Reporters
in sentence
270 examples of Reporters in a sentence
My life was ruled by tk – which stands for “to kum,” or “to come,” in the jargon of
reporters.
We fact-checkers would joke about the lazy
reporters
who would hand us copy such as, “Juan Tigar, tk years old, grew up in tk before studying at tk.
How can we ensure that these self-nominated
reporters
respect the truth?
US Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel recently told
reporters
that the US, working with Russian security officials, will be prepared to extract Americans from Sochi in the event of an attack.
And yet journalists – not very experienced reporters, to be sure – ask me who is likely to get the “plum job” of Fed Chair next year.
In a January 14 conference call with reporters, Keiji Fukuda, the special adviser to the WHO’s director general for pandemic flu, argued that the organization did not overplay the dangers but “prepared for the worst and hoped for the best.”
In the World Press Freedom Index, compiled each year by
Reporters
Without Borders (RSF), Russia is ranked 148th out of 180 countries.
He was shot 13 times in the back of his head and dumped in a cemetery, joining a macabre roll call of Latin American
reporters
brutalized for daring to speak out during the 1970’s and 1980’s.
As Latin America became increasingly democratic in the years since then, more
reporters
chose to investigate instead of retyping government press releases.
In Honduras, direct government payments to journalists are common, as are minimal or non-existent salaries for
reporters.
All but the most courageous remain silent; with the threat of ruin for their paper or station, the risks that
reporters
run are no longer primarily their own.
More than 60 people, including two foreign
reporters
and a few soldiers, died in the Thai army’s suppression of the urban rebellion.
Meanwhile, the authorities continue their assault on independent media through capricious licensing rules, interrogations, and, on occasion, revoking the permits of
reporters
for international broadcasters like the Voice of America.
Furthermore, the government effort to portray independent journalists as vicious enemies unfairly condemns the many Ethiopian
reporters
and editors who take their responsibilities seriously.
Not only has the term become a shorthand way to malign an entire industry; autocrats are invoking it as an excuse to jail
reporters
and justify censorship, often on trumped-up charges of supporting terrorism.
The most common charge against
reporters
is belonging to, aiding, or propagandizing for an alleged terrorist organization.
For example, attempting to write about the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) in Turkey, the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt, or Uighurs in China can quickly land
reporters
in jail for harboring terrorist sympathies.
But in the absence of robust local journalism, we often don’t hear about these activities, other than from the few
reporters
and researchers who have been willing to traverse the country to document what is happening.
Next, consider a comment by the former editor of the New York Times, Max Frankel, about how the Washington ecology of media leaks is healthy, because “most
reporters
do not just lazily regurgitate...leaks.”
But what this suggests is that people may not be reliable
reporters
of what they really think; actions speak louder than words.
At last week’s White House Christmas party for the press,
reporters
speculated about whether this might be the last such party for years to come.
Xi’s RecipeWASHINGTON, DC – China’s government is cracking down hard on Western journalists, threatening not to renew visas for
reporters
from the New York Times and Bloomberg in retaliation for their reporting on the corruption of senior Chinese officials.
Reporters
are not entitled to so twist the facts as to reinvent them.
To be sure, Target Malaria has issued videos of local people who support the project and introduced
reporters
to them.
Renewing the NewsNEW YORK – Last week, rumors from the world of print media were rife: a hundred
reporters
from The New York Times news desk to be bought out – or to lose their jobs if they refuse; steep cutbacks at British newspapers; staffs slashed at Condé Nast – eight respected editors axed at Glamour magazine.
Moreover, North Korea could not deny failure this time, because the regime invited international media to attend the event – even allowing foreign
reporters
into the mission-control room – in order to legitimize it as a “satellite” launch and not a weapons test.
In January 2018,
reporters
at The Tribune newspaper in India paid 500 rupees (just under $8) to get a login and password that enabled them to access the name, address, postal code (PIN), photo, phone number, and email of every person in the system.
For just 300 rupees more, the
reporters
could print out – and start using – copies of anyone’s unique identity cards.Years of massive data breaches in the US (affecting companies such as Target, Yahoo, LinkedIn, and Intel, as well as the federal government’s Office of Personnel Management), and reports of companies such as Facebook and Google handing over personal data to developers and other third parties, have led to little concrete change.
For just 300 rupees more, the
reporters
could print out – and start using – copies of anyone’s unique identity cards.
War to the last breath was declared by Kuvaev on the media, and he was soon echoed by the feral Makashov, who suddenly found
reporters "
acting worse than the worst of the Yids."
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