Media
the media (noun) - newspapers, television, the internet, radio, magazines
broadcast media
mass media
news media
print media
visual media
the mainstream media
the new media
electronic media
national media
local media
foreign media
the international media
handling his encounters with the international media
a media event
media productions
media attention
media bias
her media image
media coverage of the event
covered by the media
a media blackout
a media mogul
a media group
media awareness
access to the media
media access
media freedom
control the media
inform the media
media's agenda
women's alternative media
the growth of women's alternative media
prominent in the media
media reporting on an issue
media outrage
outrage at the media
commentaries on the mass media
the media blasted the tourist industry
use the communications media for the glory of God
media diatribes
media influence
media brainwashing
spray press releases at the local media with mad abandon
how gently the media handled the issue
arguments that resonated through the media
the regional media
get your media relations programme worked out
plenty of facts available about media audiences
confiding to the nation's media
a media industry newsletter
Example sentences:
* I am fed up with the media blasting Kenya's tourist industry.
* Colleagues and the Italian media are outraged at the ethics of the latest case.
* We believe that mass media and other forms of communication must contribute to peace, justice and understanding.
* She also gets involved in occasional interviews and media productions.
* The owners of Land's End are experts at the game and my friend Des Hannigan, who's been working as a journalist down there for a few years, tells me they spray press releases at the local media with mad abandon.
* There are plenty of facts available about media audiences.
* Even when the story was out of the national news, the regional media, now well connected to useful sources, kept it rolling.
* Once you have an outline of your media relations programme worked out, and preferably written down, you will be ready to start thinking about the detailed use of tools such as media lists, press releases, competitions, press receptions, workshops, visits and special events.
* The apparently simple question 'Does the media influence voters?' is too general to be meaningful.
* The event was widely covered by the mass media.
* One of the most significant developments in the past decade has been the growth of women's alternative media.
* The subject itself is taboo in many Muslim families, perhaps because Muslim parents regard it (as do the white media) as a choice between two life styles, one Asian and one British.
* One can imagine how gently the western media would have handled the this highly controversial issue.
* Such arguments resonated through the media and in the various parliamentary debates during September and October 1985.
* The survey is a large study sponsored by the Business Media Research Committee, a body which represents publishers of newspapers and magazines.
* Most of them are riding high on a feeling that all politicians and most of the media now put the environment at or near the top of the political agenda.
* Education is probably the best form of conservation because public opinion influences politicians, as is exemplified by the environmental debates of the late 1980s that figure so prominently in the media.
* Unsurprisingly, Socks was fine until his owner's presidential victory exposed him to the unwelcome attention of the world's media and turned his little world upside down.
* To what extent did the mass media follow interpretations of events, both national and international, which originated elsewhere?
* The state governments, of whatever party, attach great importance to the expansion of their own mass media facilities.
This is a study of the media's effect on individual voting preferences.
* Recent commentaries on the mass media derived from within the broad Marxist tradition have attempted to move away from the simplistic view of the mass media as mere relay systems; a view which implicitly suggests that the study of the mass media is not problematic since their ownership (usually by large corporations) pre-determines the nature of their work.
* The spectacle of a beautiful boy in a dress and dreadlocks confiding to the nation's media that he preferred a cup of tea to sex appeared both to arouse the public appetite for sexual frisson and deflate it with humour, honesty and a curious sort of innocence.
* Gone are the days when concerned voices, from purblind Right or knee-jerk Left, could get away with glib diatribes about media brainwashing.
* However, all three magazines were down, according to figures from Media Industry Newsletter.
* The research will contribute towards our further understanding of the relationship between the media and the policy process.
* All commentators agreed that Mandela's commanding performances at the huge rallies which followed his release, the statesmanlike handling of his encounters with senior political figures and the international media, and not least his grasp of the complex issues of the day, gave hope to those for whom he was a long-awaited, natural leader.
* It is a feature of a changing pattern of information use, emerging through a variety of electronic media.
* For the Church, that it may discover effective and responsible ways to use the communications media for the glory of God, the proclamation of the Gospel, and the service of his creation.






