Top 589 Reporting Quotes & Sayings

Explore popular Reporting quotes.
Last updated on December 21, 2024.
I'm convinced you can combine this with reporting integrity and accuracy.
I am not reporting things about people. I am reporting things about practices.
I think the main goal of the feminist movement was the status degradation of the full-time homemaker. They really wanted to get all women out of the homes and into the workforce. And again and again, they taught that the only fulfilling lifestyle was to be in the workforce reporting to a boss instead of being in the home reporting to a husband.
I'm reporting on a world at war. — © Brooke Baldwin
I'm reporting on a world at war.
I never thought I had the ability to not watch. People think I watch MSNBC's "Morning Joe." I don't watch "Morning Joe." I never thought I had the ability to, and who used to treat me great by the way, when I played the game. I never thought I had the ability to not watch what is unpleasant, if it's about me. Or pleasant. But when I see it's such false reporting and such bad reporting and false reporting that I've developed an ability that I never thought I had. I don't watch things that are unpleasant. I just don't watch them.
Reporting in general makes me pretty nervous. But I realized: all the amazing work experiences of my life were thanks to reporting. So that forces you to go do it.
I knew my reporting would be validated eventually.
In a world where companies increasingly know about their business in real time, it makes no sense that public reporting mostly follows the old quarterly schedule. Companies sit on vital information until reporting day, at which point the market goes crazy.
Am I accurately reporting what I see in such a blossom? The answer is no ... and yes.
Being on a book tour is a lot easier than reporting.
I don't see the value of boringly reporting the cold facts.
I broke into comics by working as a press reporter for the industry, for a trade press in comics, and reporting on events and reporting on books and so forth, and I got to know some of the editors at DC Comics in the mid-'80s.
We need a universally accepted definition of reserves reporting.
So many reporters have blurred the line between reporting and editorializing. — © Andrew R. Wheeler
So many reporters have blurred the line between reporting and editorializing.
There is no joy so great as that of reporting that a good play has come to town.
If you have managers reporting to managers in a startup, you will fail. Once you get beyond startup, if you have managers reporting to managers, you will create politics.
What is originality? It is being one's self, and reporting accurately what we see and are.
Reporting makes you a better anchor and vice versa.
We were doing sports. It was entertainment. It wasn't like it was investigative reporting.
I don't think journalism changes. It's about digging into stories and telling them well. The basic tenets of great reporting stay the same while things around it change. Technology has made reporting easier, but it has also caused job loss. Social media has increased discussion around topics, but it has its own challenges at times.
I enjoy reporting on triumph over tragedy.
The credit reporting system suffers from inaccuracy and often from outright injustice.
I think it's just about the machine is about reporting the news, and then reporting the news about the news, and then having those moments where they sit around and go, "Are we reporting the news correctly? I think we are." And then they go back to the and the cycle just sort of continues.
When you think about Twitter, there are people all around the world reporting twenty-four seven, every second. They're reporting what they're seeing and what's happening around them. So there's a lot of potential for breaking news.
What I don't understand is how a policy against outing trumps a policy of reporting. Whenever you're reporting on hypocrisy, you're kind of 'outing' something to begin with.
I spent a long time reporting on trans issues, and I know in the course of that reporting I saw how deeply adversity runs.
The reporting has always been what drives me.
Media bias in editorials and columns is one thing. Media fraud in reporting 'facts' in news stories is something else. ...The issue is not what various journalists or news organizations' editorial views are. The issue is the transformation of news reporting into ideological spin, along with self-serving taboos and outright fraud.
What happens when I'm dealing with the problems in North Korea and the Middle East? Are you folks going to be reporting all that very, very confidential information, very important, very - you know, at the highest level? Are you going to be reporting about that, too? So I don't want classified information getting out into the public in a way that was almost a test.
The President is going to benefit from me reporting directly to him when I arrive.
The truth is the committed left press in America is not longer interest in reporting the news. Anything that hinders a favorable view of the far left will be ignored; anything that advances liberal causes will be celebrated. News reporting today is largely about ideology and shaping the culture, not about informing the public.
