Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Walter Winchell" ¶ 13
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

readership and gradually
As she and the publishing mogul had developed an ironclad relationship, her Los Angeles Examiner column came to appear in over six hundred newspapers the world over, with a readership of more than twenty-million, and Parsons gradually became one of the most powerful voices in the movie business with her daily allotment of gossip.
Regarded by Amis's readership as possibly his strongest novel, the tone gradually shifts from high comedy, interspersed with deep personal introspections, to a dark sense of foreboding and eventually panic at the approach of the deadline, or " horrorday ", the climactic scene alluded to on the very first page.
Zep joined Glénat in 1992, and first Titeuf book Dieu, le sexe et les bretelles ( God, Sex And Suspenders ) appeared in 1993 and sold only a few thousand copies, but the following books have gradually won over a huge readership, outselling traditional French favorites such as Astérix and Lucky Luke.

readership and dropped
In the early 2000s the NME also attempted somewhat to broaden its coverage again, running cover stories on hip-hop acts such as Jay-Z and Missy Elliott, electronic music pioneer Aphex Twin, Popstars winners Hear ' say and R & B groups like Destiny's Child, but as in the 1980s these proved unpopular with much of the paper's readership, and were soon dropped.
As the title changed and the book began shipping more and more infrequently, readership dropped and sales decreased.

readership and when
The setting of the novel contributed greatly to its popularity following its early release, but the book did not receive widespread attention until after Fitzgerald's death in 1940, when republishings in 1945 and 1953 quickly found a wide readership.
Dagbladet. no claims a readership of nearly 800, 000 per day, 1, 700, 000 per week, which makes it amongst Europe's most successful web newspapers when measured against both population and readership of mother newspaper.
Some questions provided marketing data, e. g., average age of the readership ; some were used to provide competitive rankings of SPI's and other publishers ' products, charts that S & T's readers pored over when deciding what game to buy next.
Techniques used by Apple Daily to gain readership included price warring, extensive use of written Cantonese, at a time when most Hong Kong newspapers used written vernacular Chinese, and a focus on reporting crime, celebrity news, eroticism, gambling, and drug use.
Even when he had returned to Germany, his works continued to be reprinted and were translated into French, Italian and Germany, reaching a wide readership in Europe, as well as in the US after it was reprinted there.
The competition between the Chronicle and Examiner took a financial toll on both papers until the summer of 1965, when a merger of sorts created a Joint Operating Agreement under which the Chronicle became the city's sole morning daily while the Examiner changed to afternoon publication ( which ultimately led to a declining readership ).
The early World War I-based books were reprinted in the 1950s when the Biggles books had acquired a younger readership, and some bowdlerising took place to render them more suitable to young children.
Cracked also appeared monthly during the period when Mad was being published just 8 times a year, thus picking up readership from Mad fans that couldn't wait out the six weeks for their next " comedy fix.
In the 1950s, when the newspaper was confined largely to Scotland, sales of the Sunday Post were so high that it was recorded in the Guinness Book of Records as the newspaper with the highest per capita readership penetration of anywhere in the world.
Newspapers as their primary means of income rely on advertisements, which rely on readers seeing them, but historically newspaper readership drops off during this time when, for instance, in the United Kingdom, Parliament takes its summer recess, so that parliamentary debates and Prime Minister's Questions, which generate much news coverage, do not happen.
Her father regularly consulted her when he was considering ideas for increasing readership in the youth market.
It is aimed at a general readership and authors are asked to take this into account when preparing papers.
The Heralds sales declined as a result, yet even when it was forced to close, it was probably among the 20 largest circulation dailies in the world ; nevertheless its largely working class readership was not considered a valuable advertising market.
City Pages competed for readership with The Twin Cities Reader until 1997, when Stern Publishing purchased City Pages in March and The Twin Cities Reader the following day, shuttering it immediately.
She has said that when she first arrived, it was being produced by a staff of solely gay men, who would choose to display photos of the ugliest possible women, to mock their heterosexual readership.
The newspaper, published on pink paper, sells over 400, 000 copies daily ( more on Mondays when readers want to catch up on the weekend's events ), and can claim a readership in excess of three million.
" It is perhaps interesting to note that when asked what the consequences of the discovery of superior life would be, an audience of Saturday Review readership chose, for the most part, not to answer the question at all, in spite of their detailed answers to many other speculative questions.
Under new management, the newspaper began to win back its readership, especially when it took a more critical approach towards the government.
It is a cautionary tale set in the year 2047, when DRM-like technologies are employed to restrict the readership of books: when the sharing of books and written material is a crime punishable by imprisonment.

