The only winners are the non-doms, red-top owners, hedgefund operators and wealthy pensioners. |
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Much fuss has been aired in the red-top papers about these two studies, but with few quotes from the researchers. |
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He still edits Scotland's biggest-selling daily red-top with an enduring political clout in Labour's west coast and central belt heartlands. |
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The original cash cow of the Murdoch newspapers was his red-top daily, The Sun. |
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A graphic art whizz had done it for him, but he had made the mistake of giving the red-top a blokey, jokey quote to accompany it. |
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She is also keen to deny red-top rumours of a gastric band. |
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We can only hope his dimmer petrol-head and red-top fans realise his sophisticated wit is tongue in cheek. |
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That is justice as dispensed by the red-top press. |
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But after photos of Mark and a lap dancer appeared in a red-top at the weekend, his attendance won't go unnoticed. |
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Please stick to reporting the facts and leave the name-calling to the red-top newspapers. |
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Because during the summer, John Carew, right, had turned to hair dye to become a hot-shot with a red-top. |
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The red-top papers gorged on not just one small picture of the Captain wretching but several. |
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Eriksson would not have been fuming or raging or seething or any of the other words a red-top newspaper might have used. |
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Nor is it something exclusive to red-top newspapers. |
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In the red-top market, the story is more complex. |
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However, its major red-top rivals have nothing to celebrate. |
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I used to go in for romaine, but now I like better the red-top lettuce. |
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The first ABC figures since the cover price war began between the Sun and the Daily Mirror show that the Sun is ahead of its former red-top rival. |
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And if silver van man stops for a break he is more likely than five years ago to be reading The Times while he enjoys a glass of wine rather than a red-top tabloid and a pint. |
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