Newman's second law: Just when things look darkest, they go black.
‐‐ Paul Newman
Newport Center has become a Mediterranean town. The climate here is the same as the Mediterranean's, and so is the architecture. This center exudes a radiance, an energy. It will become a special way of life for everyone.
‐‐ Donald Bren
News, after all, is a spin of words and pictures. It's a kind of music. There are beats in a newscast, a newspaper story. Ed Murrow sounded like Ed Murrow. Huntley and Brinkley sounded different. Anderson Cooper, different still.
‐‐ Robert Krulwich
News and images move so easily across borders that attitudes and aspirations are no longer especially national. Cyber-weapons, no longer the exclusive province of national governments, can originate in a hacker's garage.
‐‐ Robert Reich
News, by and large, has been the purest of all the television mediums, or at least we've tried to keep it that way, and there constantly is the argument about the separation between church and state.
‐‐ Leslie Moonves
News channels have always had interview shows, but we need different kinds of interviews with different kinds of interviewers - interviewers who bring different life experiences to the table.
‐‐ George Stroumboulopoulos
News conferences are the only chance the American public has to see Ronald Reagan use his mind.
‐‐ Sam Donaldson
News events are like Texas weather. If you don't like it, wait a minute.
‐‐ Jessica Savitch
News events cannot be controlled, nor can newscasts be mapped out like entertainment shows.
‐‐ Jessica Savitch
News has become entertainment. Once that happens, a whole series of horrific events start to happen, whether it's the lack of dissemination of something that can inform you or something that actually negatively impacts society.
‐‐ Dan Gilroy
News, if unreported, has no impact. It might as well have not happened at all.
‐‐ Gay Talese
News in printed form is in secular decline. However, news delivered the way consumers want it is growing and thriving.
‐‐ Gracia Martore
News is important information that may influence your investments. Noise is talk or buzz or some headline that prevents you from seeing a story clearly. News is useful. Noise is a distraction. Calling what's noise and news after the fact is easy.
‐‐ Maria Bartiromo
News is so often a report of conflict, an account of problems, a thing of the day and even of the minute, that sometimes I think we make the background darker and the shadows deeper than they actually are.
‐‐ Arthur Hays Sulzberger
News is something that happens that matters to you, which is not most of what we watch on television.
‐‐ Val Kilmer
News is the best drama on television because it's real.
‐‐ Deborah Turness
News is virtual now. It is not 24-hour news cycles; it is instant news cycles. It is live. News is live all the time, around the clock.
‐‐ Mark McKinnon
News is what a chap who doesn't care much about anything wants to read. And it's only news until he's read it. After that it's dead.
‐‐ Evelyn Waugh
News is what somebody somewhere wants to suppress; all the rest is advertising.
‐‐ Lord Northcliffe
News isn't even the truth on television.
‐‐ Val Kilmer
News, news, news - that is what we want. You cannot beat news in a newspaper.
‐‐ Arthur Christiansen
News organisations that have been around a while have a lot of traditions and ways of doing things that may have served them for many years but perhaps make them less flexible in the digital era. As an entrepreneur, it just makes more sense to start something new.
‐‐ Pierre Omidyar
News reporting is a cycle: No matter how much you work at sending a message, it's only successful if it's received.
‐‐ Jessica Savitch
News reports don't change the world. Only facts change it, and those have already happened when we get the news.
‐‐ Friedrich Durrenmatt
News reports don't look at the land that existed before a war and the land that exists after a war. Reporting on war is a snapshot in time.
‐‐ Abigail Disney
News represents another form of advertising, not liberal propaganda.
‐‐ Christopher Lasch
News seems to travel far more quickly on Twitter and Facebook than through search.
‐‐ Marvin Ammori
News writing and sports writing have become synonymous. And it started with, you know, free agency, and now it's in the concussion debate.
‐‐ Jane Leavy
Newscasters cannot call attention to themselves by being too attractive or too unattractive.
‐‐ Jessica Savitch
Newsflash for any of the current, past or future Survivors out there... when you contemplate strategizing about the other team, the best idea is to shut up and keep it to yourself. You're welcome; this bill is in the mail.
‐‐ Jenna Morasca
'NewsHour' is very interested in poetry, but they're also interested in not just that something's cute to add on at the end of their programming, but something that actually is integrated into the news.
‐‐ Natasha Trethewey
'Newsies' is definitely aerobic! The boys have to do a lot more than I do in the show, but for 'King of New York,' the big Act Two tap number, I have to be warmed up or I will hurt myself.
‐‐ Kara Lindsay
'Newsmax' lets me work with other media.
‐‐ Ronald Kessler
Newspaper companies are losing advertisers, readers, market value, and, in some cases, their sense of mission at a pace that would have been barely imaginable just four years ago.
‐‐ Eric Alterman
Newspaper editors are men who separate the wheat from the chaff, and then print the chaff.
‐‐ Adlai E. Stevenson
Newspaper men, perhaps more than any other class, are rated by ability.
‐‐ Franklin Knight Lane
Newspaper people, once celebrated as founts of ribald humor and uncouth fun, have of late lost all their gaiety, and small wonder.
‐‐ Russell Baker
Newspaper readership is declining like crazy. In fact, there's a good chance that nobody is reading my column.
‐‐ Dave Barry
Newspaper readership is still growing in India.
‐‐ Bill Gates
Newspaper reporting is really storytelling. We call our articles 'stories,' and we try to tell them in a way that even people who don't know all the background can understand them.
‐‐ Serge Schmemann
Newspapermen ask dumb questions. They look up at the sun and ask if it is shining.
‐‐ Sonny Liston
Newspapers across the country and the world have published cartoons that have gone beyond reasonable differences of opinion and expanded into the realm of antisemitism.
‐‐ Gordon Smith
Newspapers always excite curiosity. No one ever puts one down without the feeling of disappointment.
‐‐ Charles Lamb
Newspapers and magazines are vanishing. But science writers are not. In fact, they are becoming so adept and varied that I hardly have time to read 'Gawker' anymore.
‐‐ Michael Specter
Newspapers and magazines didn't want pictures of musicians behaving badly back then. Now, because of the Internet, that's all the media wants.
‐‐ Mick Rock
Newspapers and magazines have been valuable to us precisely because they apply filters to information, otherwise known as editing, and often the Internet seems valuable for exactly the opposite reason: You can get your news without a filter.
‐‐ Michael Specter
Newspapers and their editors have to become as accountable as the rest of us - they are not 'a special case,' and they have only themselves to blame for having lost the argument for 'exceptionalism' - and with it the right to 'self-regulation.'
‐‐ David Puttnam
Newspapers are busily experimenting with different models. Traditionally, and I suspect in hindsight very mistakenly, online news was free. And once given free access readers felt it was their entitlement.
‐‐ Malcolm Turnbull