Reporters
in sentence
270 examples of Reporters in a sentence
Over the next few months, my small nonprofit organization of less than 20 people was joined by more than 350 other
reporters
from 25 language groups.
Inside the virtual newsroom, the
reporters
could gather around the themes that were emerging from the documents.
When
reporters
like Johannes wanted to scream, they did so inside the virtual newsroom, and then they turned those screams into stories by going outside the documents to court records, official company registers, and by eventually putting questions to those that we intended to name.
Panama Papers actually allowed the
reporters
to look at the world through a different lens from everybody else.
As a consequence,
reporters
don't lead with them, policymakers don't think about them, and politicians aren't encouraged or demanded that they speak to them.
I helped newspapers replace their
reporters'
typewriters with computer terminals.
Our local
reporters
in Syria and across Africa and across Asia bring us stories that we certainly would not have found on our own.
Later that day, a beekeeper told
reporters
that her bee yard looked like it had been nuked.
During the hurricane season of 2017, media outlets had to actually assign
reporters
to dismiss fake information about the weather forecast.
Do not talk to reporters."
And the
reporters
came too, which lead to bloggers and which lead to a call from something called TED.
And actually it's amazing, because I got phone calls from many
reporters
asking, "Have you actually seen the planet going into a star?"
And so we started a publication with the Society for Conservation that we think presents cutting-edge science in a new, novel way, because we have
reporters
that are good writers that actually can distill the information and make it accessible to the general public.
The Daily Show started off as a news parody, by definition they poke fun at how the media plays it's own news by pretending to be inept and dumb news
reporters
and anchormen and they tackled tons of subjects from science to movies and sometimes politics, then Jon Stewart came along...and it all went to Hell.
Earlier in the film a
reporters
voice can be heard saying that nothing can stop the flow fire fighters have tried cars and CEMENT.
Uwe Boll slips back in his film-making skills once again to offer up a scifi horror tale of mercenaries and
reporters
taking on super soldiers on a remote island.
Story's simple - two reporters, one (A) is atheist, the other (B) for some sake has abandoned religion.
One particularly irritating scene has McLaren in an abandoned airplane hangar, waiting for a plane, being hounded by
reporters
and giving them their "big story".
Travolta gives one of his breeziest and most likable performances as Michael, an archangel whose quiet existence at the home of a lonely innkeeper named Pansy (Jean Stapleton) is disrupted when Pansy reports Michael's presence in her home to a "National Enquirer"-like newspaper and the editor (Bob Hoskins) sends
reporters
(William Hurt, Andie McDowell, Robert Pastorelli) to the motel to check it out.
He may be a messenger of God, but he's not the nicest guy, as
reporters
Andie MacDowell and William Hurt discover.
Because when it boils down, I really think that glam
reporters
such as Barbara Walters is the devil.
Bill Hurt and Robert Pastorelli are great as fellow reporters, each bent on proving the hoax of the angel on earth.
At times, the mainstream news media seems to be driven by a bunch of no-brain
reporters.
I don't really know when it was that TV stations began preferring to have handsome men as their
reporters
- regardless of the mens' IQs - but it was clearly a problem by the time that "Broadcast News" came out, and the movie does a really good job looking at it.
"Rival
reporters
Pat Morgan (Ginger Rogers) and Ted Rand (Lyle Talbot) are always trying to out-scoop each other on stories.
The only thing he needs is to get her on stage, surrounded by cameras and
reporters.
Two tabloid reporters, one seasoned(Miguel Ferrer)and one not so accomplished(Julie Entwisle), begin to believe that a serial killer(Michael H. Moss) may actually be a vampire.
A pair of
reporters
and their clumsy photographer set out to work the story of 'The Fiend' and find themselves targets as well.
Add in some truly awful musical moments, a whole lot of flagwaving hooey, and a boring subplot about newspaper reporters, and you've got a film that must have had Philip Wylie ready to pen Generation of Vipers 2: D.C. Boogaloo.
Some news
reporters
and their military escorts try to tell the truth about a epidemic of zombies, despite the 'government controlling the media'.
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