If you are a reliable, honest journalist, sources will open up and trust you and share good information.
Well, I don't know how astute I am, but I did want to be a journalist when I was growing up.
A good journalist is modest; his only job is simple: to decide what counts as news.
While I am not a journalist, I have, myself, written more than one thing that has been plagiarized in the past.
The training of a journalist, of working with words for thousands of hours, is extraordinarily useful for a fiction writer.
For a journalist who covers the Muslim world, we have responsibilities to be familiar with that culture and to know how to respond to that.
As long as a journalist shows fairness and honesty in his or her work, their private life shouldn't matter.
I think if you look at the failure of journalism in the modern age, then I don't want to be called a journalist.
Now I'm doing a film festival for kids and writing a script about a kidnapped journalist in Afghanistan.
I'm a working journalist. I'm interested in all points of view, and I draw conclusions based on facts, not just on opinions.
A Hamas terrorist, a UN aid worker and a journalist walked into a Gaza hookah bar. And no one could tell who was who.
Anyone who thinks that you become a journalist or broadcaster in order to be a wallflower needs to think again.
I realise that, strutting around in power corridors for political coverage, a journalist becomes half a politician.
Here is a very inexpensive costume idea. Wear a re-elect Obama button and go out as a journalist.
I am an old journalist, so I always do a lot of research and dive deep into people's character, who they are, and their motivation.
I'm a journalist and author. I make my living by finding things out and writing about them.
I am not a new journalist, whatever that is. I just sit here at the typewriter and bang away at the old forms.
I'm trying to grow more as a journalist and understand the story I'm photographing in order to communicate it in a better way.
I'm a terrible interviewer. I'm not a journalist - although I have a Peabody Award - and I'm not really a late-night host. What I am is honest.
Everyone with an iPhone is a journalist in their own way now, especially because we live in a tabloid culture.
Censorship is un-American, and it's egregious that any journalist would advocate for others to be banned for political speech.
I await the hour when a journalist can be driven from the press room for venal practices, as a minister can be unfrocked, or a lawyer disbarred.
I'm an entertainer. Not a journalist or spokesman for anybody. Truth is, a lot of my listeners absolutely hate what I have to say.
It might sound glib, but in a sense, as an actor I'm a journalist and a psychologist recording life and truth.
As a journalist, I'm not supposed to be the subject, but as an author, I'm fair game - another ingredient in the media soup.
Most writers I know go for word counts, and I used to be a journalist, so I guess that's ingrained.
As a journalist, you sort of grind away, taking rejections as they come, building on whatever advances you've achieved.
The journalist should be on his guard against publishing what is false in taste or exceptionable in morals.
I am sensitive to the value of faith and religion and spirituality in people's lives because I'm a journalist.
As a journalist, I know what it is like to incur the self-righteous wrath of people who denounce you for things you didn't say or didn't mean.
It's probably the journalist in me, but I'm naturally suspicious about consensus and always feel an impulse to confront it.
The journalist must do his work in a kind of deliberately induced state of moral anarchy.
It's not unusual for me to find that I'm the only female journalist of color in the front row during some of the briefings.
As a professional journalist, I am always looking for new ways to get paid for being motionless.
The journalist confines himself to the clean, gentlemanly work of exposing the griefs and shames of others.
I've never had any interest at all in being a journalist or writing some sort of historically accurate autobiography.
I'm Harvard-educated; I'm an economist by training. I'm an author, a journalist, as well as being active in community development.
I was a freelance journalist, and it was a struggle because I had to pitch all the time, research, and stay on top of subjects.
I trained as a journalist in America where paying sources is frowned upon. Now I work in the U.K. where there is a more flexible attitude.
I'm here as a radio journalist but am not even sure which part of a tape recorder takes the pictures.
No journalist knows the ins and outs of the Allman Brothers Band better than Alan Paul.
At 26, I was single, living in Manhattan, and working as a journalist at 'Vanity Fair.' I was Carrie Bradshaw... in sensible shoes.
I think you get into trouble as an author and a journalist when, rather than owning the gaps, you try to elide them.
Journalism without a moral position is impossible. Every journalist is a moralist. It's absolutely unavoidable.
I wanted to go to college to be a journalist and follow in my dad's work. And then I became an actor.
Since becoming a journalist, each time I engage with subjects I become more radicalized.
I'm not an advocacy journalist - that's not what I do. My role in journalism is to be able to engage the most interesting people with the best ideas.
As much as I'm not a journalist, I use journalism. And when you photograph a relationship, it's quite wonderful to let something unfold in front of you.
I think I was able to endure risks not because I was ambitious about great stories but I was curious as a journalist.
I chose to write from different perspectives despite its complexity because it is what I have always done as a journalist.
I come to the table from a conservative or libertarian point of view, and I admit that. I'm a commentator. I'm not a journalist or anything else.
It might sound glib, but in a sense, as an actor Im a journalist and a psychologist recording life and truth.
If I wasn't going to be a world-famous journalist and if I didn't have such respect for truth and justice, I could be an amazing master criminal.
I'm baffled that Mark Greenberg would send an offensive email politicizing the beheading of an American journalist.
I was a political journalist for a long time. I wrote a book about Putin. I made all kinds of trouble.
I've always called myself a journalist who happens to draw. If I wasn't drawing cartoons, I'd be writing stories.
Having been a journalist for thirty-nine years, I've developed a pretty thick skin.
To me, that's the foundational fact of my identity is that I'm a journalist and so it's hard to imagine putting anything else first.
I am a very conservative journalist and prefer to write about what happened, and not what will happen.
Journalist: 'Have you received any death threats?' Harry Redknapp: 'Only from the wife when I didn't do the washing up!'.
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