Newspapers
in sentence
499 examples of Newspapers in a sentence
Equally important, no
newspapers
were closed, stories suppressed, or journalists harassed, as occurred in earlier Kazakh elections.
Although the schedule for my most recent trip was overwhelming, and offered little real contact with ordinary people, I could still grasp – from daily newspapers, TV programs, and conversations with friends – the profound economic, political, and moral crisis engulfing the country.
This thesis is now gaining much broader traction – major
newspapers
now report a broadening criminal probe by the federal government – and by New York’s state attorney general – into the US financial sector’s residential lending and related securities practices.
People expressed their opinion freely--in newspapers, on television, in Internet chat rooms--concerning George Bush's planned war on Iraq.
Analogies with pigs, snouts, and troughs fill the pages of British
newspapers.
Where Did Market Volatility Go?Television and
newspapers
continue to trumpet every twist and turn of global financial markets.
Newspapers
are now competing in a fast-changing and overcrowded media landscape where it is not they, but TV, that sets the pace: every morning, they must reach readers who have watched TV the previous day.
So, instead of providing context, depth, and analysis,
newspapers
are blasting out headlines that stimulate prurience or outrage.
This erosion of professional standards has too often made
newspapers
willing accomplices of purveyors of manipulated “leaks” and malicious allegations.
For example, Correa brought an $80 million lawsuit against El Universo, one of the country’s major
newspapers.
In trying to account for the way British
newspapers
sneered at her good intentions, he said: “My own and only explanation is that genuine goodness is threatening to those at the opposite end of the moral spectrum.”
For example, the number of governance-related articles in US
newspapers
tripled from 2000 to 2002, and the number of governance-related resolutions brought to a vote by institutional investors (many focusing on anti-takeover provisions) more than doubled, with both figures remaining at elevated levels ever since.
Social media also make it possible to bypass the traditional filters of authority, such as serious
newspapers
or broadcasters, and publish any point of view directly.
India’s LBWNEW DELHI – A casual reader of India’s
newspapers
for the last several weeks would be forgiven for wondering whether the country was suddenly bereft of political controversy, sex scandals, or official corruption – normally the standard headline fare here.
The newspapers’ front pages have had space – under massive banner headlines – only for a topic normally reserved for the sports pages: cricket.
The Return of the NewspaperBANGKOK – Social media are no longer the new kid on the block, but in 2016, platforms like Twitter and Facebook looked poised to nudge traditional
newspapers
into obsolescence.
Trump led the multi-pronged attack on traditional news media, and
newspapers
in particular.
Accused of being elitist and out of sync with readers, newspapers’ reactions ranged from self-flagellation to repentance for the election result.
The most remarkable media story of 2017 may have been how Trump inadvertently made
newspapers
great again.
Newspapers
achieved this remarkable turnaround by doing what they do best: investigative journalism and breaking stories.
Since November 2016, and particularly since Trump’s inauguration in January last year,
newspapers
have led with stories ranging from conflicts of interest involving Trump’s son-in-law, Jared Kushner, to evidence that the president’s former national security adviser, Michael Flynn, met with former Russian Ambassador Sergey Kislyak.
It is important to remember that newspapers’ investments in rapid-response investigative teams, long-form stories, and data-driven journalism are possible only because more people are paying for their news, especially through digital subscriptions.
Growth trends are even more pronounced in the Asia Pacific region, where readers in China and India are leading a return to traditional
newspapers.
Of course, newspapers’ post-election rebound was not entirely their own doing; it was also facilitated by social media’s failure to consolidate its gains.
Blinkered by the illusion of having snatched whatever influence
newspapers
commanded, social media’s mavens bungled their attempts to dethrone the older medium.
But Trump’s ad nauseam tweets about failing
newspapers
and fake news have also spurred more reasonable consumers to embrace
newspapers
as a bastion of anti-Trumpism.
In other words, newspapers’ revival is a visceral, if partisan, response to social media in the Trump era.
Newspapers
have gained allies even on Capitol Hill.
As calls to rein in social media grow, it is the world’s
newspapers
– until very recently thought to be on the ropes – that have provided the reporting needed to convince policymakers to act.
These individuals read
newspapers
fabricated in the offices of the Communist Party; view only two television channels, both cut from the same cloth; and listen to radios that play the same worn-out speeches.
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