Journalists
in sentence
1139 examples of Journalists in a sentence
This German movie got the award of the Torino gay film festival: Italian
journalists
still don't understand why the jury took such a bad decision, as the festival presented lot of talented movies.
Once again, police officials and fellow
journalists
either disbelieve, or want to cover-up, the supernatural angle.
They're not jawing
journalists
Cary Grant and Rosalind Russell from "His Girl Friday" or witty detective William Powell and sassy lady Myrna Loy from Thin Man, but Woody Allen and Scarlett Johansson are surprisingly charming as amateur sleuths in Scoop.
Meanwhile, I enter the vision of boredom as Jesse stuck talking to the
journalists
in Before Sunset, and Celine's first smile from behind the shelves are the most heartbreaking smile I've seen in a beginning of a film, and the many moving shots after that takes me to a place I don't know with a sadness in me, no matter how beautiful Paris is, and no matter how happy I am that they meet again.
Based on the classic play "The Front Page", Hawks gives it a delightful twist by presenting Rosalind Russell and Cary Grant as an estranged couple of newspaper
journalists
who haven't quite written the final line of their love story.
If people only knew how cynical
journalists
really are, they'd be chocked.
In the meantime, Diana's dreams cause the violent deaths of some persistent
journalists
that are interested in her upcoming marriage with a local army-hero.
Kurt Russell's Malcolm Anderson reminds me a lot of Darrin McGavin's Kolchak, the skeptical paranormal investigator from TV's "The Night Stalker", from their lousy taste in clothes to their hardheaded devotion to the truth as
journalists.
Meanwhile back in Manhattan Lou (Jason Evers), the editor of a newspaper called the 'Judge and Jury' is putting pressure on one of his
journalists
named Marcie Elliott (Kathryn Meisle) to keep the Bradley twins story going as it sells newspapers and suggests she visits an old lady they used to write loads of story's about and who they nicknamed Dr. Freak, real name Ruth Smoeller.
After having seen it a number of times-- first in the mid 1980's after if was released to negative reviews and poor box office receipts--most recently last week-- I think that THE MEAN SEASON is an under-appreciated, tightly crafted suspense thriller that, in spite of what other reviews have stated, does NOT pander to cliché's--this film is old enough to have helped establish those very same tropes that have since become clichés; remember, this was made before Manhunter, Silence of the Lambs, 15 Minutes, etc etc...and was one of the first films to deal with the whole notion of fame/celebrity/serial killers and the lack of ethics displayed by journalists, who must rank somewhere below pimps and pickpockets in terms of moral turpitude.
All of the news people look and sound like bad actors, not
journalists.
The small, silly, anti-capitalistic
journalists
of that day jumped on the chance to rewrite that testimony and slander one of America's best.
Guerin may not have been a very likable person,
journalists
seldom are, and it could be said that her reckless style of reporting didn't just put her own life at risk but that of her family as well, (she never courted anonymity).
This occurs not only in the main characters, but in virtually every minor act too, from
journalists
over fellow inmates to high priests and nuns.
The protected right of
journalists
is always under fire by the government and has been exploited in other movies as well.
Charles McGraw and Ben Hecht, two of the best writers of the era, paid tribute to the
journalists
that wrote for the American newspapers of the thirties.
In the long run, the US and EU should support civil society organizations in pressing Moldova’s government to guarantee more equitable distribution of television time, to stop police harassment of opposition political leaders and workers as well as journalists, to reform the police and end the ruling party’s abuse of state institutions, and to allow all political parties more opportunity to inspect election rolls and monitor polling stations.
In the United States, by one count, two-thirds of professional
journalists
are men, and men account for almost 90% of bylines in economics and business reporting in traditional media.
I cannot fathom why serious
journalists
commit such egregious breaches of basic professional norms of fairness and impartiality.
This is difficult to reconcile with lending to a country like Iran, which publicly executes individuals for sexual “deviance,” imprisons women who protest peacefully, and silences
journalists
who are critical of the regime.
Journalists
are killed, scientists are accused of espionage, and Mikhail Khodorkovsky remains unjustly imprisoned.
Betraying his yearning for approval, Singh told the assembled
journalists
that he hoped that history would judge his tenure more kindly than his political adversaries do.
That is why it is so disappointing that, despite heightened awareness of inequality, the IMF/World Bank meetings – a gathering of thousands of policymakers, private-sector participants, and journalists, which included seminars on inequality in advanced countries and developing regions alike – failed to make a consequential impact on the policy agenda.
Even reputable fact-checkers disagree on the origin of the famous admonition to journalists: “Comfort the afflicted, and afflict the comfortable!”
Yam remains a hero to many in Hong Kong, including
journalists
unschooled in international finance.
True, Egypt's military regime – whose foreign minister, Sameh Shoukry, raised eyebrows when he appeared near the head of the march in Paris – released the Al Jazeera journalist Peter Greste from prison, and has since freed two other journalists, Mohamed Fahmy and Baher Mohamed, on bail.
As the chief executive of the Estonian International Center for Defense and Security, Dmitri Teperik, recently argued, information wars are most dangerous for “civil activists” – like journalists, writers, and authors – because we are the ones on the front lines.
His trial could even mark a definitive moment in the history of efforts to counter Russian propaganda, giving beleaguered writers and
journalists
the courage they need to stand up to Russia in ways that governments rarely have.
As the journalistic priesthood erodes and everyone can become a citizen reporter or commentator, regulating or training all would-be
journalists
is not the answer.
This is not to say that
journalists
should not check their own facts (or that priests should not observe the tenets of their own religion).
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