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People who make the news?
Answer for the clue "People who make the news? ", 9 letters:
reporters
Alternative clues for the word reporters
Word definitions for reporters in dictionaries
Wikipedia
Word definitions in Wikipedia
Reporters is a weekly analytical programme shown on BBC News , during BBC Breakfast on BBC One and BBC World News . The programme features a presenter linking a number of BBC news reports from the past week or highlighting a topic or a series of reports ...
Wiktionary
Word definitions in Wiktionary
n. (plural of reporter English)
Usage examples of reporters.
Veteran reporters had suddenly become uneasy, checking their credits, reviewing their work and comparing it to Rhy's direct, slashing style of reporting.
The old Pony Express advertised for riders who were orphans and had no family ties, and I sometimes think that should hold true for reporters, too.
As far as I'm concerned you're not one of my best reporters now, you're his wife.
She would have thought the female reporters, at least, would be all over Chance, but he'd worn such a forbidding expression that no one had approached him.
Tabloid reporters have often tried to get information by claiming to be with various police departments.
The reporters wanted juicy, gory, frightening details, and were frustrated when none were forthcoming.
The house was crawling with policemen, and the neighborhood was crawling with reporters, who ignored the light rain in favor of getting comments from anyone who would talk to them.
I’ll try to calm the reporters down, but I can’t say much until we actually charge the guy, so they won’t believe me.
The guy can’t get to me if a hundred reporters and photographers are camped on the front yard.
The hospital had been a zoo, with cops everywhere and reporters fighting to get in to talk to Marlie, and Dane had been totally unable to cope with it.
The reporters will probably play up the lover angle, make it sound like some sort of lovers' quarrel.
The three reporters were spaced far enough apart that they didn't intrude on each other's shots, and they were talking earnestly into their microphones.
No more reporters should be bothering to call, since Marci had given them their story, but considering the timing, the call was probably from someone who knew her and had just heard her name on television and wanted to talk to her, as if her fifteen minutes of dubious fame could somehow rub off on him/her by association.
It was a miracle the reporters hadn't heard her and Sam talking in the garage.
Certainly she and Sam had been so engrossed in their own conversation they hadn't heard the reporters arrive.