Magazine
in sentence
536 examples of Magazine in a sentence
Then one day, Forbes
magazine
contacted me when I was 10 years old.
For example, supposing I was a writer, say, for a newspaper or for a
magazine.
As you would read a car
magazine
before purchasing a new car or taking a look at a product review before deciding which kind of tablet or phone to get, investors are reading ratings before they decide in which kind of product they are investing their money.
You may have seen this anecdote that was printed in Forbes
magazine
where Target sent a flyer to this 15-year-old girl with advertisements and coupons for baby bottles and diapers and cribs two weeks before she told her parents that she was pregnant.
I was not surprised at the TEDster and New Yorker
magazine
overlap.
I do not subscribe to Crochet Today! magazine, although it looks delightful.
People sent me
magazine
ads.
A recurring discussion I have with
magazine
editors, who are usually word people, is that their audience, you, are much better at making radical leaps with images than they're being given credit for.
The late, great Christopher Hitchens wrote a book called "God Is Not Great" whose subtitle was, "Religion Poisons Everything." (Laughter) But last month, in Time magazine, Rabbi David Wolpe, who I gather is referred to as America's rabbi, said, to balance that against that negative characterization, that no important form of social change can be brought about except through organized religion.
I have another friend in Silicon Valley who is really one of the most eloquent spokesmen for the latest technologies, and in fact was one of the founders of Wired magazine, Kevin Kelly.
We started Wired
magazine.
Some people, I remember we shared the reception desk periodically, and some parent called up irate that his son had given up Sports Illustrated to subscribe for Wired, and he said, "Are you some porno
magazine
or something?" and couldn't understand why his son would be interested in Wired, at any rate.
This is my favorite, 1995, back page of Newsweek
magazine.
The good people at Forbes magazine, among my biggest admirers, called it "Nick Hanauer's near-insane proposal."
Virally, in the way that the Tea Party, for instance, was able to take the "Don't Tread on Me" flag from the American Revolution, or how, on the other side, a band of activists could take a
magazine
headline, "Occupy Wall Street," and turn that into a global meme and movement.
The very same Eric Schmidt, the CEO of Google, ordered his employees at Google to cease speaking with the online Internet
magazine
CNET after CNET published an article full of personal, private information about Eric Schmidt, which it obtained exclusively through Google searches and using other Google products.
It's called Future; it was a
magazine
publishing company.
A
magazine
I'd recently launched called Business 2.0 was fatter than a telephone directory, busy pumping hot air into the bubble.
Fifteen years earlier, I was a science journalist who people just laughed at when I said, "I really would like to start my own computer magazine."
The time scale on which TED operates is just fantastic after coming out of a
magazine
business with monthly deadlines.
And I'm sure you've all read about this in the newspapers, you've seen this in every
magazine
that you come across, but I really want you to appreciate the significance of this problem.
McIntyre wrote about this and it was read by the editor of High Times
magazine.
With this realization, I was free from the photojournalistic conventions of the newspaper and the
magazine.
But to make a long story short, I had entered that protest as the editor-in-chief of a well-established printed
magazine
where I'd worked for 11 years, and thanks to this unsolicited effects of tear gas, I left it as a journalist that was now committed to new ways of sharing the raw experience of what it's like to be there, actually.
It was way more than any newspaper or any
magazine
could ever do.
When I read that in The Advocate
magazine
this year, I realized I could no longer afford to keep silent.
That's a magazine, mom, a magazine."
It started with a single email from a magazine, Adbusters, to 90,000 subscribers in its list.
I'm Michael Shermer, director of the Skeptics Society, publisher of "Skeptic
" magazine.
If you examine newspaper or
magazine
articles, you'll see how widely assumed it is that everyone gets PMS.
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