The gratuitous gossip included claims of domestic violence, adultery, and abusive relationships. |
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This is where the old money lives, where the nouveau riche covet, and where anyone who's anyone among the upper crust loves to gossip about. |
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I am really very, truly from the bottom of my heart, sorry for the gossip I have spread. |
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And, knowing Susan, the gossip would have it that she had got the part on the casting couch. |
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He threw back his head and laughed heartily, for his appetite for football gossip matched his encyclopedic knowledge on the game itself. |
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Women, of all ages, education, and social strata love the gossip magazines! |
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It was famed gossip columnist, wearing a bright red evening gown, smoking a cigarette in a holder and sitting behind a long metal table. |
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Lawyer Richard Potter points out that the odd word said in jest in the gossip pages of newspapers and magazines can also cause legal headaches. |
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Card tables were set up, a good supper was enjoyed and plenty of gossip ensued. |
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He said gossip and canny office politics were far more common activities for men than most people realise. |
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Honour killings are very prevalent there, and the news of an honour killing will spread through the country faster by gossip than by media. |
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In our close-knit cliques we gossip about a variety of topics even though we complain about the parents who do it. |
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All subjects were fair game from gossip to sports, from crime to society balls. |
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I have any number of fairly prurient interests, among them, a penchant for gossip columns. |
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There was the prospect of drug tales and gossip from the demimonde to impeach his credibility. |
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Have you been buying up every celeb magazine on the shelves this year and reading every column inch of showbiz gossip in the papers? |
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Since then the gossip columnists have been doing their best to sniff out the real reasons behind the split. |
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He was put in the picture by the amused elderly ladies who gossip every evening in the entrance hall of the block. |
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I am a compulsive consumer of gossip magazines and freely admit to an unhealthy fascination with celebrity. |
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So gossip magazines would be free to snap the Streatham girl buying her daily pinta, but could not publish the princess with hers. |
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It was a low-key event, confounding expectations of gossip columnists dispatched to observe the dirt. |
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Didn't your mother ever teach you not to gossip about others, you disgusting piece of filth? |
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I crave intellectual respectability despite the fact that I am an inveterate gossip with a hankering for the naughty. |
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Once a month in the summer locals gathered on the courthouse lawn for the flea market, exchanging gossip and junk under the big pecan trees. |
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The cowardice of those prepared to gossip to journalists but not join 24 others in signing a secret letter is pitiable. |
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During the holidays a horde of in-laws forgathered at Dark Acres to play cards and gossip about horses. |
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One minute I was fighting off psychotic gossip cravers and the next thing I knew, I was here sobbing. |
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Lunar Park is a lush, mature novel that is also a frothy read full of gossip and blood. |
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However, she is played as such a little fusspot and gossip that she injects the women's scenes with a lot of humour. |
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When he tried her fidelity by telling her pretended secrets, she divulged them in gossip with the servants. |
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But he never succumbed to the lure of rock 'n' roll degeneracy, generally avoiding both the gossip columns and the gutter. |
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Consequently, we kept our daily reports clear of any gossip or personal information. |
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Those in tune with local film gossip have been waiting for Hussain's vision to hit the big screen for a long time. |
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Adam was talking to the owner of the apartment block once we'd moved in, and found out some of the local gossip about the residents. |
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However, members of the public reading the caption would think it was true and that the gossip he reported was accurate. |
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It's still uncertain if the damaging gossip is true, but if it were, I would only respect Sharon that much more! |
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While it is true that set gossip is often exaggerated, it's amazing how often stories turn out to be completely true. |
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Hopefully I will find easy wireless access and have some fun gossip to report. |
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His survival depends on audiences who will not accept fact-free reporting and who recognize gossip packaged in legalese. |
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He was a sociable man and a popular figure in Newcastle, fond of a gossip on the Quayside or at the Exchange on Sandhill. |
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Dobpark Woods are pleasant and after a sandwich and a gossip with some other walkers, I set off through the riverside trees. |
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After this the men may separate for gin rummy or poker, leaving the women alone to their gossip. |
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My visit was to see The House of Commons and have a girly gossip with Melissa which I enjoyed immensely. |
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Many women enjoy sharing a good gossip with their hairdresser, and it works both ways. |
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She often kept the gossip mill busy with stories of her publicly fighting with her various husbands. |
