A reporter is always concerned with tomorrow. There's nothing tangible of yesterday. All I can say I've done is agitate the air ten or fifteen minutes and then boom - it's gone.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
Newspapers do a good job telling me what happened yesterday, but they'd be a lot more impressive if they could tell me what's going to happen tomorrow.
Today's gossip is tomorrow's headline.
Today is the tomorrow I worried about yesterday.
I can't take 24-hour news. Life is what it is, and we can handle it, but when you're getting it pushed down your throat, it's too much.
The evening news is a concept whose time has come and gone.
There is a tomorrow after a disaster, and it's sometimes hard to remember that in the midst of it.
What's happened has happened, so what can we do to make it better for tomorrow and the day after? That's why we're here.
Today's news, which may be yesterday's anyway, will be eclipsed tomorrow.
The reporter wrote with the hope that he would get a by-line in the Times, a testimony to his being alive on that day and all the tomorrows of microfilm.
You turn on the news, there're no facts anymore. 'Here's what's happening today,' and then you cut to thirty minutes of people in little boxes, little windows, telling you their opinions on it. It seems like all the news is going on in the ticker-tape on the bottom of the news. It's all opinion, it's all editorial.
No opposing quotes found.