I would like to say that I saved that for my retirement, which would make a great headline in a newspaper. |
|
Yep, I'm using an attention grabbing headline again to get you to read the article. |
|
Childcare is likely to be the headline grabber this year, just as disability was last year and decentralisation was the previous year. |
|
Such strong words are headline grabbers when they come from someone widely assumed to be speaking his mind. |
|
He's headlined almost every major U.S. dance music festival, and he was the first EDM act to headline Staples Center. |
|
Pete Cami gives a disturbing account of youth crime but your headline does a disservice to the efforts of the police. |
|
On Friday night, The Rankins were the headline performers, and they put on a dynamite show for 8,000 delighted people. |
|
That headline reads like the title of a Monty Python sketch or an obscure, slightly funny but drably photographed art-house movie. |
|
It's so easy to just look at the headline of a newspaper and say oh what a horror, what a tragedy, and then turn to the sports section. |
|
The headline in the newspaper blared that thousands of people were stranded. |
|
I'm sure with or without meow meow this idiot would have still done what he did but its an easy headline to blame drugs. |
|
She understands she's been an attractive target for journalists scratching for the next headline. |
|
One of her answers became the headline of the resulting scoop for his newspaper. |
|
Despite the tentativeness of the headline, do not doubt that the mediation will occur. |
|
Yes, the headline numbers can be and will continue to be manipulated, massaged and presented in as bullish a light as possible. |
|
The only clue he can find is a newspaper headline saying that the city has been evacuated. |
|
It was laughable, but then what can be expected from politicians always on the make for a quick pic or plausible headline. |
|
The chap ignored them completely, reading a tab with a headline something like Terror Wife Found Hanging. |
|
Using an attention-grabbing headline ensures the reader will continue to read the rest of the ad. |
|
The play was fiercely attacked by critics and made headline news in the tabloids. |
|
|
There's another great newspaper headline in there about how an electrical repair sparked romance for the lovelorn star. |
|
It didn't much matter, today every newspaper was running the same headline. |
|
They headline the NME tour and like many a skinny, white American band they are committed Anglophiles. |
|
To them, the lead story is the one with the biggest and boldest headline, whether it is to the right or the left. |
|
Donating the passes will cost the city a fraction of the headline figure, as no extra services will be laid on. |
|
Maybe my headline above takes the words out of the President's mouth these days. |
|
A number of investors have expressed concern at an alarming headline last week. |
|
Even the words attributed to the Defence Secretary in the aforesaid newspaper didn't back up the euphoric headline. |
|
On the face of it, this is an absurd claim and nothing in the piece justifies the headline. |
|
In Seattle, where fish are obviously more important, the story was front-page banner headline news for the Times. |
|
Then fight to get your story on the front page, above the fold, with the big headline and a photo. |
|
The consequences of a patient dying during surgery have made headline news in the medical press recently. |
|
What should have been considered a minor security breach by check-in and immigration staff again became a 'security scare' headline story. |
|
It is not these practical problems about housing supply that gives rise to the weekly headline horror stories. |
|
The article was then wrapped up in a suitably corporate style and a final quote, not unlike last week's headline feature. |
|
His excessive lifestyle and battles with drug addiction have made headline news for much of his life. |
|
Two up-and-coming young girl bands took to the stage to headline the event, part of a national day of action. |
|
Finally, journalists on the English-language papers will write headline articles about the case. |
|
The headline band, The Outhouse Critics, appearing for the third year running, went down a storm. |
|
By the time they had their TV debut on the Ed Sullivan show, they were already a headline act. |
|
|
After their stellar performance at Candlefest the other week, I can't wait to watch them do a headline set. |
|
The headline was irresponsible because it was unrelated to the facts of the case. |
|
