NOUN
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a program during which well-known people discuss a topic or answer questions telephoned in by the audience
in England they call a talk show a chat show
How To Use talk show In A Sentence
- He was the host for a TV talk show.
- Being a conservative talk show host is a logical extension of his upbringing, notes Pendleton.
- So, much as I’m weary of western politicians who couldn’t tell the Ka’ba from a peach cobbler going on about how extremists are “perverting” Islam — how the hell do they know? — this article, which got its author suspended from his radio talk show hosting job for its claim that “Islam is a terror organization,” is truly, profoundly stupid. Excommunicated from the Ummah?
- Of course, a healthy dose of petulance is is one of the hallmarks of polemics (to say nothing of talk show hosts), right? "That's one of the things that really bugs me about religion."
- Stephen Colbert, the host of the parody talk show “The Colbert Report, ” urged his fans to vote for naming the station segment after him, and they did in large numbers.
- This surprise declaration was so stunning that local New York television stations broke into their regular broadcasts of soaps and talk shows.
- It is the perfect fodder for talk show host fulmination. Guess who isn't getting laid off (Jack Bog's Blog)
- Moveable type may have changed our world, as did radio and television and 24-hour newscasts and talk shows.
- AP - A federal judge has dismissed a lawsuit filed by conservative radio talk show host Michael Savage against an Islamic civil rights group over its use of a portion of his show in which he called the Quran a "book of hate. Undefined
- As it is, one has to read through it to find the good stuff, which is not a thrilling prospect, notwithstanding the fact that much worthwhile material is here, though one should take it in small quantities: mithridatism The act of taking poison in increasing doses as a means of building an immunity to it, as in the case of people who start out with talk shows and gradually work their way up to situation comedies. VERBATIM: The Language Quarterly Vol XI No 2