Do you have a tabloid sized newspaper, some Scotch tape, string, scissors and an appreciation of simple joys? |
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From kidnapped heiress to accomplice in a bank robbery, her story was perfect grist for the tabloid mill. |
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According to an excitable tabloid, he viewed the murder as good material for a future book. |
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Keen observers of British justice have this week been treated to a category-A barney between two of tabloid society's leading lights. |
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All of these photographs are presented not in frames on the wall, but printed on newsprint in cheap tabloid form. |
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The contents were so harrowing that even tabloid newspapers declined to print the full details. |
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I only mention this now because the tabloid battle lines have already been redrawn. |
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These are rich, seductive, deeply sympathetic images aimed to counter tabloid stereotypes. |
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The other issues were dredged up later, presumably to incite a better flow of signatories and to bring the tabloid press into the fray. |
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We are fed endless information about them in the tabloid press, how drunk they were last night, what they were wearing, and what they think. |
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Unfortunately, the occasional glimpses of that free spirit which leaked out into the tabloid press over the years did her no favours. |
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There were rumours of a new girlfriend, and the tabloid was interested in any picture, however badly exposed or out of focus. |
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We should have more proper news in newspapers, or am I asking too much from the daily tabloid press? |
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Irvine has made a tidy living as a controversial tabloid editor, columnist and now owner of his Glasgow-based PR company Media House. |
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For example, my Grandmother loved to read a certain sensationalized tabloid. |
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Typical of a tabloid, they took a sex-tinged story, layered it with outrage, but ultimately used it to titillate their audience. |
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During my playing career, what passed as scandals were more along the lines of tabloid tittle-tattle than criminal investigations. |
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Print and broadcasting, broadsheet and tabloid newspapers, photojournalism, TV, and radio are all different. |
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The guy in question works for a New York tabloid, making a comfortable living and aspiring to little else. |
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In the 1980s the relationship between soap operas and tabloid newspapers reached hitherto unprecedented heights of incestuousness. |
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The real tragedy of all this is that the real problem behind these events gets lost in the tabloid headlines. |
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This is the sound of a band more interested in increasing their tabloid column inch count with their various late night shenanigans. |
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But Richard Wallace, editor of the Mirror, says he has seen no evidence of tabloid journalists fabricating stories. |
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True to its tabloid format, it has always been strong on exposure of their sexual peccadilloes, of which there are many. |
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But the Congressman's lawyer says this whole thing has become a media circus and a tabloid frenzy. |
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I don't subscribe to the view that readers in this market equate broadsheet with quality and tabloid with trash. |
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I know that many in the tabloid media can be downright nasty and unpleasant, but I didn't think this would happen! |
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The Independent newspaper said yesterday the tabloid was exploiting the case to boost its circulation. |
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There's the tabloid variety trash filled with the juicy details of the latest break-ups and make-ups. |
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Relaxed, she settles into the chintzy sofa and declares herself unconcerned about tabloid fury. |
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Among the highlights were crowd trouble, arrests and the inevitable tabloid furore that accompanies such incidents. |
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Last Saturday, a tabloid published a mock-up picture of him wearing a dunce's cap. |
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He was in the depths of despair following allegations of rape and sexual assault and tabloid tales of cocaine abuse. |
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He has left his wife and family after allegedly asking an underage girl to pose naked in a tabloid newspaper honeytrap. |
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Finally he did achieve a cheap tabloid immortality, but this CD won't raise his status. |
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An earlier hearing attracted unwelcome attention from both broadsheet and tabloid media. |
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These tabloid turncoats wonder why the players don't like talking to the press. |
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We go back to when he was subsidised by the greatest afternoon tabloid ever, before he became a silvertail. |
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However since the tapes have now been declared unauthentic and fabricated, she has filed a defamation case against the tabloid. |
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Many broadsheet readers are snobby about the tabloid format, simply because it's associated with more downmarket content. |
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Mainstream journalists used to leave such muckraking to the denizens of the swamp where tabloid reporters reside. Not any more. |
