Quotes of All Topics . Occasions . Authors
When I was a newspaper reporter, and later a television writer, I really felt my co-workers became a second family.
I would like to see every newspaper and every magazine have a network of bureaus all over the world, gathering news.
When I was at a newspaper, I knew what an opportunity that was, and I religiously protected my time on the cop beat.
In a highly competitive newspaper market, every editor needs to appeal to female readers to boost their circulation.
Growing up, I was so sick of politics - it was in the house all the time - I was proud of not reading the newspaper.
If Moses had been paid newspaper rates for the Ten Commandments, he might have written the Two Thousand Commandments.
Given how few young people actually read the newspaper, it's a good thing they'll be reading a newspaper on a screen.
I was an English major in college, took a ton of creative writing courses, and was a newspaper reporter for 10 years.
My father used to get me to read the newspaper to him, as if I was a radio. I would stand there and read the 'Times.'
Digg is like your newspaper, but rather than a handful of editors determining what's on the front page, the masses do.
I always had to prove myself through my actions. Be a cheerleader. Be class president. Be the editor of the newspaper.
A Swedish newspaper reporter called and said, You've been awarded the Prize. I was quite sure it was a practical joke.
I had a job right out of college writing for a small newspaper called 'The Unterrified Democrat.' Ghastly, ghastly job.
Half of the American people have never read a newspaper. Half never voted for President. One hopes it is the same half.
They do awful things in the press. One newspaper in England said I was 12 years older than I am, and I was ready to sue.
The first time I showed the tattoo, it was big news in the newspaper: 'She has a tattoo with a snake.' It's not a snake.
The old attitude toward newspapers was that they were completely disposable - today's newspaper is tomorrow's fish wrap.
Do you know anything that in all its innocence is more humiliating than the funny pages of a Sunday newspaper in America?
I don't listen to the news. I don't read the newspaper unless it's eccentric information - and the obituaries, of course.
What MSNBC is, what cable news prime time has become in the shows that get the ratings, is the oped page of the newspaper.
There is no worse place for an intelligence service like CIA to be than on Page 1, above the fold in your daily newspaper.
I never get upset about what I read in the newspaper. I realize that every human being can make a difference in this world.
I have all of my firesuits and helmets, and my parents collect all the newspaper articles and pictures and stuff like that.
I ran the high school newspaper and was in student government. I played sports my whole life but was never picked as captain.
Time is short, life is short, there's a lot to know. So I skip the entertainers in the newspaper now. I just haven't got time.
Public opinion is a compound of folly, weakness, prejudice, wrong feeling, right feeling, obstinacy, and newspaper paragraphs.
I haven't read a newspaper in 20 years. I don't look at the computer or anything. You have to have a filter on what you let in.
Success is about honour, feeling morally calibrated, absence of shame, not what some newspaper defines from an external metric.
I couldn't even pick up the newspaper without saying, 'This is a fine piece of writing. I wish to hell I could write like this.'
I can't turn on the television without seeing me, or open the newspaper without seeing me and, honestly, I'm sick to death of me.
When I was a 12-year-old middle-schooler in Richmond, Virginia, my local newspaper published an op-ed that I wrote all by myself.
A harsh reality of newspaper editing is that the deadlines don't allow for the polish that you expect in books or even magazines.
I'd like 'Morning News' to become a great first edition electronic newspaper, so that the 'New York Times' will want to watch us.
I think I'm a born storyteller. Inspiration is all around me. I can read a newspaper article and come up with an idea for a book.
Newspaper people, once celebrated as founts of ribald humor and uncouth fun, have of late lost all their gaiety, and small wonder.
I wanted to be some kind of captain of industry. Then I wanted to be in advertising, and then I wanted to be a newspaper reporter.
A magazine or a newspaper is a shop. Each is an experiment and represents a new focus, a new ratio between commerce and intellect.
I think that the days when newspaper barons could basically click their fingers and governments would snap to attention have gone.
I really think me and my family live humbly. I've secured my life, and I won't have to open the newspaper and be looking for work.
As both a consumer and producer of newspaper articles, I have no beef with pay walls. But before signing up, I read the fine print.
The first writing I did was short short stories for a newspaper syndicate for which I was paid five dollars a piece on publication.
I want to be an advocate for the people who don't have time to read the newspaper... or the money to make a political contribution.
Facts are facts, and fiction is fiction, and a lie doesn't become truth just because it appears on the front page of the newspaper.
When I was a kid, I could draw, and my ambition was to be a cartoonist. I wanted to draw comics. But I also liked newspaper comics.
The first day that I get to Fort Myers, there was a newspaper down there. The newspaper said, 'Puerto Rican hot dog arrives in town.'
One of the strange things about doing publicity is that a mistake in a newspaper profile long ago is repeated and amplified over time.
There's a lot of things in my life that are more important I have to think about than what someone puts in the newspaper, or says on TV.
It is impossible not to hear some of the criticism. However, no newspaper, nor journalist, is going to tell me who I am. I know who I am.
I will tell my best friends who I'm attracted to, but I'm not going to talk about it in a newspaper... It has nothing to do with my work.
I didn't appreciate how special and sometimes strange my CIA world was - until it suddenly and spectacularly ended in a newspaper column.