Discover the most popular and inspiring quotes and sayings on the topic of Reuters. Share them with your friends on social media platforms like Facebook, Twitter, or your personal blogs, and let the world be inspired by their powerful messages. Here are the Top 100 Reuters Quotes And Sayings by 96 Authors including Mark Bowden,Ali Babacan,I.b. Nosey,Jeff Jarvis,Bernard Goldberg for you to enjoy and share.
60 Minutes, the most watched and most respected news program on the tube.
'The Economist' is a biased organization.
I'm the official unofficial reporter.
In the future, journalists must ask: How do we encourage and support flows of information?
You know, I was at CBS News for 28 years. I may have run an unidentified source. Frankly, I don't remember.
I'm a pretty big news junkie.
Online journalism has rendered us all news wire hacks - get it posted fast, forget about context or nuance or interpretation, and errors will be fixed on the fly.
I intend to buy 'The New York Times.' Please don't take it as a joke.
News in printed form is in secular decline. However, news delivered the way consumers want it is growing and thriving.
The greatest felony in the news business today is to be behind, or to miss a big story. So speed and quantity substitute for thoroughness and quality, for accuracy and context.
Never trust a journalist.
Newspapers are the Bibles of worldlings.
How diligently they read them!
Here they find their law and profits,
their judges and chronicles,
their epistles and revelations.
I don't even read the papers. I read 'USA Today' because it has color photos.
I don't think the intelligence reports are all that hot. Some days I get more out of the New York Times.
I know that doesn't sound very radical and webby of me to say that but I think the New York Times is important. I also think there's an occasional piece that will pop out.
United States HarperCollins Publishers Inc. 195 Broadway
To this day, I'm a slave to CNBC.
Newspapers are horror happening to other people.
A newspaper should be the maximum of information, and the minimum of comment.
Sovereign is the source.
News in not what happened but a story about what happened.
There is no more respected or influential forum in the field of journalism than the New York Times. I look forward, with great anticipation, to contributing to its op-ed page.
If it's a good day, I get 'The New York Times' on my iPad, and if I have a little time in the morning, I like to look at that while I'm eating.
I would like to know that when I read the paper in the morning, it's telling me something that actually happened, and I think the vast majority of journalists want the same thing.
I rely on Taegan Goddard's Political Wire for straight, fair political news, he gets right to the point. It's an eagerly anticipated part of my news reading.
The journalistic vision sharpens to the point of maximum impact every event, every individual and social configuration; but the honing is uniform.
There is no substitute for a local newspaper that is doing its job.
Commenting on print journalism at the Commenting on print journalism at the White House Correspondents' Dinner: "Thanks to Obamacare, millions of Americans can visit a doctor's office and see what a print magazine actually looks like.
The publisher has told - you know, if these editors, Andres Martinez and Nick Goldberg, were the least bit honest about this, they would tell you the publisher has told them he wants the editorial page to be conservative.
I read the 'New York Times,' 'USA Today,' the 'Union-Tribune,' then go online to Drudge, CNN, Fox News, blogs.
A good newspaper, I suppose, is a nation talking to itself.
The Internet feeds off the main press, and the main press feeds off the Internet. They're working in tandem.
Thank you, World Screen, for regularly providing me with excellent articles on international media topics. For me, World Screen is an important means of information-well-structured and reader-oriented.
the chairman of Random House, Alberto Vitale, told a Wall Street Journal reporter about the new online bookselling sensation from the Pacific Northwest.
Rachel The Huffington Post
I get most of my news updates from electronic and social media.
Yahoo! has clearly established itself as the go-to destination for big events and breaking news, and we are focused on providing the best digital canvas for the world's greatest storytellers to create, develop and showcase their visions.
I am the one person who can truthfully say, I got my job through the New York Times.
You can always count on the New York Times to cut your legs off.
Don't read newspapers for the news (just for the gossip and, of course, profiles of authors). The best filter to know if the news matters is if you hear it in cafes, restaurants ... or (again) parties.
Never trust a journalist unless she's your mother.
The only gossip I'm interested in is things from the Weekly World News - 'Woman's bra bursts, 11 injured'. That kind of thing.
CNN has a thing called You Choose the News. Y'know what CNN? I'm turning you on because I don't know the news. I was hoping you could help me.
I know real people, whose names I could tell you, people I know who have said 'I've stopped buying the New York Times.' Why? Because their editorial position has filtered, has leached into the news pages.
I was in a state of perpetual disbelief. I would have thought that someone would have recognized what was coming before June 2007. If it really took that June remit data to cause a sudden realization, well, it makes me wonder what a 'Wall Street analyst' really does all day." By
A daily newspaper should report the news, not play at geopolitics.
Nowhere else can one find so miscellaneous, so various, an amount of knowledge as is contained in a good newspaper.
If you are a reliable, honest journalist, sources will open up and trust you and share good information.
plane. The headline read, najriad prince
Newspapers do a good job telling me what happened yesterday, but they'd be a lot more impressive if they could tell me what's going to happen tomorrow.
Invaluable ... the best one-stop source I've seen for what various officials actually said at various times, suffused with intelligent analysis.