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These are written by an army of subs who, wherever you work, be it a top London broadsheet, or the tiniest local tabloid, are all of a breed. |
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This, of course, is intensified with our tabloid sleb-watching culture, which is more prevalent today than ever. |
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Have you read what some of your former boyfriends have said about you in a tabloid this past week? |
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It forgets the fact that millions of bosoms are thrust in people's faces every single day in the tabloid papers. |
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The most bileful piece appeared in the Evening Standard, a London tabloid, which fired one unsourced criticism at Smith after another. |
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The best hope of avoiding a downmarket tabloid TV future lies in the pressure currently being put on the networks to clean up their act. |
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It looked and felt like a downmarket tabloid, but it was in a war it could not win against the more richly resourced Daily Record, Sun or Mirror. |
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What with my page three story in a Scottish tabloid I was getting double takes all night. |
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I'm not going to say you're so feeble that you let the tabloid press walk over you. |
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In the United Kingdom, most of the respected broadsheet newspapers have cut costs and increased circulation by adding a tabloid edition. |
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It is as important to the article as the first sentence is to the tabloid journalist. |
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He must be one of the few tabloid journalists who can get away with expensing cocaine. |
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How did she work as a promising and up-rising journalist at one of the country's most popular tabloid rags? |
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However, they may be whistling in the wind, for they entrusted the precious volume to a tabloid journalist, of all people. |
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It's not a good look watching grown men and women openly weeping while reading a tabloid newspaper! |
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It sounds like a headline from a supermarket tabloid, but the idea may not be as outlandish as it first appears. |
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Reading that letter to a tabloid agony uncle, you can almost hear the frantic beating of the writer's heart. |
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Neither of those lofty attributes encompassed the desperate desire to win the support of tabloid newspapers. |
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Few executives at loss-making small or medium sized enterprises can have been doorstepped by tabloid journalists. |
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Her release has been carefully planned to avoid a tabloid witch-hunt and to reduce the possibility she may be threatened or attacked. |
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The publication, which is also known to have been preparing tabloid dummies, is evidently not going to reveal its hand. |
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Whether the government of the day knowingly suppressed the evidence is a matter for tabloid debate. |
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Germany's third defeat under Klinsmann saw the nation's powerful tabloid media reel off a long list of shortcomings. |
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Human nature is greedy, devious and sleazy, and most salacious tabloid stories are merely reflecting that fact. |
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He was never an outstanding player, never one to generate much headlines in the tabloid gutter press, but what he did, he did outstandingly. |
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There is little evidence to support either scenario, unless you consider gossipy tabloid stories and books hard evidence. |
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By this, she means the seemingly endless publicity tour to promote the movie, and the fevered tabloid attention that came to dog her every move. |
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And the ability of those programmes to create C, D and Z-list stars who have an afterlife in tabloid newspapers in turn validates them. |
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That friendship has apparently become very important to Cherie, as her life has moved from family-and-career anonymity to tabloid demonology. |
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Do not believe the glib, easy solutions and hard lines put forward in the tabloid press. |
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I object strongly to my local paper having leaders which place them with the tabloid press. |
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Legislation has too often been cynically reactive to the leader columns of the tabloid newspapers. |
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This must have struck a chord with you, given that you were outed by a tabloid. |
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At the time there was a craze for bingo games in the tabloid newspapers, so a feature was introduced where the day's bingo numbers were read out. |
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Despite her personal life having often featured in the tabloid newspapers, she felt there was still an important story to tell. |
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They're a family whose internal squabbles have been tabloid catnip for decades. |
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She became a tabloid favourite as part of girl band Atomic Kitten and wife to the Irish Westlife singer Bryan McFadden. |
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The Conservative Party and the right wing tabloid press, led by the Sun, were overjoyed at the appeal court's decision. |
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The star of the Alfie remake has attacked the tabloid press for invading his privacy. |
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Tonight, her life has been an open book and a tabloid target, a rare interview with Melanie Griffith. |
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The reason why dumbing down and tabloid trivialisation is so widespread is that it works. |