In this very uncertain time for the media, serious investigative reporting - the expensive, time-consuming stuff - is under enormous pressure at newspapers and other commercial news organizations. Non-profits such as the Center for Public Integrity are taking on this vital work and without them the prospects for investigative reporting would be even more dire. The Center has been properly celebrated for its careful, rigorous work, and to my mind it has now ascended to the status of national treasure.
This is reporting the way I like it... in the field, gritty and aggressive.
I would love to be able to get along with Russia. Now, you've had a lot of presidents that haven't taken that tack. Look where we are now. Look where we are now. So, if I can - now, I love to negotiate things, I do it really well, and all that stuff. But - but it's possible I won't be able to get along with Putin. Maybe it is. But I want to just tell you, the false reporting by the media, by you people, the false, horrible, fake reporting makes it much harder to make a deal with Russia.
Journalism today is obviously in a major transition. Going to journalism school, learning how to write, working your way up in a little paper in Decatur, Georgia and then moving to Atlanta and then maybe to New York: it's just over. You have to have a whole other set of skills now. You have to be a videographer, you have to do social media. You can't do a long, thoughtful, insightful piece if you don't have the time to do reporting, particularly reporting around somebody who doesn't want to be known or an issue that doesn't want to reveal itself.
I've tried to be a straight scientist doing the science and reporting it as best I can.
As long as I have my health, I want to be reporting somewhere.
Rawhide Down is full of spectacular, original reporting.
I try to come to my reporting as a real, whole person, not an automaton. — © Sarah Stillman
I try to come to my reporting as a real, whole person, not an automaton.
I have absolutely no interest in the tabloids or reporting of the royal family.
I have no people reporting to me and don't expect to. My competency is in the tech realm.
The most important thing is that there is clear reporting structure and everyone knows what it is.
The reporting of news has to be understood as propaganda for commodities, and events by images.
The corruption in reporting starts very early. It's like the police reporting on the police.
Investigative journalism and reporting has become much more dangerous. This is especially true for journalists and sources in National Security - but it has been getting pretty bad for beat reporters and small outlets doing local reporting, too.
Good reporting is good reporting, regardless of the newness or oldness of the medium.
I'm in the reporting part of journalism.
I love reporting stories that the Complex refuses to report.
I'm sometimes embarrassed by how clinical I can become when I'm out reporting. — © Nicholas Kristof
I'm sometimes embarrassed by how clinical I can become when I'm out reporting.
Reporting the consensus about climate change ... is not synonymous with good science reporting. The BBC is at an important point. It has been narrow minded about climate change for many years and they have become at the very least a cliché and at worst lampooned as being predictable and biased by a public that doesn't believe them anymore.
Language is not simply a reporting device for experience but a defining framework for it.
'Business Week' is guilty of very shoddy reporting.
I'm John Kerry, and I'm reporting for duty.
The US is often the first to call for transparency and integrity in the reporting of other governments. It has never provided transparency or integrity in its reporting on the war in Iraq. It has downplayed the growth of the insurgency and other civil conflicts. It exaggerated progress in the development of Iraqi forces, and has reported meaningless macroecomic figures claiming 'progress' in the face of steadily deteriorating economic conditions for most Iraqis outside the Kurdish security zone, and does so in the face of almost incredible incompetence by USAID and the Corps of Engineers.
The U.S. media have done a shameful job of reporting on the Arab world.
My reporting in Africa wouldn't be political per se, but it's certainly the point of my reporting - and of a lot of other reporters I know: Human suffering is bad, and if reporting stories about it brings it to light and someone does something, that's part of the point of journalism. And it's a thin line between that and activism, and you have to be careful about that.
My point is Trump is Trump. He's the same guy wherever he is. But the reporting on him on Middle East trip is nowhere near like the reporting on Trump when he's in Washington. There aren't any leaks. For example, we haven't yet seen a story quoting unnamed sources in the Saudi government saying that the king was profoundly embarrassed when Trump asked if there was a McDonald's nearby.
Americans deserve journalists who provide responsible, objective reporting.
The false reporting by the media, the false, horrible, fake reporting makes it much harder to make a deal with Russia, and probably [Vladimir] Putin said, he's sitting behind his desk a and he's saying, you know, I see what's going on in the United States, I follow it closely, it's going to be impossible for President [Donald] Trump to ever get along with Russia because of all the pressure he's got with this fake story.
Manage by exception.Only require reporting when there is a deviation from the plan.
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