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Reporters Quotes

Quotes tagged as "reporters" Showing 1-30 of 39
Mahatma Gandhi
“I believe in equality for everyone, except reporters and photographers.”
Mahatma Gandhi

Nalini Singh
“Illium, with his wings of silver-kissed blue and a face designed to seduce both males and females, not to mention his ability to do the most impossible acrobatics in the air, would provide a worthy diversion. The fact that he鈥檇 decided to ditch half his clothing was just icing on the cake.”
Nalini Singh, Archangel's Consort

Jonathan Maberry
“Reporters trade in pain. It sells papers. Everyone knows that.”
Jonathan Maberry, Dead of Night

Charlie LeDuff
“I am a reporter, a leech, a merchant of misery. Bad things are good for us reporters. We are body collectors of sorts.”
Charlie LeDuff, Detroit: An American Autopsy

David Rosenfelt
“I've never really had a problem with reporters. I treat them as human beings, not as objects to be manipulated. I find I can manipulate them better that way. I've long ago learned that in dealing with the press, sincerity is the most important quality you can have. If you can fake sincerity, you've got it made.”
David Rosenfelt, Open and Shut

“Le sabordage de l'芒me devrait 锚tre enseign茅 dans les 茅coles de marine".
Le Voyageur de l'inqui茅tude”
Olivier Weber

“Nous sommes tous des naufrag茅s de l'芒me vois-tu, la peinture n'est que le reflet de ce chagrin, antichambre de la grande joie 脿 venir."
Nous sommes tous des naufrag茅s de l'芒me vois-tu, la peinture n'est que le reflet de ce chagrin, antichambre de la grande joie 脿 venir.
On ne se tue pas pour une femme (Plon)”
Olivier Weber

Calvin Trillin
“Reporters also tend to love trials. It may be that we are transfixed by a process in which the person being asked a question actually has to answer it. He cannot say he would rather not comment. He cannot tell an anecdote on a different subject. He has to answer the question鈥攗nder oath that he is telling the truth.”
Calvin Trillin, Killings

“One of the great myths about war is that there is a ground zero, a center stage, where the terrible forces unleashed by it can be witnessed, recounted, and replayed like the launching of a rocket. War is a human activity far too large to be contained in the experience of a single reporter in a single place and time in any meaningful way. When it comes, it happens to everyone. Everything is in its path. Yet this is the allure of war reporting, the chance of acquiring some personal mother lode of truth to beam back to the living rooms of a waiting nation. The fear that comes from reporting on a war is as much a fear of missing this mother load as it is of being injured or killed in battle, and it sets reporters apart from the people who have to fight wars. Soldiers have their own agonies to think about as a battle approaches. Missing the war is not generally one of them.”
John Hockenberry, Moving Violations: War Zones, Wheelchairs, and Declarations of Independence

“I know my career is going badly because I'm being quoted correctly.”
Lee Marvin

“...the ravenous monsters men called reporters; sub-human vermin who feed off misery and created it wherever they went.”
Christopher Nuttall, The Nelson Touch

Christopher Paul Curtis
“When I left her office, I felt like she'd gut-punched me, brushed me off, slapped me back and forth, gave me a cool compress to put on my cheeks, cold-cocked me with a stiff uppercut to the jaw, picked me up, brushed me off again, then kicked me in the seat of my pants as she handed me a piece of cake and showed me the door.
Being a reporter isn't as easy as it looks.”
Christopher Paul Curtis, The Madman of Piney Woods

“Now listen,' said George angrily, 'I鈥檝e been in a newspaper office all evening and I know better than you what鈥檚 going on.'

'Nonsense. If there鈥檚 one place in the world where nobody knows what鈥檚 going on, it鈥檚 a newspaper office.”
Jack Iams, The French Touch

Dan Groat
“I don鈥檛 know how a reporter would ever understand a politician. Your job is supposed to be about finding the truth and enlightening people. Right? A politician鈥檚 job is about hiding the truth and fooling people. Right? You want us to be better informed so we get smarter. They think we鈥檙e dumb and it鈥檚 to their advantage to keep us that way.”
Dan Groat, An Enigmatic Escape: A Trilogy

Anthony Trollope
“It is probable that Tom Towers considered himself the most powerful man in Europe; and so he walked on from day to day, studiously striving to look a man, but knowing within his breast that he was a god.”
Anthony Trollope, The Warden

