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producers

n. (plural of producer English)

Usage examples of "producers".

It was a tradition that producers, correspondents and editors working in the field polished and repolished their pieces until the last possible moment, so that most came in during the half hour before the broadcast and some after the broadcast had begun.

The reason was that it had been a busy day at the Dallas bureau, with all camera crews, field producers and correspondents out on assignment, and by sheer bad luck all of the assignments were a long way from the airport.

Although Karl Owens had talked on Friday with Latin American contacts, as far as Partridge could tell there was no overlapping-a fact not surprising since producers as well as correspondents cultivated their own sources and, once they had them, kept them to themselves.

Correspondents and producers around the world had contributed ideas, received instructions and responded.

Along the The Evening News 17 way she had badgered senior producers into giving her some of the tough foreign assignments which almost always went to men.

He became a favorite with the New York Horseshoe producers and was frequently on the evening news, sometimes three or four times a week, which was how a correspondent built up a following, not only among viewers but with senior decision makers at CBA headquarters.

At first senior Horseshoe producers queried those reports and The Evening News 41 wanted to delay them.

One floor above the newsroom, senior producers at the Horseshoe paused to listen.

Two other offices, already jammed with desks, would be shared by the additional producers, camera crews and support staff, some of whom were already moving in.

But it was a signal, which would be understood by fellow producers at the Horseshoe, that she wanted wide circulation.

The producers thought it would be instructive to explore how easily a faith-healer or guru could be created to bamboozle the public and the media.

Most reporters, editors and producers, swept up with the rest of us, will shy away from real sceptical scrutiny.

But owners of networks and television producers have children and grandchildren about whose future they rightly worry.

A set of inexpensive televised debates, each perhaps an hour long, with a computer graphics budget for each side provided by the producers, rigorous standards of evidence required by the moderator, and the widest range of topics broached.