There are hundreds of fine journalists who regularly inform us of what is happening in the world around us; and innumerable commentators who provide intelligent and objective insight on public policy matters.
Citizens in a democracy need diverse sources of news and information.
My comments are reserved for reputable journalists.
The newspapers, the magazines, television, and radio produce a commodity: news, from the raw material of events. Only news is salable, and the news media determine which events are news, which are not.
large numbers of reporters and
There has to be news at a place called Fox News.
Reporters thrive on the world's misfortune. For this reason they often take an indecent pleasure in events that dismay the rest of humanity.
China is so central to our economic lives that journalists have had no choice but to engage China with greater technical analysis and precision.
We are in a situation with the huge stimulus package that's going to be spent all across this nation and a big financial crisis and banking crisis. And what we need is good, trained journalists who can play the role of watchdog.
Nobody believes the official spokesman ... but everybody trusts an unidentified source.
The price of good journalism is eternal vigilance.
Today's gossip is tomorrow's headline.
While many people think that we as reporters are whining and that this is a time of war, we are really the conveyors of truth in a very critical time and people need to know that truth.
'The Daily News' and 'Post' gave me my life, and I want to see them survive.
All across America news organizations have been devoured by massive corporations, and allegiance to stockholders, the drive for higher share prices, and push for larger dividend returns trumps everything that the grunts in the newsrooms consider their missions.
Of all the reports that fly about the world, ill news is the surest of all to arrive!
Journalism is an act of faith in the future
Newspapers are the engines that drive the Web.
American newspaper?" "The Tribune, general." Dornberger
General Mills Editorial Director: Jeff Nowak Publishing
I like getting 'Times' articles online. But the actual paper just has too many words.
Our content carries the Forbes name, and our whole mantra is to put authoritative journalism at the center of the social media experience.
I've been intrigued by 'Le Monde' ever since work took me to Paris once, and I noted that on a day when there was some huge worldwide story, the paper led its front page on some cabinet changes in Turkey. It implied a magnificent disdain for the quotidian folderol of mere news.
I never understand why 'economist makes forecast' is ever a headline. Whether the economist in question is from the International Monetary Fund, a City forecasting group or the Treasury - a forecast is still not news.
If 'The New York Times' says it, it must be true.
Do not, oh do not indulge such a wild idea that a newspaper might err! If so what have we to trust in this age of sham?
Journalism can be lethal
You can never get all the facts from just one newspaper, and unless you have all the facts, you cannot make proper judgements about what is going on.
I get my news from selected Google News and my social feed.
An article can be timely, topical, engaged in the issues and personalities of the moment; it is likely to be stale within the month. In five years, it may have acquired the quaint aura of a rotary phone. An article is usually Siamese-twinned to its date of birth.
HarperCollins Publishers Inc.
The great thing about reading diverse news from the fields of business, health, science, technology, politics, and more is that you automatically see patterns in the world and develop mental hooks upon which you can hang future knowledge.
I used to be a journalist.
First reporter to broadcast live from the floor of the New York Stock Exchange.
Our stable and eternal verities are being challenged. There's a kind of postmodern breakdown in journalism. The breadth of information sources and the speed of transmission are growing; but the traditional gravity of news has eroded. -Jin Yongquan
God - if the press ever quoted anyone correctly, it would be brilliant.
I believe that the BBC, in spite of the stupidity of its foreign propaganda and the unbearable voices of its announcers, is very truthful. It is generally regarded here as more reliable than the press.
You're not buying news when you buy The New York Times. You're buying judgment.
Michael, don't you know by now that my grandmother and Uncle Alfred are the largest private shareholders of Singapore Press Holdings? We're not going to be in the papers. We're never going to be in the papers.
war correspondent
Columnists must make sure that when they describe an event, they are being accurate in their description. When they quote someone, they are required to do so accurately. Errors that are made must be corrected openly and quickly.
When I was counsel for the Senate Rackets Committee, about 25% of the important leads which our committee developed came from newspapers. This increased my respect for those courageous newspapers which assisted us. It also caused me to look with wonderment at some of the newspapers that did not.
In 1981, Ms. Ebtekar was made editor-in-chief of the English-language newspaper 'Kayhan International.' The man who gave her the job was Mr. Khatami, who was then head of the Kayhan publishing house.
I don't read all the newspapers.
We journalists are a bit like vultures, feasting on war, scandal and disaster. Turn on the news, and you see Syrian refugees, Volkswagen corruption, dysfunctional government. Yet that reflects a selection bias in how we report the news: We cover planes that crash, not planes that take off.
Looking to advance in journalism, one future editor displayed skilled as varied as economic analysis and humorous commentary.
A newspaper, not having to act on its descriptions and reports, but only to sell them to idly curious people, has nothing but honor to lose by inaccuracy and non-veracity.
Nowadays, truth is the greatest news. The mass media are the wholesalers, the peer groups, the retailers of the communications industry.
You read the papers and you watch television, so you know the kind of spider-brained, commercially poisoned piece-of-crap reporting you get in America.