Given how few young people actually read the newspaper, it's a good thing they'll be reading a newspaper on a screen.
I always wanted to be some kind of writer or newspaper reporter. But after college... I did other things.
I wanted to be some kind of captain of industry. Then I wanted to be in advertising, and then I wanted to be a newspaper reporter.
I'm not a daily reporter. I'm not a newspaper reporter, I'm not a political reporter.
Well I just always wanted to be a newspaper reporter.
Because I worked as a newspaper reporter for about 14 years before attempting my first novel, I learned to write under almost any circumstances- by candle light, in longhand, in African villages where there was no power, under shelling in Kurdistan.
I was an English major in college, took a ton of creative writing courses, and was a newspaper reporter for 10 years.
When I was a newspaper reporter, and later a television writer, I really felt my co-workers became a second family.
I don't listen to the news. I don't read the newspaper unless it's eccentric information - and the obituaries, of course.
When I was a 12-year-old middle-schooler in Richmond, Virginia, my local newspaper published an op-ed that I wrote all by myself.
No serious futurist deals in prediction. These are left for television oracles and newspaper astrologers.
A lot of my friends were retiring from the newspaper business, and the newspaper pensions are not enormous.
To see the Persia of poets and painters, hiding in plain sight behind the much-maligned Iran of our newspaper headlines, would be my fondest wish.
I tried to steer the student newspaper toward more pertinent information instead of the usual gossip and bull.
Once a newspaper touches a story, the facts are lost forever, even to the protagonists.
The proud man counts his newspaper clippings, the humble man his blessings.
I think a newspaper should be provocative, stir 'em up, but you can't do that on television. It's just not on.
Before the 21st century, stories became popular because people talked about them in other publications or shared magazine and newspaper clippings with friends.
The simultaneous reactions elicited all over the world by the reading of newspaper dispatches about the same events create, as it were, a common mental pulse beat for the whole of civilized mankind.
I can't be alone among fiction writers in regarding the world, so much weirder than anything we could make up, as beating us at our own game or in racking my brains over what could possibly constitute a contribution when novels pale before the newspaper.