With an average age of just 19, having already played Glastonbury and in the middle of a headline tour, this group are really hot at the moment. |
|
Between bands, the crowd wandered around, anxiously awaiting the headline act. |
|
It is left to the press to inform, and translate into layman's language, and if that means a shock-horror headline then so it does. |
|
Much more important is what papers say, report and headline in the years between elections. |
|
When the bag is clear, the headline of the newspaper is displayed on one side. |
|
The Financial Times broke with tradition, using a white-on-black splash headline for the first time in its history. |
|
And always try to include keywords in the headline and byline of your article. |
|
When ticket sales weren't as brisk as anticipated, headline acts such as the Black Crowes were added to the bill. |
|
This brought tears to my eyes and I thought of a headline in your paper some months ago saying community living is dead. |
|
Editorial and headline writers and the hacks at the television news outlets have no time for such contradictions. |
|
It's a useful headline grabber but it doesn't help when you're overtaking the numpty with the caravan. |
|
Nobody survives lying to me and betraying me just for a good headline and to feed her own vanity! |
|
Of course, it would be much more newsworthy if the headline were Dog Clones Man. |
|
The headline and standfirst of this article were changed in accordance with editorial guidelines. |
|
Media pundits and politicians point to trivial decreases in the headline unemployment rate as evidence of economic recovery. |
|
The headline interest rate is a good place to start when looking for a savings account but there are other considerations. |
|
Within a few hours of the match, reference to the incident was both headline news around the country and the top trend on Twitter worldwide. |
|
When shopping for a financial product it is important to compare more than the headline interest rate. |
|
|
Yet, whilst making headline news, coverage of the scandal is aimed at obscuring any real understanding of the issues involved. |
|
Brit Award winners Blue will headline the concert and several other major acts are set to be announced. |
|
They have a long way to go until they can headline a concert but they really know what they're doing. |
|
The more common practice is for a male star and a female counterpart to headline at such a concert. |
|
The irrelevance of the streamer headline in a world racked by wars and threats of wars alarmed some of the newspaper's well-wishers. |
|
The New York Daily News ran a banner headline proclaiming that a Bronx ex-GI had become a blonde beauty. |
|
It sounds like a headline from a supermarket tabloid, but the idea may not be as outlandish as it first appears. |
|
I think that takes the prize for the most bewildering and cryptic headline of the day, hands down. |
|
The core inflation measure made its debut in the early 1970s when the headline inflation rate was trending sharply upwards. |
|
Of course he did have the foresight to land a job with a newspaper that thinks horoscopes are headline news. |
|
This year, Boscastle became headline news when a devastating flood swept through the town, destroying all in its path. |
|
This was the front page headline in the very conservative morning newspaper on December 17th. |
|
The Poet Laureate has been pencilled in to headline a major North Yorkshire literary festival. |
|
This incident might warrant a newspaper headline but it is certainly not a story! |
|
Hopefully they all now realise that your headline was wrong and that you had used an incorrect figure. |
|
Some years ago, a newspaper headline accused him of stalking a woman, though no charges resulted. |
|
We had a headline in the newspaper stating that one-third of the foreshore was off limits. |
|
Let's deal with first things first, and the thing that's getting the most attention is the headline grabber. |
|
The only response to The Peak's inflammatory headline was a few mildly irate letters. |
|
The copyreader will not have to search the entire story for headline material. |
|
|
Despite significant increases in the headline inflation, core inflation remains low. |
|
Most of Beijing's newspapers used the same headline and photograph again today. |
|
This one is the headline which made me smile while having my cuppa tea this morning. |
|
If you're not going to give away the news in your lead, don't give it away in the headline or front-page photo cutline either. |
|
Here's the editor of the paper making sure every word of a cutline or a drop head was right, not just the main headline or the lede. |
