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Quotes About Journalist

That was par for the course but I also found that commissions were being canceled and in fact I considered this directly libelous - I write biographies for a living as well as being a journalist - for a non fiction book to be called fiction from beginning to end.
~ Anthony Holden
According to the California Penal Code, prisoners have the legal right to marry. The prison approved Richard's marriage, and his and Doreen's names were added to the list of ten inmates marrying that day, three from death row. It was quickly pointed out to a curious journalist by San Quentin's public relations department that prisoners on death row do not have the right to conjugal visits.
~ Philip Carlo
The novelist now usurps the chair of the educator, the pulpit of the preacher, the columns of the journalist. Yet his original purpose of entertaining may have been his highest purpose. (introduction to Gladiator, Book League Monthly, 1930)
~ Philip Wylie
A sports journalist doesn't have to be sporty any more than a political journalist has to be an opportunistic liar.
~ Philippe Geluck
I had been laughed at my whole life through school, and I never really thought of it as a vocation. I mean, I started off as a soldier, and then I went into the university thinking I was going to be a journalist, but comedy kind of fell on my head and demanded I pursue it.
~ Rhys Darby
in 1890, of Jacob A. Riis's How the Other Half Lives. A pioneering urban journalist, Riis, himself an immigrant from Denmark, had taken powerful photographs of tenement life.
~ Jon Meacham
Then I get worried that if anyone is really paying attention to Happy's predilections, they might become wary of his wholesale compassion and suspect him of being an imaginary character, created by a journalist, to trick businesses into inadvertently revealing their data-trafficking practices. So I untick tigers.
~ Jon Ronson
I told a journalist that Dave seemed quite psychopathic (I didn't know a thing about psychopaths but I assumed that that was the sort of thing they might do).
~ Jon Ronson
Ah,' said the journalist, 'so the entire thing is your own invention. I thought it was true because you gave the name of the street.' I did not dare tell him that the naming of streets is not much of a feat.
~ Jorge Luís Borges
St. Bride's is the journalist's church on Fleet Street. There have been seven churches on this spot. It's named for the Irish saint Brigit of Kildare, the virginal head of the old, equal-opportunity Celtic Church. She has, over the years, become the patron of babies, blacksmiths, chickens, bastards, children of abusive fathers, and printing presses. It must have been the combination of bastards and ink that brought her to hacks.
~ A.A. Gill
proportionately, being a journalist in a war is more dangerous than being in the Special Forces, and more important.
~ A.A. Gill
What I love - and I'm a journalist - and what I love is finding hidden patterns; I love being a data detective.
~ David McCandless
Obviously, whenever the government is getting involved with speech, it gives me a lot of pause. I have a background as a journalist, so that's something that I take very seriously.
~ Brianna Wu
Sometimes, when you look at an adviser's failings or perceived failings, I think the tough question you have to ask as a journalist is, 'What does this say about the president?'
~ Jodi Kantor
In February I secured permission to enter Osama bin Laden's compound in the northern Pakistani city of Abbottabad, where he was killed and where he had lived for the last half-decade of his life; the first, and only, journalist to do so.
~ Peter Bergen
She had to admit this journalist was one of her trickier customers, and his interviews nearly always ended with the same argument, since he seemed to take such a long time to get round to asking a question and when he did, discovered that he himself had the best answer for it.
~ Rachel Cusk
I think people are sort of waking up to it now, how probably the biggest change in Internet media isn't the immediacy of it, or the low costs, but the measurability. Which is actually terrifying if you're a traditional journalist, and used to pushing what people ought to like, or what you think they ought to like.
~ Nick Denton
One of my roles, and one of the things I'm good at, is breaking news.
~ Ariel Helwani
When I was diagnosed with bipolar disorder the year I turned 50, it was certainly a shock. But as a journalist, knowing a little bit about a lot of things, I didn't suffer the misconception that depression was all in my head or a mark of poor character. I knew it was a disease, and, like all diseases, was treatable.
~ Jane Pauley
A journalist, it is said, enjoys a license to be educated in public; we are the lucky ones, allowed to spend our days in a continuing course of adult education.
~ Joseph Campbell
A moment passed in silence. Then Gabriel asked, "What are you thinking now, Eli?" "I'm wondering why a beautiful young woman like that would risk her career to give a Russian journalist confidential financial documents about an important client." "Perhaps she has a conscience." "Not possible. RhineBank doesn't hire anyone whose conscience wasn't removed at birth.
~ Daniel Silva
Before the interview, even casual observers seemed to have a cautioning word. 'You'd better take a crash helmet,' joked one mate, aware of Smith's colourful reputation – in particular, stubbing a cigarette out on a pesky journalist's forehead.
~ Dave Simpson
who knew John XXIII was so funny? Of course, not all the stories were laugh-out-loud funny. And I had already heard his famous answer to the journalist who asked innocently, "How many people work in the Vatican?" "About half of them," said His Holiness.
~ James Martin
In the 1890s the reform journalist E. L. Godkin alleged that Tammany leaders feared biography more than the penitentiary.
~ James T. Fisher