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The gossip mills have been fuelled since by the fact that he has not raced on the European Grand Prix circuit for three years. |
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Rumors were spread through the Westmoore gossip mill that the two were on intimate terms. |
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But Hopper, who was the grande dame of gossip columnists at that time, she was constantly castigating us in the press for living in sin. |
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As soundbytes of gossip regarding imminent closures of galleries circulated through the grapevine in past months, I admit I panicked at first. |
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The ones from his mother were as he expected, a guilt trip and gossip fest that he just skimmed through quickly. |
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Our friends talked shop for a while, dishing on backstage gossip about the other artists. |
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If you've never heard a juicy tidbit you weren't dying to dish, take a gander at your gossip groove. |
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Several museum docents come from pioneer families and will happily share gossip about Danville's past. |
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And they will all be waiting expectantly, not just for the dollops of neighbourhood gossip that is served up in such places. |
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With gossip raging more quickly than a bush fire, Leonie fled for South Africa while her lover absconded to Peru. |
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Some of the pressroom chatter noted that it looked like some warmed-up gossip from those investor relations conferences. |
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Even Lincoln, despite typical undergraduate japes, is hardly a hotbed of gossip. |
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It was the water-cooler gossip that led many to speculate that he lost his bid for the CEO position because of his sexual orientation. |
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She's in a newspaper or magazine every day and she's good water-cooler gossip. |
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The balance of the glorious afternoon was spent sitting in Lucy's screened porch chatting and catching up on gossip. |
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This was the tactic of the scandal rags and Hollywood gossip sheets, and it was just not done. |
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If you know somebody will repeat everything you say over the dinner table to a gossip columnist it will probably put you off the person. |
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Before we can slide into the booth, he is already talking with the excited, slightly conspiratorial tone of a friend with some juicy gossip. |
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There was so much juicy gossip it was hard to pay much attention to the debate. |
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My newly acquired knowledge is nothing more than juicy gossip and therein lies the problem. |
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With juicy gossip and scandal about the rich and famous in Taiwan, the magazine took the country by storm, selling out in hours. |
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She assured me that the gossip was untrue and demanded to know where I'd heard it. |
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They will sip sherbets, drink syrupy tea, smoke kalians, and gossip incessantly. |
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The crowd's reaction was a mixture of whispers and excited gossip about the newly discovered relative. |
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The arithmetic of gossip usually makes two and two equal five, but this time, the whisperers seem to be using calculators instead of fingers. |
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They were always scavenging for the latest hint of gossip as if they were ravenous animals on the trail of a wounded deer. |
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Few estates have a history as colourful as Mourne Park in Co Down, where gossip and scandal have been par for the course over the centuries. |
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She may have been far from clever, but she certainly kept up with all the palace's gossip. |
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Other people's viciousness, gossip, and vengefulness are no excuse for you to respond in kind. |
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Aggression turned outward often takes the forms of gossip, verbal abuse, or withholding affection or friendship. |
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Chatty, charming and a highly entertaining gossip off the record, she picks her words carefully when the tape recorder is switched on. |
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If she were to gossip, it would be with the closest of friends, not when there was a camera in her face. |
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But there's more to this attachment than a simple fondness for gossip or a good yarn. |
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Her life revolves around her dogs, the local am-dram society, the church, bell-ringing and village gossip. |
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People can get hurt, friends can become enemies and reps can be tarnished by bogus gossip. |
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Call the office regularly to keep up to speed with all the latest gossip and news. |
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I hated sewing, but merely joined in the gossip of the ladies as they sewed the cloth. |
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It also meant that, as her best friend, I was usually dragged to whatever event that gossip may lead her too. |
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You haven't seen each other in a while, you've got time to kill and you talk about how it's going, share gossip and stories from your club. |
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Post quiz we headed off to the bar to catch up on gossip, swap stories and generally bond a bit. |
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In this day and age it is hard to believe that people can be held up to hatred, ridicule and contempt by a light-hearted gossip paragraph. |
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There are no secrets in a small village, and gossip is a potent weapon to keep people in line. |
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I learned through gossip that she ruled her family with a rod of iron and she controlled the purse strings to her fortune. |
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There was, inevitably, a lot of gossip going the rounds, mostly amongst the wives. |