|
Under the headline one will find a link to a press release issued by the US Green Party. |
|
Her final waking came with the cry of a newsie outside of the building hawking the headline in a most annoying fashion. |
|
There is no in-frame linking, and each news headline includes the publisher's name. |
|
Experts warned savers not to be blinded by headline interest rates. |
|
However, you need to look at more than just the headline rate of interest. |
|
This is the giant unwritten headline of our post-industrial economy. |
|
Politico at least has refrained from giving us a headline praising Ryan today. |
|
The court was also told that the risk of prejudicing the trial was increased because the headline and standfirst gave no indication he would be the subject of the article. |
|
Beijing's weather is often the lead headline of local newspapers. |
|
Recent corporate decisions by the British banks to switch thousands of low-end call centre jobs to India resulted in headline news and fury among British unions. |
|
Since he phoned the headline in, I thought I'd offer some help. |
|
The only question I had was why this band was not a headline act. |
|
Where Glastonbury can at times challenge the listener with its daytime itinerary of acts, it traditionally fills the headline slots with acts who deliver music for the masses. |
|
With a superb and epic set, they're easily worthy of a headline slot. |
|
When he took the stage the reception was as if he was the headline act. |
|
|
Festival organiser Michael Eavis has hinted that next year's headline band had already been confirmed, but he refused to divulge any more information. |
|
Economists have been sceptical of the latest reading, which has surprised them with three quarterly increases in the headline unemployment figure. |
|
This compares with the headline unemployment rate of about 5.5 per cent. |
|
For example, the male headline unemployment rate is currently below the previous cyclical low but the male under-employment rate remains somewhat above the pre-recession low. |
|
Beneath the headline unemployment figures disturbing trends are emerging. |
|
The headline unemployment rate has surprised the markets by dropping slightly, but the number of people looking for work has also dipped dramatically. |
|
The headline unemployment rate declined by one-tenth of a point in both the United States and Canada, to 5.5 per cent in America and 7.2 per cent in Canada. |
|
In addition, 'core' inflation tends to lag the headline rate. |
|
Or is it simply easier for a struggling paper with sales in freefall to decide that a cheap headline is worth more than any kind of journalistic accuracy? |
|
The home page incorporates a Google search box, and a news headline feed. |
|
In many cases, the headline was also couched in a passive voice. |
|
While waiting patiently for a meaningful explanation to this mystery, I was amused by this headline on one email I received selling some form of pep pill. |
|
One critic says his tongue could fillet a fish, and this week he comes to New Zealand to headline the Comedy Festival and perform solo shows in Auckland and Christchurch. |
|
This brought flashbacks of headline filmsetting on my first job. |
|
This news item was the headline news in all of the Hong Kong newspapers. |
|
On their debut release under the Stompy Jones headline these genuflectors of jumping Jazz swing through seventeen tunes, six of which are originals. |
|
Journalists at the press conference questioned the feasibility of this project, and The Beijing News punctuates the headline of its article with a question mark. |
|
Our results also suggest that using the official measure of core inflation may be inadequate as a communication tool because of its apparent biasedness with respect to headline inflation. |
|
We seem content to parade a few success stories as examples of progress, reducing legitimate achievements to a headline and unwittingly shutting the door to more candidates through sheer ignorance. |
|
Like a great tabloid headline, The adventuress by N.D. Coleridge promises a lurid story that spares no detail. |
|
|
England 1-0 Slovenia England scored early to appease the baying headline writers, but never looked entirely fluid. |
|
When the chimes of Big Ben ended on September 1, 1969, the first headline was a shocker. |
|
It suggests that epidemics, like explosions and tsunamis, are of interest only if there is a body count to headline the story. |
|
As the case became headline news and then a national scandal, brasilia stepped forward. |
