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journalistic and nickname
Bus plunge stories are a nickname for a journalistic practice of reporting bus mishaps in short articles that describe the vehicle as " plunging " from a bridge or hillside road.
The choice of a nickname for M. Royer-Collard does credit to the journalistic insight of the contributors to the Nain jaune réfugié, for he was emphatically a man who made it his business to preach a doctrine and an orthodoxy.

journalistic and was
Besides fulfilling other journalistic engagements, Beckett was on the staff of Punch from 1874 to 1902, edited the Sunday Times 1891-1895, and the Naval and Military Magazine in 1896.
For the next four years Orwell mixed journalistic work – mainly for Tribune, The Observer and the Manchester Evening News, though he also contributed to many small-circulation political and literary magazines – with writing his best-known work, Nineteen Eighty-Four, which was published in 1949.
In his 2004 book The Republican Noise Machine, Brock wrote " the Washington Times was governed by a calculatedly unfair political bias " and that its journalistic ethics were " close to nil.
The extraordinary potential of radio news showed itself in 1930, when CBS suddenly found itself with a live telephone connection to a prisoner called " The Deacon " who described, from the inside and in real time, a riot and conflagration at the Ohio State Penitentiary ; for CBS, it was " a shocking journalistic coup.
John Maddox, editor of Nature from 1966 to 1973 as well as from 1980 to 1995, suggested at a celebratory dinner for the journal ’ s centennial edition that perhaps it was the journalistic qualities of Nature that drew readers in ; “ journalism ” Maddox states, “ is a way of creating a sense of community among people who would otherwise be isolated from each other.
The climax of Weir's early career was the $ 6 million multi-national production The Year of Living Dangerously ( 1983 ), again starring Mel Gibson, playing opposite top Hollywood female lead Sigourney Weaver in a story about journalistic loyalty, idealism, love and ambition in the turmoil of Sukarno's Indonesia of 1965.
The term Tiananmen Square Massacre was also commonly used by the media, but journalistic use has waned in recent years.
Martin had been interested in political journalism for some years, although she was not a member of any party, believing that party affiliation compromises journalistic integrity.
The bulk of Gautier's criticism, however, was journalistic.
Privatisation during the 1990s in both Slovakia and the Czech Republic was harmed by widespread unlawful asset stripping ( also described by the journalistic term of tunnelling ).
ABC and ITT agreed to a merger in late 1965, but this deal was derailed by FCC and Department of Justice questions about ITT's foreign ownership influencing ABC's autonomy and journalistic integrity.
It was decided then, nearly three weeks before the Revolution, that in the event of < span lang =" fr "> Charles </ span >' expected proclamations, the journalistic establishment of Paris would publish vitriolic criticisms of the king's policies in an attempt to mobilize the masses.
Chicago American, an afternoon newspaper in Chicago, Illinois, was the last flowering of the aggressive journalistic tradition depicted in the play and movie The Front Page.
The traditionally strong journalistic bench of CBS News was changed in 1984, when new owner Lawrence Tisch oversaw layoffs of thousands of CBS News employees, including correspondents David Andelman, Fred Graham, Morton Dean and Ike Pappas.
The beginning of Tucholsky's journalistic career was interrupted by the outbreak of World War I – for over two years, no articles by Tucholsky were published.
Rivera publicly criticized Arledge's journalistic integrity, claiming that Arledge's friendship with the Kennedy family ( for example, Pierre Salinger, a former Kennedy aide, worked for ABC News at the time ) had caused him to spike the story ; as a result, Rivera was fired.
When the decision to expel him was overturned by the courts, because of the journalistic reporting of LyonMag was deemed biaised, Villepin pushed a change of the law through Parliament, and Bouziane was sent home.
But instead of hard-hitting investigative journalism, what he discovered was the phenomenon that he termed Junk Food News — journalistic trivia served up to the public in a number of predictable categories:
Outside his journalistic output, which included Letter from America and Alistair Cooke's America, he was well known in the United States as the host of PBS Masterpiece Theater from 1971 to 1992.
In August 2007, he was appointed to a five-member special committee with the objective of assuring the continued journalistic and editorial integrity and independence of the Wall Street Journal and other Dow Jones & Company publications and services.
According to the Irish Times, on 24th July 2010 Seierstad was found guilty of defamation and “ negligent journalistic practices and ordered to pay damages to Suraia Rais, wife of Shah Muhammad Rais ".
WWN was a journalistic leader in following the progress of Bat Boy, the half-bat, half-boy superhero ; and P ' lod, an extraterrestrial who became involved in Earth politics and had an affair with Hillary Clinton.

journalistic and inspired
Poe may have been inspired, at least in part, by a prior journalistic hoax known as the " Great Moon Hoax ", published in the same newspaper in 1835.
Among other controversies inspired by the show, LaPierre was once shown wiping away tears on the air after a filmed interview pertaining to the Steven Truscott case, a report on the Miss Canada pageant was criticized as journalistic " poaching " because the rival CTV Television Network had exclusive coverage rights to the event, and an interview with members of the Ku Klux Klan was deliberately engineered to provoke an on-air reaction when a black civil rights activist was brought in, unannounced, to join the interview partway through.

