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publicist

[ US /ˈpəbɫɪsɪst/ ]
[ UK /pˈʌblɪsˌɪst/ ]
NOUN
  1. someone who publicizes

How To Use publicist In A Sentence

  • That delights the band's publicist who has been telling us that this is a return to the era when album launches were hyper-expensive, orgiastic affairs that lasted all day and are still remembered.
  • Like many vainglorious self-publicists, he probably thought he could charm the acid interviewer.
  • Sulkily, the publicist moves to the back of the bar but Sinclair is still scowling.
  • He has also been accused of being a shameless self-publicist, boring, inarticulate and lucky.
  • We would share stories of mistaken identity, confused publicists and editors, odd coincidences and connections.
  • Let me say that again, because I know about 72,000 publicists just plotzed because they have no idea what to do other than ask for a review. Amy Hertz: Dear Publishing Colleagues
  • Yup, publicist Howard Bragman (who helped scootch Chaz Bono and Meredith Baxter into the light of gay) is allegedly prepared to shoo a big-time Somebody into the homosphere, and we have no idea who it is. Queer Sighted
  • In an age where publicists' hype tells us more than we want to know about mediocre writers, Coetzee rarely gives interviews.
  • His instinct was that of the adept publicist, and his interventions showed considerable journalistic flair. THE CURIOUS LIFE OF ROBERT HOOKE: The Man who Measured London
  • There seems to be this misconception that she's a rampant self-publicist: the evidence I've encountered suggests precisely the opposite.
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