|
This is not the headline a Times subeditor might have chosen, nor any fair-minded one, because it made Mr Bower's argument even sillier than it was in the first place. |
|
Even the most silly distorted fact, tongue-in-cheek headline or top-spinned newspaper tales concerning Hibs put this awkward customer on the warpath. |
|
The second disturbing thing was this headline in my local rag. |
|
Some of the concern over student debt is likely driven by the startling headline numbers. |
|
The most promising bands and artists will get the chance to record a session and get airplay, and be given a slot supporting a headline band at a live event. |
|
The Guardian warns, in a page-wide headline, that it could degenerate into a fiasco of Suez 1956 proportions. |
|
She'll lay down the law on headline issues and take your calls. |
|
I am all for criticizing the press, and demanding that we get more depth to a story than a sensationalistic headline. |
|
How many clicks are there in a headline that says Teens Not In Danger, sexting Fears Overblown? |
|
A smaller headline in the herald Tribune stated that Black September, headed by Ali Salameh, had taken credit for the operation. |
|
First, the saturation of the media with images of terrorist atrocity has raised the bar on the level of destruction that will attract headline attention. |
|
The latest headline to pop up in the feverish coverage is that Gayet is four months pregnant. |
|
The headline should promise that you, with your chipped measuring cups, twenty-year-old bakeware and a busted sifter, can throw it together in ten minutes or less. |
|
It's conventional wisdom that many people seeing an intriguing headline share the link with friends before or even instead of actually reading the attached article. |
|
It had been a headline case, and a task force of over a hundred detectives had been assigned to investigate. |
|
Often, while the facts may be correct, the presentation style sitting under a sensational headline will sell more papers but can frighten the public. |
|
|
You were just thanking your husband in a speech, and suddenly it became headline news. |
|
I am a dawn riser, more prone to tormenting the early shift with headline changes than the late-nighters. |
|
But a snappy headline, a shock-horror story, and it draws them in. |
|
One headline, decades earlier, must have struck him with the force of tsar Bomba. |
|
The headline number continued the recent trend of generally decent but unimpressive growth. |
|
The contents of the title, headline and body text, however, are variable. |
|
One headline described her as blonde, brainy and ready to rumble. |
|
Overall, it seems likely business can expect the Budget to be a non-event, with no headline grabbing increases and little solid to say about the growth of the economy. |
|
Unsurprisingly, the story is much more complex than the headline suggests and provides yet another example of the story being spun to meet a commercial agenda. |
|
Service sector activity was much more buoyant than manufacturing, with the headline activity index rising to 57.6 from 57.0 in the previous month. |
|
The splash headline in the virulently anti-war Independent was exultant. |
|
Pet Shop Boys returned after 10 years to headline the Other Stage on the Saturday Night. |
|
The claimant count and the headline estimate of unemployment based on data collected in the Labour Force Survey. |
|
This count is still published today alongside the headline unemployment figure which is based on the Labour Force Survey. |
|
Arctic Monkeys were the last ever act to headline the main stage at Balado in Kinross-shire when they performed on stage last night. |
|
Arctic Monkeys became the lastever act to headline the main stage at Balado in Kinross-shire when they performed last night. |
|
Josh Widdicombe, Holly Walsh and Charlie Baker will headline the one-nighter on September 26 at the Glee Club. |
|
More information on the differences between the official headline unemployment figure and the Claimant Count is in this document. |
|
Herbal and muscular, juniper, coriander, angelica, orris, cassia bark and cardamom headline this small batch gin with prominent vapours. |
|
Second editions retracted the headline and attempted to portray a more sympathetic attitude towards Bruno and mental health in general. |
|
|
One week later, rock band The Killers performed their biggest headline show at the venue on 22 June. |
|
He became hugely popular with a unique style of limp-wristed, eyebrow-raising humour and his untimely death made headline news. |
|