Evelyn Waugh
“As a rule there is one thing you can always count on in our job 鈥� popularity. There are plenty of disadvantages I grant you, but you are liked and respected. Ring people up any hour of the day or night, butt into their houses uninvited make them answer a string of damn fool questions when they want to do something else 鈥� they like it. Always a smile and the best of everything for the gentlemen of the Press.”
Evelyn Waugh, Scoop

Harlan Coben
“Politics and the press; two cherished institutions that spoke with tongues so forked they could double for fine dinnerware.”
Harlan Coben, One False Move

Maxim Behar
“One implication is that we, the people who have been known as PR experts鈥攁nd still go by that title鈥攈ave now turned into a combination of publishers, reporters, and editors.”
Maxim Behar, The Global PR Revolution: How Thought Leaders Succeed in the Transformed World of PR

Germany Kent
“To be successful as a journalist, you must be curious and have a yearning for learning facts.”
Germany Kent

“A moment from another world! Imagine a reporter dictating an exclusive story, a lead story, sourced from the President of the United States, from a telephone just off the White House dance floor to the strains of Lester Lanin's dance band.”
Ben Bradlee, A Good Life: Newspapering and Other Adventures

Sierra Donovan
“What, Rudolph wasn鈥檛 available?”
Sierra Donovan, Do Not Open 'Til Christmas

Mortimer J. Adler
“To understand what kind of filter our reporter's mind is, we must ask a series of questions about it. This amounts to asking a series of questions about any material dealing with current events. The questions are these:
1. What does the author want to prove?
2. Whom does he want to convince?
3. What special knowledge does he assume?
4. What special language does he use?
5. Does he really know what he is talking about?

[How to Read a Book (1972), P. 244]”
Mortimer J. Adler and Charles Van Doren

John Sandford
“What the f-f-f... What's that supposed to mean?" the reporter sputtered. The TV cameraman behind him was laughing. TV people ranked radio people, so laughing was all right.
"What's 'f-f-f' supposed to mean?" Lester asked. He turned away and pointed to a woman wearing glasses the size of compact discs. "You."
"What precautions should women in the Twin Cities take?" She had an improbably smooth delivery, with great round O's, as though she were reading for a play.”
John Sandford, Eyes of Prey

James  Patterson
Cross and Sampson are walking in to the courthouse to hear the verdict for the case. There are reporters and photographers everywhere, trying to talk to anyone and everyone connected with the case.

"Dr. Cross! Dr. Cross, please," one of them called out. I recognized the shrill voice. It belonged to a local TV news anchorwoman.

We had to stop. They were behind us, and up ahead. Sampson hummed a little Martha and the Vandellas, "Nowhere to Run."

"Dr. Cross, do you feel that your testimony might actually help to get Gary Murphy off the hook for murder one? That you may have inadvertently helped him to get away with murder?"

Something finally snapped inside me. "We're just happy to be in the Super Bowl," I said straight-faced into the glare of several minicam lenses. "Alex Cross is going to concentrate on his game. The rest will take care of itself. Alex Cross just thanks Almighty God for the opportunity to play at this level." I leaned in toward the reporter who'd ask the question. "You understand what I'm saying? You're clear now?"

Sampson smiled and said, "As for me, I'm still open for lucrative endorsements in the sneaker and the soft-drink categories.”
James Patterson, Along Came a Spider

E.L. Doctorow
“But the institutional mind has only one mental operation: It abhors truth.”
E.L. Doctorow, The Waterworks

Ian  Kirkpatrick
“The flags on their mics say they鈥檙e from different companies, but the plastic preparedness of their appearances makes them look like they came from the same machine.”
Ian Kirkpatrick, Bleed More, Bodymore

Steven Magee
“Mainstream media ignores the bulk of news releases.”
Steven Magee

Roy Duffield
“The Invaders are in your very midst!鈥�
The Newsman admits.
The People
start having fits
after paying him handsomely
for his services.”
Roy Duffield, Bacchus Against the Wall

Ayn Rand
“The reporters who came to the press conference in the office of the John Galt Line were young men who had been trained to think that their job consisted of concealing from the world the nature of its events. It was their daily duty to serve as audience for some public figure who made utterances about the public good, in phrases carefully chosen to convey no meaning. It was their daily job to sling words together in any combination they pleased, so long as the words did not fall into a sequence saying something specific. They could not understand the interview now being given to them.”
Ayn Rand, Atlas Shrugged

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