Journalists are supposed to be skeptical, that's what keeps them digging rather than simply accepting the official line, whether it comes from government or corporate bureaucrats.
‐‐ Linda Chavez
Journalists are supposed to put the people first, even before themselves. Around the world and throughout history, journalists have died to get the truth out.
‐‐ Michael Arrington
Journalists are usually quite jealous people, especially of intellectuals who are supposed to be in fashion.
‐‐ Vivienne Westwood
Journalists aren't supposed to be cheerleaders.
‐‐ Eric Schlosser
Journalists ask me all the time, 'Akshay, do you believe in the numbers game?' My standard response: 'I can't count, that's why I have producers and accountants who calculate for me. As long as I have them in my life, I don't need to worry about numbers!'
‐‐ Akshay Kumar
Journalists ask me, 'Why don't you ever talk about sex in your performances?' True, I don't talk about sex - not in my personal life and not in my professional life. This is modesty.
‐‐ Gad Elmaleh
Journalists can get very pompous, especially in the formalized days of 'Meet the Press,' when they took themselves so damned seriously.
‐‐ John McLaughlin
Journalists constantly ask Metallica if the success of their new album means they've had 'the call' to record a Zeppelin cover album yet.
‐‐ Antony Johnston
Journalists couldn't do their jobs overseas without taking risks, and the same is true for diplomats and intelligence officers.
‐‐ David Ignatius
Journalists dedicate their lives to covering war - they make many personal sacrifices, and it's not something that's gender-based. In a place like Libya where there's heavy fighting, it doesn't matter if you're a man or a woman.
‐‐ Lynsey Addario
Journalists do not like to report on uncertainties. They would almost rather be wrong than ambiguous.
‐‐ Melvin Maddocks
Journalists do not live by words alone, although sometimes they have to eat them.
‐‐ Adlai E. Stevenson
Journalists don't have audiences - they have publics who can respond instantly and globally, positively or negatively, with a great deal more power than the traditional letters to the editor could wield.
‐‐ Howard Rheingold
Journalists, especially English journalists, were very cruel to me. They said I only knew three chords when I knew five!
‐‐ Leonard Cohen
Journalists have always written that my mum said that I punched a hole through my cot when I was three years old. I don't remember doing that, and I think it was more that I was very energetic.
‐‐ Frank Bruno
Journalists have made celebrities into an industry.
‐‐ Stefanie Powers
Journalists have misquoted people for so long - and quoted them out of context that for many people like to have their words on record.
‐‐ Jason Calacanis
Journalists have sometimes looked to my Twitter account and quoted me from there, and that's fine because that's public domain. I know exactly what I'm doing when I post something on Twitter; in a way, it's saying, 'This is who I am, and I don't have anything to hide.'
‐‐ Samuel Barnett
Journalists hold themselves apart, and above, the common person. They have rules designed to ensure their objectivity and impartiality.
‐‐ Michael Arrington
Journalists immediately think of me as a resource for a quote or comment because they know that I will be available to offer fresh insight and meet their deadlines.
‐‐ Marc Benioff
Journalists in newspapers and in many magazines are not permitted to be subjective and tell their readers what they think. Journalists have got to follow a very strict formulaic line, and here we come, these non-fiction writers, these former journalists who are using all the techniques that journalists are pretty much not allowed to use.
‐‐ Lee Gutkind
Journalists like to say I started off sweeping the pottery floors. But it was just a short-lived part time job doing that after I left school.
‐‐ John Caudwell
Journalists must not be made accomplices by the secret service to solve its own problems.
‐‐ Hubert Burda
Journalists never make it clear when you are joking.
‐‐ David Bailey
Journalists often ask me when I go to the field, 'What do you expect to find?' And my answer always is, 'The unexpected,' because we're just looking at the tip of the iceberg; we've just scratched the surface.
‐‐ Donald Johanson
Journalists prize independence - not teamwork.
‐‐ Ken Auletta
Journalists say a thing that they know isn't true, in the hope that if they keep on saying it long enough it will be true.
‐‐ Arnold Bennett
Journalists seem mostly interested in what brand of shoes I wear.
‐‐ Rem Koolhaas
Journalists should denounce government by public opinion polls.
‐‐ Dan Rather
Journalists should have been the first to tell people what Obamacare would mean to them. They are now the last to figure all of this out.
‐‐ Rush Limbaugh
Journalists should think of themselves as outside the Establishment, and owners can't be too worried about what they're told at their country clubs.
‐‐ Rupert Murdoch
Journalists told me that a talk show wouldn't work. Some told me I was going to get canceled before my first season was up.
‐‐ Tyra Banks
Journalists were at the forefront. From the Civil War until the early 1900s, nothing was being done to solve the problems of the Industrial Age.
‐‐ Doris Kearns Goodwin
Journalists who are devoted to strictly factual reporting take particular pleasure from satirical news outlets that have the liberty to laugh and even mock the hypocrisy that reporters and editors must simply observe without comment.
‐‐ Tom Rachman
Journalists, who are skeptical to begin with, simply do not like to be lied to or made fools of.
‐‐ Roger Mudd
Journalists write because they have nothing to say, and have something to say because they write.
‐‐ Karl Kraus
Journey with me to a true commitment to our environment. Journey with me to the serenity of leaving to our children a planet in equilibrium.
‐‐ Paul Tsongas
Journeys, like artists, are born and not made. A thousand differing circumstances contribute to them, few of them willed or determined by the will-whatever we may think.
‐‐ Lawrence Durrell
Joy acts like a trampoline, everything that touches it bouncing right back off it.
‐‐ Mariella Frostrup
Joy always came after pain.
‐‐ Guillaume Apollinaire
Joy can only be real if people look upon their life as a service and have a definite object in life outside themselves and their personal happiness.
‐‐ Leo Tolstoy
Joy comes from places you least expect it. It's usually the simple things, like watching my son play basketball or going through Central Park when the blossoms are blooming.
‐‐ Dave Gahan
Joy comes, grief goes, we know not how.
‐‐ James Russell Lowell
Joy descends gently upon us like the evening dew, and does not patter down like a hailstorm.
‐‐ Jean Paul
Joy Division finished the 1970s on a high. Our debut album, 'Unknown Pleasures,' was doing well; we'd just finished a hugely enjoyable and successful tour. The band's profile was higher than it had ever been, and it seemed to be growing by the day.
‐‐ Bernard Sumner
Joy Division sounded like Manchester: cold, sparse and, at times, bleak.
‐‐ Bernard Sumner
Joy doesn't betray but sustains activism. And when you face a politics that aspires to make you fearful, alienated and isolated, joy is a fine initial act of insurrection.
‐‐ Rebecca Solnit
Joy, feeling one's own value, being appreciated and loved by others, feeling useful and capable of production are all factors of enormous value for the human soul.
‐‐ Maria Montessori
Joy, has no cost.
‐‐ Marianne Williamson