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The prime examples of commercial journalism are popular magazines, tabloid newspapers, and news and current affairs on commercial TV and radio. |
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Upper-class Englishmen pride themselves on discretion and a stiff upper lip, deeply unfashionable human qualities in these tabloid times. |
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He said he stood by his support for Britain joining the Euro, which sparked the tabloid newspaper's attack on him. |
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I'm not a tabloid reporter, though some of my stories have sent the tabs into a frenzy. |
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News of one or another celebrity suing a tabloid always elicits praise from me. |
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The rise of tabloid journalism, and then of Hollywood, intensified this trend. |
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In short, the market is softening, but is in no way in a crisis, slump or any other such tabloid noun you care to use. |
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Is it too much to expect, in this increasing tabloid media age, leadership from the media too? |
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The first obstacle to the rising star of my career in tabloid television was that we were lost. |
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Throughout the article he used some of the most reactionary tabloid language possible for the occasion. |
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My interest in talking about Keira, however, is not to add to the stockpile of tabloid tittle-tattle. |
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His tabloid chatter won over a new generation and their relationship blossomed. |
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We ape the worst of tabloid titillation in a relentless downward drive of tacky exploitation. |
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His early, all-male Hamlet, complete with semi-naked gravediggers, had the newspapers, both tabloid and broadsheet, fulminating at his audacity. |
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Chattering about tabloid trivia or television celebrity shows, he can barely conceal his lack of interest. |
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It is tabloid trash no matter how you dress it up or justify it to yourselves. |
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The President demonstrated that he was a serious and thoughtful man, and not the Texan cowboy of tabloid cartoons. |
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There is more to one of Scotland's top comedians than reality-TV fodder and tabloid headlines. |
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The tabloid wave has swept from New Zealand and Australia to the pampas of Argentina, and, of course, the four corners of Europe. |
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True, tabloid journalism is something invariably dirty and salacious that refuses to ever consider whether what it is doing is right. |
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How he handles the tabloid tales and maintains a higher sense of purpose could be his key to a happy and fulfilled life. |
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Now the worst-case scenario is a tabloid picture of plastered politician stumbling out of a Soho dive. |
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His case was splashed across the front page of a Montreal tabloid newspaper on Friday. |
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Perelman's free-associative style spun fantasias out of girdle ads, tabloid tattle, sleazy pulp fiction and recipe prose. |
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In these days of tabloid confessionals and celebrity magazines, the sound of rock stars complaining about their lot has become a familiar one. |
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His lyrics read like tabloid confessionals, offering glimpses into a celebrity's life. |
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The Bradford pop idol had previously denied a liaison with the topless model, despite her own confessions to tabloid newspapers. |
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But it takes more than that to deter a tabloid hound on the scent of fast-breaking international news. |
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According to one overseas tabloid report, his alleged paramour gave a tell-all interview to an unidentified American broadcast network. |
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It is as compulsively enjoyable as the juiciest tabloid, yet it also serves as a stunning indictment of our tabloid-crazed culture. |
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A typical class project compiles enough news to fill a 36-page tabloid, which gets distributed throughout the state. |
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In the build-up to war, Mr Beattie found his photograph splashed across the front page of a national tabloid newspaper. |
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A scoop by the tabloid newspaper announced that he had sent him to visit a rehab clinic to observe the dangers of drug use. |
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In my opinion he is an economic ignoramus and a political opportunist, all wrapped up in a sickly-sweet package designed to appeal to the worst kind of tabloid consumers. |
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The story and my picture were emblazoned on the front page of a tabloid. |
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There are many tabloid weeklies in Hong Kong and how many can I read? |
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Like a great tabloid headline, The adventuress by N.D. Coleridge promises a lurid story that spares no detail. |
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The tabloid battle between the sweet blonde and the brunette vixen played out like an issue of betty and Veronica on crack. |
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Months of bugging showed that reporters from three tabloid newspapers were receiving confidential information from the agency. |
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Who knew Kim Kardashian, celebreality tabloid queen, would be the one to finally help us interrupt that bogus premise? |
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But we will not secure what's left of that tradition by, as one leading tabloid urged the other day, waiving the rules in this particular situation. |
