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hard news

NOUN
  1. news that deals with serious topics or events

How To Use hard news In A Sentence

  • You said that you've become identified, almost trapped as a hard news or political photographer.
  • He bemoans the loss of hard news in colour supplements to the worlds of advertising and fashion. Times, Sunday Times
  • They're going to have to, I hate to use the word soften but it can't be a hard, hard news cast. CNN Transcript Apr 8, 2006
  • It doesn't have the same kind of hard news value that required the networks to give it three hours of gavel-to-gavel coverage.
  • The myth is that ragged-right type implies ‘soft’ or feature material, while justified type represents serious hard news.
  • TV news programs seem to be more interested in gossip than in hard news.
  • He bemoans the loss of hard news in colour supplements to the worlds of advertising and fashion. Times, Sunday Times
  • And, despite your distortions of the truth, once again, Boingboing has never claimed they are a source for hard news on their blog.
  • The kinds of stories that go on the front page of newspapers are hard news.
  • Hard news stories demand a straight summary, like this headline from The Zimbabwe Independent newspaper, "Smugglers Dent Zimbabwe's Gold Production.
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