Cheryl Cole was supposed to headline the Arena but had to cancel due to Malaria. |
|
Actress and singer Carol Lawrence will headline this year's black-tie gala fund-raiser for the Children's Center of the Antelope Valley Nov. |
|
Fierce competition is forcing broadband operators to drastically reduce the prices of their headline triple-play services. |
|
James Moye will headline the benefit with a stellar cast of Broadways actors, all in support of NIBD Kids. |
|
Damon Albarn's Gorillaz replaced U2, and joined Muse and Stevie Wonder for the Saturday and Sunday headline slots respectively. |
|
Progressive Nation tours were held in 2008 and 2009 with Dream Theater as the headline act. |
|
Queen were scheduled to headline Sonisphere at Knebworth on 7 July 2012 with Adam Lambert before the festival was cancelled. |
|
The overline is sort of an extended headline in a direct mail piece or sales letter. |
|
They will headline an event for Cle Dubai, a restaurant that features Middle Eastern cuisine owned by Australian celebrity chef Greg Malouf. |
|
A special operetta is going down for the Egyptian police force during a big old partay that will headline said singers. |
|
In 2011 it featured headline acts Scissor Sisters, Blondie, Eliza Doolittle and Feeder. |
|
Six regions have local authority leaders' boards to assist with correlating the headline policies of local authorities. |
|
Roy Bailey will headline a bill which also includes One String Loose and The Devil's Interval. |
|
Keeping that festy vibe going, we've just been promoted to headline act for the REBIRTH festival this weekend in Cardiff! |
|
A tantalizing, clickbait-y headline gets slapped atop the tweet, video or blog. |
|
This Goldrush event has local and international performers, with the headline artist being Freddie McGreggor and The Ruff Cut Band. |
|
In other words, I am intentionally borking the headline writer, for no other reason than to make my point with greater force. |
|
News headline excerpts for each covered sector are available on every home page. |
|
|
The headline film will be Clueless starring Alicia Silverstone, after the 1995 comedy won twice as many votes as any other film. |
|
The dance music producer was the headline act at Belsonic where he blew the crowd away with uplifting hits including his floor-filler Yeah. |
|
Today I offer my profuse apologies to the people of Liverpool for that headline. |
|
He said to Mr. Tallboy he thought the headline was a bit hot. And Mr. Tallboy said he had a nasty mind. |
|
Between the two headline slots, Biffy Clyro also performed a huge outdoor show in Glasgow, with Fall Out Boy filling in as the support act. |
|
This marks their sixth appearance at the festival and their first headline performance on the main stage. |
|
Studio sessions were booked for early 1985, and a UK headline tour was booked for May 1985, to coincide with the release of the new album. |
|
On 2 May 2010, they embarked on their headline tour starting in Newcastle and finishing in Exeter on 14 May. |
|
The Isle of Wight County Press website was launched in 1999 and features headline articles updated on a daily basis. |
|
If you suspect you've stepped over the line, ask a few other copy editors to second-guess your headline. |
|
Ray Peacock is a prolific writer and is one of the most popular compers and headline performers on the circuit. |
|
They began a second US tour in March 2017, culminating in a headline slot at the April 2017 Coachella festival in California. |
|
More information on the difference between the claimant count and the headline measure of unemployment is in this pdf. |
|
The 2017 theme was 'Colour' and the headline acts were Jamie T on Thursday, The xx on Friday, A Tribe Called Quest on Saturday and Pet Shop Boys on Sunday. |
|
Normally I would wait until something happened before I mithered you but someone has just made me aware of a headline they came across on this here Internet. |
|
Despite edging on smarminess at times, you couldn't fault the four-piece who appeared to be loving their first headline tour as much as the audience. |
|
The fact that casualised labour continues to grow even during this 'so-called' recovery suggests that the labour market is far more fragile than headline figures suggest. |
|
I remember my dad showing me the headline in the paper actually and I remember not quite understanding, I didn't quite get that somebody could kill themself. |
|
This was followed by another headline tour during October, with support provided by This City and Save Your Breath, and a European tour with Zebrahead and Simple Plan. |
|