journalistic and by
The situation is complex, however, because the relatively free Russian media is allowed to transmit television programming, sell newspapers and conduct journalistic activities in Belarus ( though some Russian journalists have been expelled by the Belarusian government ) thus giving some members of the public, typically those in large cities with many Russian residents, access to an alternative point of view in the Russian language ( nearly all Belarusians understand and most of them speak Russian ).
The channel's journalistic output has been overseen by Controller of the channel, Kevin Bakhurst, since 16 December 2005.
" News " today is virtually always dramatized, at least by pitting " one side " against another in the fictional journalistic concept that all stories must contain " both sides " ( as though reality could be reduced to two sides ) or by using more intensive dramatic developments similar to feature movies.
Many gags centre around how easily he is manipulated by his executive producer, the most typical case being when Mike refuses to present a story and then is convinced to run it by an appeal to his supposed fearlessness or journalistic integrity.
Noteworthy examples of the journalistic style and successful integration of fictional characters with historical events were the politico – military novels The Day of the Jackal ( 1971 ) by Frederick Forsyth and Eye of the Needle ( 1978 ) by Ken Follett.
Psychiatrist, Peter Breggin has published books and journalistic reviews of the literature purporting to show that ECT routinely causes brain damage as evidenced by a considerable list of studies in humans and animals.
In the end, TV news brought an end to most afternoon papers, but up until the 1970s, Chicago had a competitive journalistic scene unmatched by most other American cities, five daily newspapers and four wire services in competition, and none more competitive than Chicago's American.
The trainings in Chinese and English as well as knowledge of Chinese and Western literature provided by the fifteen years ' education Mao Dun received had prepared him to show up in the limelight of the Chinese journalistic and literary arena.
In order not to make the left-democratic weekly paper seem too " Tucholsky-heavy ", he had already created three pseudonyms by 1913 which he retained until the end of his journalistic work: Ignaz Wrobel ( perhaps from the Polish word for " sparrow ", " wróbel "), Theobald Tiger and Peter Panter ( Panter means " Panther " in German ).
" A number of jurisdictions have made such suits illegal, provided that the appropriate standards of journalistic responsibility have been met by the critic.
* Success Stories ( 1988 ) by Harry Ritchie, a well-documented history of the AYM as a journalistic phenomenon
* The New York Press Club confers an annual " Nellie Bly Cub Reporter " journalism award to acknowledge the best journalistic effort by an individual with three years or less professional experience.

journalistic and on
Nevertheless, his journalistic skills are useful as he pursues stories on the crime boss known as the Spider Lady, and the criminal scientist Luthor ( who had yet to receive his first name, Lex ).
Much of the real life journalistic misconduct reported on Media Watch later appeared on Frontline in fictionalised form.
Neyer has authored or co-authored several books about baseball, and his journalistic writing focuses on sabermetric methods for looking at baseball players ' and teams ' performance.
" The head of the Institute for Press and Society in Venezuela said that " here you had the convergence in the media of two things: grave journalistic errors-to the extreme of silencing information on the most important news events-and taking political positions to the extreme of advocating a nondemocratic, insurrectional path.
Organizations such as the Committee to Protect Journalists and Reporters Without Borders publish reports on press freedom and advocate for journalistic freedom.
Another noteworthy indicator of the importance Berlioz placed on journalistic integrity and even-handedness were the journals which he both did and did not write for.
" Additionally, the school and journalists often categorized sporting competitions as conflicts of Indians against whites ; newspaper headings such as " Indians Scalp Army 27 – 6 " or " Jim Thorpe on Rampage " made stereotypical journalistic play of the Indian background of Carlisle's football team.
The increased use of sound bites in news media has been criticized, and has led to discussions on journalistic and media ethics.
Rusia en 1931, reflexiones al pie del Kremlin ( Russia in 1931, reflections on foot of the Kremlin ), first published in 1931, is a journalistic work describing Vallejo's impressions of the new socialist society that he saw being built in Soviet Russia.
" This account has been questioned in a book on journalistic accuracy.
These provided for controversy and journalistic focus due to Kember's candid openness about his drug taking habits and his forthright views on recreational drug use.
While he went on to make a splash with his series of West Coast Computer Faires, subsequent DDJ editors like Marlin Ouverson, Hank Harrison, Michael Swaine and Jonathan Erickson appear to have focused on the journalistic and social aspects of the young but growing microcomputer industry.
Throughout the war, he made regular journalistic reports on the airwaves and in print.
In 1989, Saralegui transferred her journalistic success to television, by launching the Miami-based Spanish-language talk show, El Show de Cristina ( The Cristina Show ) on Univisión.
* Koppel makes occasional guest appearances on The Daily Show appearing in extreme close-up as a disembodied head, acting as Jon Stewart's journalistic conscience, sometimes as the replacement for the so-called " Giant Head of Brian Williams " projected on the screen behind Stewart.
From 1854 onwards, he combined these duties with journalistic work on the Morning Herald, Morning Post and Standard.
Danton fled Paris, and Desmoulins, though he remained in the city, and spoke on several occasions at the Jacobin Club, decreased his journalistic activities for a time.
The publication scored its first great journalistic coup on February 4, 1994, when editor and publisher Shanken met Fidel Castro in Havana for a two hour interview.
Attacks on the 1930s master's thesis, and the journalistic labeling as a " monster study ," contributed to controversy.

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