readership and home
On the other hand, English crime writer Edgar Wallace, who was immensely popular with the English readership during the early decades of the 20th century ( and who achieved fame in German-speaking countries due to the many B movies made in the 1950s, 60s, and 70s that were based on his novels ), had almost been forgotten in his home country until House of Stratus eventually started republishing many of his 170 books around the turn of the millennium.
Black Press produces twice-weekly community papers that compete with the Times Colonist for readership and are distributed for free, through home delivery and in boxes in high-traffic public areas.
The intensity of the prose and the emotional tension under the colder eye with which the events are seen, provided him with a faithful readership both at home and abroad.
It reaches out to a targeted readership both at home and abroad, who are interested in news and information both about the UAE as well as the Middle East at large.

readership and paper
The Herald American was printed in broadsheet format, and failed to target a particular readership ; where the Record American had been a typical city tabloid, the Herald Traveler was a Republican paper.
The competence between papers for having more cartoons than the rest from the mid-1920s, the growth of large-scale newspaper advertising during most of the thirties, paper rationing during World War II, the decline on news readership ( as television newscasts began to be more common ) and inflation ( which has caused higher printing costs ) beginning during the fifties and sixties made Sunday strips being published on smaller and more diverse formats.
Increasing in readership and popularity throughout the remainder of the 1840s and 1850s, Punch was the success story of a threepenny weekly paper that had become one of the most talked-about and enjoyed periodicals.
With the support of its new proprietor, the paper was able to widen its readership through subscription drives and advertising, reaching a circulation of 30, 000 in 1986, exceeding the circulation of the New Statesman for the first time.
The paper advertised that its Monday-to-Friday readership averaged 668, 000, increasing to 857, 000 on Saturdays and 695, 000 for the The Sunday Age.
In 2002 PCM announced termination of the paper, citing substantial losses and declining readership PCM.
The paper has been number one in circulation since 1976, with a record readership of over 3, 100, 000.
The Gazette, nicknamed the " Old Lady ", became flashier but critics complained that the paper had lost the respect of the readership.
In October 2010, the paper ended its long-term policy of not directly competing for Sunday readership and advertising by re-branding its former Saturday editions as " a weekend read " under the masthead The Weekend West.
It also has ' Fighting Fund ' section where ' Robbie Rix ' attempts to cajole readers into donating to the paper whilst providing an update on readership levels.
The paper vigorously denies other sources of funding, priding itself on being solely funded by the membership of the party and readership.
And to maintain such readership, the paper has established an online version of the paper in 2000, the China Youth Online ( CYOL ).
News content is primarily local, political and social news but the paper also features international business and social news deemed to be of interest to its readership.
The paper currently has a Monday to Friday readership average of 47, 000, reaching an average of 55, 000 on Saturdays.
The paper came to an end due to a number of factors, including: the end of the joint operating agreement, a 75 percent decrease in readership, and decreasing advertising revenues.
( Such results must now be published in Pubmed Central ( PMC ) after an embargo period of up to 12 months: this embargo period was imposed to minimize financial harm to publishers who were concerned that their readership would diminish if the results appeared concurrently in PMC, though authors of the paper are required to submit their papers to PMC as soon as their paper gets accepted for publication by a peer-review journal.
The paper also has substantial readership in most of the state east of Winston-Salem.
readership referred to the paper as The Over Sexed Weekly.
The paper is published in Jacksonville, Florida, with a circulation of 44, 200 and an audited weekly readership of more than 127, 000.
After a financial collapse, the paper was revived in 1999 by Michael Karash and an effort was made to obtain financial stability and an increase in readership.
The paper claims a readership of 61, 263.
Letters to the editor are also published, and the extensive range of articles and letters featured reflects the broad readership of the paper.

0.330 seconds.