Join two wayward radio hosts on A Way With Words, the call-in radio show about writing, speaking, slang, old sayings, and more.
Catchword for “hotel journalism”
Catchword: hotel journalism
Filed Under: ,
Part of Speechn.
The part of speech reflects that used in the full entry, and not necessarily the part of speech as it is used in the quotation below.
Quotation: Leonard Doyle, foreign editor of The Independent in London, said, “we make a big effort not to do what you might call “hotel journalism,” and we make a very big effort not to sub-contract work to local Iraqi journalists—we think that’s basically unfair. It’s a risk to them. We carry the same risk.”
Article or Document Title:
“European press pulls in horns in face of Iraqi terror” (URL)
Article, Document, Publication, Web Site:
ChannelNewsAsia.com
Dateline:
Paris, France
Date of Publication:
Jan. 12, 2005
This cite belongs to a full entry for hotel journalism.
Recent Catchwords
park v. (5/16)
whale eye n. (5/16)
water buffalo n. (5/16)
Churchill n. (5/15)
moondust n. (5/15)
mouse type n. (5/14)
hung up adj. (5/14)
sideways market n. (5/14)
Bristol dust n. (5/14)
YAWN n. (5/13)
doodlesocking n. (5/13)
job and knock n. (5/13)
radwaste n. (5/12)
night-out money n. (5/12)
podbusting n. (5/12)
yoging n. (5/12)
 More catchwords...
Sponsored links:
New Comments
GW commented on güey (5/16)
Jak King commented on hardening off (5/16)
Jay DeKing commented on hardening off (5/15)
C.L.Mangles commented on job and knock (5/13)
Richard William Walker commented on cat-claw (5/12)
Thomas commented on cat-claw (5/12)
Richard William Walker commented on cat-claw (5/12)
Rock-hound commented on fobbit (5/12)
chris commented on fobbit (5/12)
Driver Joe commented on brown gas (5/11)
Jan commented on tom-walkers (5/11)
Jak King commented on nightstand Buddhist (5/11)
Karl Benghauser commented on jingle mail (5/10)
Thomas commented on cat-claw (5/10)
Richard William Walker commented on cat-claw (5/10)
Subscribe to the RSS feed.Subscribe to the mailing list.Browse the archive.Add to Technorati Favorites. © 1999-2008 by Grant Barrett, Double-Tongued Dictionary, New York City.