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There are tabloid rags that sully the name of reporting, and there are informed, articulate blogs that raise this medium to a far more rarefied level. |
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Reenan was most likely just a cut-out for the real snoop in the tabloid wars. |
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The move by the Times and the Independent to produce tabloid format editions for urban markets has hit the original red tops, the Sun and the Daily Mirror, hard. |
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The article about our town in the tabloid on Sunday week last was negativity through and through, depicting a picture of Dungarvan that certainly is alien to me. |
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The news made tabloid headlines around the world, a grim case of do-gooding apparently gone wrong. |
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Like lapdogs, most of the country's tabloid press fell into line. |
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So, after toiling away for two decades, Elba has finally crossed over from critically acclaimed actor to bona fide tabloid fodder. |
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I learned to string a few words together on a community tabloid and was drafted by a grand old broadsheet where I mastered sub-editing and page layout. |
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Kieron Dyer, that star of the tabloid front pages, was first to endear himself to the Newcastle public by refusing to play on the right hand side of midfield. |
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The firing of a new executive brought in to shake up the flailing show is getting dead-movie-star tabloid coverage. |
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The first is devoted to work, the middle bit to domestic arrangements and the latter part to roistering in the style to which tabloid readers have become accustomed. |
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Britain's first blind prime minister would certainly have tabloid appeal. |
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In fact, most of us have the same low tabloid tastes as everyone else. |
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Are all these setups, coincidences, misunderstandings, a shabby mass tabloid conspiracy, people on the make? |
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The tabloid ran pictures from a photo booth photo shoot of Will and Robbie hamming it up. |
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And yes, he lied one more time after being caught by a tabloid photographer with said woman and the child he sired. |
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It wasn't only the scandalmongers of tabloid journalism who were outraged. |
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Curry didn't fare much better at the hands of the tabloid scaremongers. |
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Is this what the tabloid scaremongers would have us worry about? |
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We seem to want sexual privacy when it's convenient, but we also want the freedom to be publicly wanton, from blogs to reality shows to tabloid tell-alls. |
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For all his legitimate straining to be perceived as a bona fide artist, Jack makes his best work when he goes tabloid, turning his amorous travails into juicy tell-alls. |
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For those uninitiated Jordan is the darling of our tabloid papers. |
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The project does, however, riff on tabloid culture and even, perhaps, such recent fiascos as James Frey and jt Leroy. |
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But who can deny perusing the headlines, even thumbing through the pages, of the occasional supermarket tabloid while waiting to ring up our groceries? |
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He is flicking idly through the tabloid tittle-tattle, recounting a story of marital strife, laughing at the expense of others, and yet again avoiding work. |
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She agreed to meet with tabloid editors in New York City and take a lie detector test to back up her claims. |
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As drama it was accepted that tabloid journalism and high principle were not natural bedfellows. |
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Indeed, the tabloid press last week bent the rules still further. |
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His indictment of the tabloid press seemed vindicated when its TV critics began falling over themselves to say how brilliant the broadcast had been. |
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A three-way tabloid circulation war was being waged amid a three-way mayoral election. |
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The tabloid revelations were, according to sources within Goodison Park, the principal reason why Rooney was so anxious to leave Merseyside before the transfer window closed. |
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Nothing like an unbiased free press to stir up intelligent debate, although coming from the UK, with its tabloid trash, I'm hardly one to talk really. |
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Their hands, mostly left clasping right, or right clasping left, holding the odd newspaper or the odd trash tabloid, grasping the odd book like a lifeline. |
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He resigned in disgrace amidst the media circus that only a tabloid culture born in a country founded by Puritans can muster. |
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Those tabloid images of Stewart misbehaving were taken without her knowledge, which implies a Garden of Eden type of innocence. |
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The combative Canadian businessman summarily ejected him from the board, blackening his character as a mole and provider of information to the tabloid press. |
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They've got the glossy good looks and fleeting A-list appeal to grab a famous Liam, but want to be more than lucky pop princesses turned tacky tabloid sirens. |
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I know of a sleazy tabloid reporter whose girlfriend dumped him. |
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How would you feel, if some tabloid hack wrote a breathtakingly unpleasant, factually inaccurate, and demonstrably defamatory article identifying you by name? |
