People care about what newspapers tell them to care about.
All the legal action I've taken against newspapers has had a massively positive effect on my life and achieved exactly what I wanted, which is privacy and non-harassment.
Read two newspapers a day. And not just online. Hold them in your hands. Get ink on your fingers.
I buy newspapers to make money to buy more newspapers to make more money.
Inspiration is everywhere - film, television, newspapers, novels, overheard conversations, whatever you can tap into. It's out there, and I've been at this long enough to know that it won't always just come to me; sometimes I have to go get it.
It's nice to know about something as soon as it happens, and obviously a newspaper can't provide that.
In fact, I don't read newspapers any longer.
No one wanted to hire me. No newspaper, television station, television network that I worked for ever wanted to hire me.
Impressionism is the newspaper of the soul.
A world without newspapers or a world where the newspapers are purely electronic and you read them on a screen is not a very appealing world.
When you're true to yourself - not the audience that reads about me in the newspaper or sees a clip someplace, but the audience that actually comes and watches, just like Oprah - they get to know you and they sense something genuine.
What are the libraries of science but files of newspapers?
The American press has the blues. Too many authorities have assured it that its days are numbered, too many good newspapers are in ruins.
I just think Barack [Obama], he doesn't dig being asked at all. He's got a bit of an imperious nature about him. I guess nobody has told him that nobody reads newspapers anymore. That is a dying art form.
We'll soon buy books and newspapers straight over the Internet. Uh, sure.
These international bankers and Rockefeller Standard Oil interests control the majority of newspapers and the columns of these papers to club into submission or drive out of public office officials who refuse to do the bidding of the powerful corrupt cliques which compose the invisible government.
Newspapers should have no friends.
However, if I shall live to be eighty I shall probably be the only person left in England who reads anything but newspapers and scientific publications.
If I had to choose between government without newspapers, and newspapers without government, I wouldn't hesitate to choose the latter
The art of newspaper paragraphing is to stroke a platitude until it purrs like an epigram.