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Examples
“You won't find it on Time Warner or FIOS or Cablevision, but Al Jazeera's English language television service is laying claim to the viewing loyalty of vast numbers of news-hungry, media-obsessed westerners following the incredible story of courage and revolution in Egypt.”
The Huffington Post: Tom Watson: Sat Dishes and Revolution: Why Al Jazeera Matters There -- and Here
“You won t find it on Time Warner or Cablevision, but Al Jazeera s English language television service is laying claim to the viewing loyalty of news-hungry, media-obsessed Westerners.”
The Huffington Post: Tom Watson: Sat Dishes and Revolution: Why Al Jazeera Matters There -- and Here
“All it really took was being overheard by a news-hungry man who published a small newspaper in Santiago.”
“No wonder the news-hungry eyeballs twitched and went surfing online.”
“Several posts about the subject worked better on the Web because by they fed news-hungry readers from the niche tech crowd.”
“It's not going to happen and the neocons who helped undermine this country's security for the past eight years and the news-hungry media know it.”
“After all, horses drew the carriages that delivered millions of papers to news-hungry Americans until well into the twentieth century.”
“The market — the news-hungry audience — demands online video, podcasts and interactivity as well as the highest-quality writing.”
“They're news-hungry voters with a heightened sense of civic responsibility and a penchant for online discourse.”
“At the very least, CBS' network will get far more than its usual tally of news-hungry viewers Tuesday night, when Couric makes her debut as the first woman to anchor the evening news solo.”
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