I was flicking through the newspaper when I glimpsed a funny headline. |
|
|
The 2015 theme was 'Summer of Love' and the headline acts were Duran Duran on Friday,The Chemical Brothers on Saturday and Missy Elliott on the Sunday night. |
|
The 2016 theme was 'The Future' and the headline acts were Hot Chip on Thursday, Major Lazer on Friday, The Cure on Saturday and Wiz Khalifa on Sunday. |
|
The Juddmonte International, which highlights day one of the four-day spectacular, is an absolute spine tingler with Golden Horn the headline act. |
|
In the summer of 2014, the band performed at a number of festivals across Europe including headline performances at Let's Rock Bristol and Rochester Castle. |
|
The event is due to run from July 12th to 14th at its regular site at Balado in Kinross-shire, with headline performances from Mumford and Sons, Rihanna and The Killers. |
|
Ku's regular Shine Like Stars night tonight sees headline duties by Leeds rockers Narcs, fresh from announcing appearances at this year's Leeds and Reading festivals. |
|
The attention-grabbing headline sent the crowd into a frenzy. |
|
The festival's headline acts included Lady Gaga and the Foo Fighters. |
|
A European tour followed in June and July with several festival shows, including Radiohead's third headline performance at the Glastonbury Festival. |
|
Unlike the UK's headline hoggers Liam'n'Patsy and Noel'n'Meg, the chances of a reconciliation between Carmen and Dennis remain firmly on the cards. |
|
Chaplin was reported to be in a state of nervous breakdown, as the story became headline news and groups formed across America calling for his films to be banned. |
|
The PointCast Network employs PointCast's SmartScreen technology, which automatically begins running headline news when a viewer's computer is idle. |
|
Among the headline acts is Birmingham saxophonist Soweto Kinch. |
|
But the evening's star was headline act Keith Carter and his fantastic scally boy character Nige, the funniest dole-claiming, dope-smoking idiot savant I've ever seen. |
|
After this tour festive dates in Dundee and Glasgow were announced along with a Hogmanay headline show in Glasgow's King Tut's Wah Wah Hut and Edinburgh. |
|
The band also headlined the Hop Farm Festival 2009 on 4 July, with a gig at the Middlesbrough Empire on 3 July to prepare for the upcoming headline slot. |
|
This was also the year Radiohead returned to headline the Pyramid Stage. |
|
We've got some great acts performing including Status Quo tribute band Status Four, popular local band Backtrax, and headline acts Supergene and Newsham. |
|
Missy Elliott and former Spice Girl Melanie C, will headline the opening night on Thursday with CeeLo Green, Outasight, Lupe Fiasco and Eva Simons also performing. |
|
But the truth is that plenty of artists from other countries make work that's bold, naughty or nasty, without getting more than a very occasional headline. |
|
|
To end the summer, the Manics went on to headline another two festivals, Wasa Open Air in Finland in mid August and in late August the Victorious Festival in Pourtsmouth. |
|
Catatonia were hired by political party Plaid Cymru to headline a Welsh language concert at Builth Wells in August 1993, but they performed in both Welsh and English. |
|
Catatonia went on to headline the NME stage at the T in the Park festival on 7 July, having conducted a warm up concert at The Lighthouse, Glasgow. |
|
This was their only UK headline show until the end of the year. |
|
Yesterday, I saw an item on CNN Headline News that made me look around the net for some details. |
|
One upcoming promotion will push the redesigned CNN Headline News to the local ad sales community. |
|
For Kysa and Derwin Daniels of Conyers, Georgia, the downpour came last Thanksgiving when Kysa, 35, lost her job as an overnight anchorperson at CNN Headline News in Atlanta. |
|
Headline Publishing Group announced on Thursday that it will be publishing a new series of digital novellas written by author Simon Scarrow. |
|
Headline acts have included the Stereophonics, Tinie Tempah, Editors and the Manic Street Preachers. |
|
The official London 2012 Olympic typeface was called Headline 2012 and also suffered some criticism. |
|
To that end, a number of efforts were made to increase the EU's military capability, notably the Helsinki Headline Goal process. |
|
Headline acts were the Bestival Birthday Bash with Fatboy Slim on Friday, Snoop Dogg on Saturday and Elton John on Sunday, who was playing as a UK festival exclusive. |
|
He has also written five books, which have been published by Headline. |
|