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The most impressive breakthrough in this period was nevertheless made by Le Petit Journal, a Parisian daily of tabloid size, launched in 1863, and selling for one sou. |
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Do you compare Radio Scotland to a broadsheet newspaper or a tabloid? |
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The famously bald and speccy tabloid boss was conducting his afternoon news conference on his mobile from a doorway off Renfield Street, outside the Drum and Monkey pub. |
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Sometimes Powers had to deal with the sort of problems that are raw material for lurid tabloid headlines. |
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Rebekah Brooks, a previous editor of the tabloid, was found not guilty on all charges. |
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But is her secret, as some rivals are sniffily suggesting, simply to have let tabloid newspaper hacks loose in the more respectful world of magazines? |
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It was meant to be her big career revival, a triumphant return to form that would finally shush the incessant tabloid coverage of her car crash of a life. |
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If her manner of dress is any indication, this may be the first royal marriage not to dissolve into tabloid farce in generations. |
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Perhaps we live in an era that finds so little to admire in itself that it feels compelled to cut the storied past down to the size of the tabloid present. |
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There's nothing wrong with sloshing about in a cesspit of anecdotes from the flash trash world of English football, as Hall does in his Sunday tabloid column. |
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Culled from a slag heap of cable-access shows, cheapo action movies, inane sitcoms and tabloid news shows, these images are unfit for human consumption. |
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He is a garrulous cockney from the old school of tabloid journalism. |
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The tabloid would publish challenges from checkers players and pie eaters. |
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We've all complained about creeping infotainment, media concentration, the lack of serious investigative TV, the tabloid nature of the magazine shows and on and on. |
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As he sees it, the aggression of tabloid journalism discourages potential candidates, who are fearful of the requisite intrusion into their private lives. |
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When they found him, he denied having stolen her cellular phone, saying that he was a journalist from a weekly tabloid and showed them a press card. |
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A new giveaway tabloid newspaper has hit the streets of Sydney. |
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You say cable news squanders its resources by descending to tabloid sensationalism, personality cult shows and aping talk radio with high-testosterone shout shows. |
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The legalities of the situation didn't prevent the tabloid doorstepping his distraught mother and naming the housing estate where his parents live. |
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A shadow passes over his face as he thinks back on how one tabloid journalist doorstepped his parents and his ex-girlfriend, and even fired questions at the local librarian. |
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Crosse glanced around to discover the source of this unpleasant opener and wasn't surprised to find that the interested party represented a downmarket tabloid. |
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Some stars reportedly even want to investigate the private lives of tabloid editors, to give them a taste of their own medicine. |
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The spoof news item was read out by a newsreader during a discussion on what Britain would be like if it was run by tabloid newspaper editors. |
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The spoof news item was read by a newsreader during a discussion on what Britain would be like if it was run by tabloid newspaper editors. |
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The reporter for the tabloid called himself a journalist but was really nothing more than a scandalmonger. |
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Can misogynistic and baseless tabloid narratives go out of style? |
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She won another libel suit in 2009 against the British tabloid Daily Mail after it printed that she had lied about her exercise regimen. |
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Murdoch immediately relaunched The Sun as a tabloid, and ran it as a sister paper to the News of the World. |
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I also read of our potential tie-up with a super soaraway tabloid for exclusive access to players and staff. |
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Norris, ignore that tabloid trash about skivers with 56-inch screens an' a Porshe in the backyard. |
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Sometimes I see tabloid stuff online and it tugs at my heartstrings. |
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Soon afterwards it founded the National Star, a supermarket tabloid, and in 1976 it purchased the New York Post. |
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When he died in 1952, his son Rupert inherited a controlling interest in an Adelaide afternoon tabloid, The News. |
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The South Wales Argus is a daily tabloid newspaper published in Newport, South Wales. |
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The show might not attract the same amount of tabloid interest as X Factor or Strictly Come Dancing, but Showboaters is still good family fare. |
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Price believes high rates of incarceration in Britain are due to political preessure from tabloid newspapers. |
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The South Wales Echo is a daily tabloid newspaper published in Cardiff, Wales and distributed throughout the surrounding area. |
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The Daily Record, part of Trinity Mirror, is a Scottish tabloid newspaper based in Glasgow. |
