Journalists
in sentence
1139 examples of Journalists in a sentence
After the September 11 attack on the Twin Towers, I got a chance to go to Afghanistan for the first time, with foreign
journalists.
So a place like The Intercept was set up to protect
journalists
and publish their work when they're dealing with very sensitive matters like this.
And the anchor said to me, "But don't you think it's our job as
journalists
to sensationalize a story?"
And when I had the minute of anger and hatred towards those press and journalists, I had to identify my inner bigotry towards them.
And at the same time, I thought about this massive group of people I knew: writers, editors, journalists, graduate students, assistant professors, you name it.
They were from students and
journalists
and friendly strangers like this one.
Journalists
are not allowed here.
We were just a few
journalists
in the Palestine Hotel, and, as happens in war, the fighting began to approach outside our windows.
And I saw people, journalists, screaming in the hallways.
In this case, take a cue from
journalists.
We support Angolan
journalists
who are being illegally detained.
It can be very difficult for law enforcement or tax authorities, journalists, civil society to really understand what's going on.
My job in Gaza is to arrange everything for
journalists
who come to my homeland to tell the stories about what's going on in Gaza.
Navigating through my country helping journalists, filmmakers, news crews, is my working life.
I believe my success comes from building a relationship not only with
journalists
and the news crews, but also with the communities in the Gaza Strip.
Many male
journalists
in my society, they want to cover a story about drug addiction in my country.
So, no male
journalists
get the story.
And along the way, he became the face for the US government's recent pattern of prosecuting whistleblowers and spying on
journalists.
They told
journalists
they would rather homeschool their children than to have them brainwashed.
That was a challenge that a group of
journalists
had to face late last year.
We decided to do something that was the very opposite of everything we'd been taught to do as journalists: share.
The reason
journalists
are scared of technology is this: the profession's largest institutions are going through tough times because of the changing way that people are consuming news.
The biggest information leak in history had now spawned the biggest journalism collaboration in history: 376 sets of native eyes doing what
journalists
normally never do, working shoulder to shoulder, sharing information, but telling no one.
Any of one of these journalists, they could have broken the pact.
We showed how a group of
journalists
can effect change across the world by applying new methods and old-fashioned journalism techniques to vast amounts of leaked information.
I guess you're going to send that applause to the 350
journalists
who worked with you, right?
Gerard Ryle: We had a series of crises along the way, including when something major was happening in the world, the
journalists
from that country wanted to publish right away.
Now, we didn't publish the underlying documents of the
journalists
we're working with.
I've spent much of my career working with journalists, with bloggers, with activists, with human rights researchers all around the world, and I've come to the conclusion that if our democratic societies do not double down on protecting and defending human rights, freedom of the press and a free and open internet, radical extremist ideologies are much more likely to persist.
The reality is that civil society,
journalists
and activists are coming under attack from extremist groups on the one hand, and, in many countries, also from their own governments.
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