated its 40th anniversary this year / Turner: Made in Wolverhampton — This long - lived Black Country firm's output included bicycles, cars and commercial and agricultural vehicles.
As the group of journalists were finishing up lunch and listening to closing statements of a presentation, the thoughts of many turned to what they would like to get their hands on next.
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.
This account of her adventures as a journalist in the Middle East provides invaluable perspectives on what it's like to be female and American in some of the world's most dangerous cities.
Re Lucian's concern i think publishing will continue to morph and new alliances of writers, journalist, curators, illustrators, translators and social & mobile geeks will collaborate on ways to create ebooks, enhanced ebooks, interactive books — and additional distribution channels along with amazon... and increasingly what we create can be agnostic of technology, available on any devise, Mathew's coverage has been in - depth, up - to - date and writing for a wide audience... as a former JSJ reporter who is interested in this area i am in awe of his writing, and thankful for it, like so many others here evidentally are... maybe you, Matthew, will author your own Amazon - supported book?
Much like the great literary journalists of our time had a signature style and a signature voice, comics create these very visually branded pieces that allow readers to immediately get a sense for what the emotional content is and what sort of factual content they can draw from it, and they engage with it on a much deeper level.
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.
This one is seemingly a bit random, but this is an article by John Stossel one what he feels like is a double - standard that journalists seem to have about bias.
Chris Burns, a freelance journalist living in Brussels, talks to Peter about what it's like to live and work in Brussels and what brought him to the European city in the first place.
I thought about what her job must be like: trying to act helpful toward journalists whom, she knew from long experience, were deeply skeptical of everything they would hear and everything they would be shown.
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