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The British tabloid, Daily Mirror, subsequently printed a retraction of its story about her being dropped by the label. |
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The Vow was published in the Daily Record, one of the main tabloid newspapers in Scotland that also backed a No vote in the referendum. |
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Since 1 November 2004, the paper has been printed solely in tabloid format. |
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In November 2003, News International began producing the newspaper in both broadsheet and tabloid sizes. |
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In Canada many newspapers of Postmedia's Sun brand are in tabloid format including The Province, a newspaper for the British Columbia market. |
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One tabloid ne wspaper referred to Catherine Bleater Moans,and the label has shown signs of sticking. |
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But the publication with by far the highest readership is The Tab, Cambridge's student tabloid. |
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In Poland, the newspaper Fakt, sometimes Super Express is considered as tabloid. |
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The old more serious newspaper Berlingske Tidende shifted from broadsheet to tabloid format in 2006, while keeping the news profile intact. |
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The Berliner format, used by many prominent European newspapers, is sized between the tabloid and the broadsheet. |
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In Pakistan, Khabrain is a tabloid newspaper popular within the lower middle class. |
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In 2007, it closed shop and reappeared in tabloid form, and has been appreciated for its brand of investigative journalism. |
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This is the tabloid world of snoopers, bunglers, loony lefties and little Hitlers. |
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In Morocco, Maroc Soir, launched in November 2005, is published in tabloid format. |
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The purpose behind this was to avoid the association of the word tabloid with the flamboyant, salacious editorial style of the red top newspaper. |
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How did you write a zizzy tabloid head in ten minutes from what they did have in the box? |
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The connotation of tabloid was soon applied to other small compressed items. |
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Student tabloid The Tab also publishes online content and has teams at both universities. |
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Sheridan and his wife Gail both deny perjuring themselves during a 2006 libel case against the tabloid. |
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The Press and Journal and its sister paper the tabloid Evening Express are printed six days a week by Aberdeen Journals. |
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The Sun is a tabloid newspaper published in the United Kingdom and Ireland. |
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In common usage, tabloid and broadsheet are frequently more descriptive of a newspaper's market position than physical format. |
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The tabloid favourite stretched out on a faux fur rug in a transparent body stocking to launch the new fragrance but she was significantly more coy in the interviews. |
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Since the mid-eighties Lambeth council had become a byword for failure in the public sector and, from the tabloid press's perspective, the gold standard for looniness. |
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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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His alleged affair with pop princess Britney Spears after he choreographed her dance routine in the Womanizer video made him an overnight tabloid star. |
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The tabloid newspaper was eager to dish the dirt on celebrities. |
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At this point, we could all write a tell-all about our tabloid childhoods and contrive an autobiographical performance about the pleasures of humiliation. |
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In April 2004, the British tabloid News of the World carried claims by Beckham's former personal assistant Rebecca Loos that he and Loos had an extramarital affair. |
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Risk is everywhere. From tabloid headlines insisting that coffee causes cancer to stern government warnings about alcohol and driving, the world is teeming with goblins. |
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The term compact was coined in the 1970s by the Daily Mail, one of the earlier newspapers to make the change, although it now once again calls itself a tabloid. |
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The Celebration, which opened last month in New York and LA, digs up the skeletons in a wealthy family's closet with all the tact of a tabloid show. |
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Had he been born in the late 20th century instead of in the 18th, he would have been regularly vilified in the national tabloid press and trashier magazines. |
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A tabloid is a newspaper with a compact page size smaller than broadsheet. |
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News Group Newspapers Ltd publishes the tabloid newspaper The Sun. |
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As per the tabloid, Beyonce has set up a play date between her daughter Blue Ivy and Prince George during their next London visit scheduled at New Year's Eve. |
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The British tabloid The Sun posted a video of a woman, alleged to be Winehouse, apparently smoking crack cocaine and speaking of having taken ecstasy and valium. |
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The artist seems in thrall to a tabloid persona that is not the real Amy. |
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But shortly after telling the Star, a supermarket tabloid, about her sexploits with West, Leyla Ghobadi, 26, turned around and said a few key details were wrong. |
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Most of the faked photos actually came from the tabloid press. |
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