It not only was in the tabloids, I think it was in the fortune cookie I ate two weeks ago. |
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In years gone by, entire summers could pass with barely a glimpse of flannelled foolery on the back pages of the tabloids. |
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Harold, the tabloids are calling him a cad, a rat, a slimeball, a disgrace and a snake. |
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These stories could have come from any of the tabloids from the last few weeks, though actually they belong to the distant past. |
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The other tabloids will gleefully join in, in a frenzy of self-righteous hypocrisy. |
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He argued that broadcasters covered the case less sensationally than many tabloids. |
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Ask most people on either side of the pond what they think of tabloids and they'll tell you they don't think very highly of them. |
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Then the tabloids will read about Rita Lin and all that pagoogle and make me out as some raving drug fiend and make my life more interesting. |
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One former teammate was caught and exposed by the tabloids for having an affair. |
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And like their mother, her three children have gotten a lot of ink in the tabloids. |
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The four-page tabloids, little more than newsletters, materialized mainly because the editor used his personal computer at home. |
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As the controversy spread from the broadsheets to the tabloids, to the daytime talkshows and the radio phone-ins, parental anxieties intensified. |
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Hollywood idols are the gods of today, trashy tabloids and offensive pictorial covers can attest to that. |
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There have been no very publicly pursued paternity suits or divorce settlements plastered all over the tabloids. |
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How would the new tabloids, still hugging themselves over improved sales figures, cope? |
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The tabloids condemned them, not unfittingly, as the curdled dregs of an outmoded caste. |
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If the plan works, there will be no images of Hooray Henries, outlandish hedonism or general drunkenness in the tabloids on Friday morning. |
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Instead the tabloids were full of stories about gangs of hoodlums running out of control, terrorising vulnerable people. |
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The Penny Press and the tabloids used the same formulas to achieve unprecedented commercial success. |
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Sometime snooker world champion, perpetually in the tabloids for his substance-assisted high jinks, he's the quintessence of Essex wide-boy. |
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They would be exposed in the headlines of the tabloids and drummed out of office. |
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Blunkett stands accused of colluding with Britain's most powerful downmarket tabloids to further his war with the family of his lover. |
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The war against the tabloids, or red tops, is hard-fought, particularly as these papers can flood the market with very cheap copies. |
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The red tops, as we hacks warmly refer to the tabloids, bravely sallied forth against all restrictions European, bureaucratic or otherwise. |
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By first thing the following morning, the tabloids were doorstepping his mum's house in Bow, east London. |
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But curling is not a big game in this country and the tabloids can't see past football. |
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Even if things were otherwise, what would be the public interest defence for the tabloids splashing the story? |
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While in prison, the tabloids ran stories saying he was a drug-dealer and wife-beater. |
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We had already been told by certain people that the tabloids had the story and were going to run with it. |
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None of the nightmare scenarios laid out so graphically by the tabloids materialised. |
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The play was fiercely attacked by critics and made headline news in the tabloids. |
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Dr. Ink grew up reading, and loving, the New York tabloids, so he has a taste for the lurid and sensational. |
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No other individual currently on our screens and in our tabloids can solicit such violent hatred from my otherwise amiable self. |
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I suddenly thought what Scotland Yard would say, not to mention the tabloids. |
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The frenzy that gets drummed up by some tabloids in an effort to merely sell papers is disgusting. |
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No matter how nice they seem, you have to be sure that the story won't end up in the tabloids. |
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She has even forgiven boyfriends who have sold stories about her to the tabloids. |
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Truly there is nothing more snobbish than the tabloids when it comes to passing judgment on the way the other half lives. |
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Im a student and know plenty of nice middle class types whose only source of news are tabloids. |
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The tabloids violated my family's privacy in a manner that I felt was vicious and indecent. |
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Unsettling as our own tabloids may be, the British psyche and its problems hardly matter to the wider world. |
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The broadsheets and music press picked up on them first, with the tabloids following. |
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The alternative will be a messy scrap that would be in nobody's interests, except perhaps the tabloids. |
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His good name has been smeared by the tabloids but his films still shine through with a unique and often brilliant vision. |
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Traditionally, the news values of the tabloids have been subject to a great deal of criticism. |
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But he should have resisted the intense pressure he has been under from the tabloids and Tories. |
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The only reason she has not been is that her release has been in the hands of politicians, who have not dared take on the tabloids. |
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Even tabloids are hard to read when standing on the train, if it's crowded enough. |
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England played Germany and that was the only contest that seemed to matter, if the tabloids were anything to go by. |
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The tabloids often present a simplified, exaggerated, and personalized view of politics. |
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It still caught me off guard when I saw my picture on an album cover or in the tabloids. |
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The tabloids have given good reviews and he says people are generally supportive. |
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Both groups are forced to suffer the prejudices that have been fuelled by the tabloids and absorbed by an uninformed public. |
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The gossip magazines and tabloids try their best to get something new. |
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One that has grown from the super market tabloids to a science, cereology. |
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A motley crew of kibitzers, many of whom don't drive, hang out on Brochu's premises, reading tabloids, exchanging wisecracks and arguing their theories. |
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In fairness, like glossies anywhere, French tabloids are fallible, prone to playing up alleged trysts that fall flat. |
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The media's preoccupation with body size runs the gamut from teen magazines to tabloids, the glossies and, yes, even broadsheets which should know better. |
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With the bad attitude comes the bad behaviour the tabloids love. |
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With the tabloids scrabbling for circulation and under pressure to land sensationalist stories, it is not a question of whether that day will arrive, but when. |
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And, thanks to his relationship with girlfriend Lena Dunham, all over tabloids and your Instagram feed, too. |
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To unite not just these two tabloids but also the crusty old broadsheet behind the tokers and dope smokers of Britain was an astonishing achievement. |
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I have a theory that this could all be a set-up, whereby they are torn apart by the tabloids, but they know full well they have not actually done anything. |
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If a story transfixes Sydney tabloids, then it transfixes me. |
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Three Sunday tabloids today make separate and equally shocking claims. |
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The tradition of the middle class is not to shout about its values through the pages of the tabloids or while wandering along the street in a shell suit. |
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This is no longer only the obsession of trashy magazines and tabloids. |
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After the news of masseuse lawsuits broke, the tabloids exploded, naturally. |
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The long hot summer and the silly season, as the British tabloids call the month of August, is upon us, and what better place to be than, say, the French Riviera. |
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The one-sided Jay Z melee was quickly forgotten, as tabloids printed news of a rekindled relationship between Drake and Rihanna. |
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Moreover, they had a refreshing ability to avoid being nailed by those same tabloids that uncovered acts of debauchery by British players on a depressingly regular basis. |
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The ins and outs of reporting on national tabloids needn't detain us. |
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When writing about his rise, British tabloids never failed to mention the pharaohs' ancient dynasties. |
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If Jeremy Lin and the New York Knicks keep winning, the tabloids are going to run out of nicknames for the phenom from Harvard. |
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I think the presenter was reading from one of the national tabloids, which, as we've come to expect, print anything that might hike up their circulation. |
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I appear weekly on tabloids, TV talk shows kidnap me to have me as a guest, and I can't go anywhere outside without a group of fangirls wanting to get a piece of me. |
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The only sour note during a fortnight of success came when the tabloids had a field day over Sam's withdrawal from the Dunhill Links Championship. |
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You can horrify the tabloids and cause consternation in the wings. |
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After her first outing as the Chancellor's wife at the Labour Party conference in September, groomed to perfection and wearing vivid crimson, the tabloids raved about her. |
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The tabloids are frothing at the mouth just thinking about it. |
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In the extreme case, red top tabloids have been accused of lying or misrepresenting the truth to increase circulation. |
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This is why the krayzee boffins are so fond of making those whacky discoveries so beloved of tabloids and deejays the world over. |
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All write for tabloids which daily titivate the ogling classes with topless page three popsies. |
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And according to reports in British tabloids, the Goop hatefest even extends to Martin, who thinks his wife reveals too much on the site. |
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Even those harshest of moralisers, our right-wing tabloids, passed it off with a smile. |
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The event caught the public's imagination and gained mass media attention in national newspapers, tabloids, and even the BBC News. |
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The tabloids ensured his megacelebrity would expand when they splashed his dalliances with a stripper on the back pages. |
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Mainly White Noise and Libra are full of mediaspeak from television, radio and the tabloids. |
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The freelance investigative reporter made a career of digging up dirt on celebrities for tabloids. |
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The tabloidization of the mainstream media has been really hard on the tabloids, so they can't afford to pay as many writers. |
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Although its paper size is bigger, its style was copied from the British tabloids. |
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The naked photos of that celebrity have been making the rounds in the tabloids. |
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The events were so fantastic that only the tabloids were willing to print them. |
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In contrast to red top tabloids, compacts use an editorial style more closely associated with broadsheet newspapers. |
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And it is more reliable measure of Boro than the tabloids with their transparent agendas and more revealing than a lifetime's worth of slanted edited highlight blipverts. |
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But instead Taylor has been hounded, made public enemy number one by certain sections of society and unnecessarily humiliated by one of Britain's redtop tabloids. |
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The denizens of the gossipy world of the pink press, purple prose and yellow tabloids are shivering over disputed photographs of Princess Caroline of Monaco. |
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The entertainment industry is vibrant and feeds broadsheets and tabloids with an unending supply of details about celebrities and sensationalist daily scandals. |
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The resultant panic incited by the tabloids eventually led to a crackdown on clubs and venues that played acid house and had a profound negative impact on the scene. |
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At the local level, many sensational tabloids can be seen but, unlike Khabrain or other big national newspapers, they are distributed only on local levels in districts. |
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In early 2017, tabloids started speculating that Adele and Konecki had secretly married when they were spotted wearing matching rings on their ring fingers. |
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In fact, most compact tabloids formerly used the broadsheet paper size, but changed to accommodate reading in tight spaces, such as on a crowded commuter bus or train. |
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Those articles in the tabloids stirred up a real hornets' nest. |
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There are numerous tabloids in most of India's official languages. |
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