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Even if you knew some delicious, salacious gossip, some tantalising indiscretion, to let it slip would feel like treason. |
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There is nothing like salacious gossip to keep the conversation going is there? |
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The American people were inundated on a daily basis with new and ever more salacious bits of gossip about the occupant of the Oval Office. |
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She desperately wanted to rest, avoid the salacious Tinseltown gossip, and take control of her life. |
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The gossip is usually more salacious, the stories downright dirtier and they tend to spend more money on wine. |
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This is a fun game, but if you have ever been on the receiving end of talebearing, or gossip, you know it is not funny. |
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There was talk of the weather, the crops, some gossip and scandal, some hunting and fishing news. |
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What drives The Mail on Sunday to follow Oxford gossip with such enthusiasm? |
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Today I shall try to be on the alert not to speak an untruth, not to gossip or tattletale, and not to speak disparagingly about another person. |
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They never use profane language, bear false witness, engage in slander, gossip or backbiting, or even listen to such debasing talk. |
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How far are we complicit in the corruption of current affairs by our own viewing habits, by our love of gossip and scandal? |
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Summer was a major flirt who thrived on scandal and gossip, and she was the type of self-proclaimed daredevil who'd try anything once. |
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Again, like today's, its doings were chronicled by an irreverent, iconoclastic press eager for celebrity gossip and social scandal. |
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In addition to being a scaredy-cat, I am also a celebrity gossip fan, so I am reproducing several of the more eye-catching ones here for you. |
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They will discuss girls, sports, studies, and, after 10 sit-ups near the mandir to dispel any fears of girliness, a bit of gossip. |
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Nearly once a month influence peddlers from different worlds gather to gossip, talk business, and schmooze at his Hollywood Hills home. |
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There was enough gossip going around to fill a hot air balloon, but I was happy to say I was never the topic. |
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In the left-hand corner, behind the front door, a gaggle of New York ladies sipping gins and Martinis are deep in some conspiratorial gossip. |
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The barflies at Bombay Beach's Ski Inn drink, smoke and gossip about daily life. |
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She gets jealous easily and loves to gossip, but don't worry, her bark is worse than her bite. |
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It is the equivalent of late-night pub gossip, with nothing more than second-hand hearsay evidence to back it up. |
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During waking hours she's fielding phone calls every weekend, eager to feed the greedy maw of celebrity gossip. |
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Rather than be the victim of gossip, I decided to be upfront, and I gave a talk about how I'd self-harmed. |
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Now, add all those specialised magazines, and you have a virtual feast of news, gossip, tidbits, and more. |
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The commentaries do more than provide interesting tidbits of academic celebrity gossip. |
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In the afternoon over tiffin, Janda would compose scandalous gossip columns. |
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Our gossip columns are filled not with movie stars, but sporting celebrities. |
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He never thought a silly gossip column in a school paper could be so influential. |
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They speak English in formal discourse or political discussions and shift to Patois in informal conversation and gossip. |
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The girls, delighted by their little play, laughed merrily and forgot about the gossip. |
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People would simply gossip in the pub or broadcast their bedroom secrets on the Internet. |
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Look, no one begrudges you your right to write books, peddle gossip or make money, which given the way your boss treats you, is understandable. |
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There is some hidden truth behind gossip so who knows what the heck he'd ask out of me. |
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Most punters are aware that there are a few bent people in racing but if anything, that gives it a bit of interest, something to gossip about. |
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The Rumour Mill sorts through the mine of transfer speculation and football gossip as the transfer window opens for the summer. |
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No one was ever seen, but the high gates and security cameras of this mini Beverly Hills-sur-Mer invited gossip. |
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Such sharpened personal and professional rivalry means there's no certainly no shortage of gossip for old biddies under the dryer. |
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But though he loved telling you what he had done and was a wonderful gossip, he was not big-headed. |
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I think they belong in the same kind of timeless, truthless realm as celebrity gossip. |
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I've been out in the trenches but my moles have kept me informed of all the relevant footy gossip as we approach finals time again. |
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I had settled down during Mum's gossip but I now feel a twitch of impending doom. |
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For the next hour or two, they engage in serious debate, silly gossip or frivolous prattle. |
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A gossip that could defy the very elements of mathematical reasoning behind an expression left unconquered by the masses in question. |
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Holding children's coats and mufflers against the cold wintry night, they greet each other and exchange neighborhood gossip. |
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And that skinder or gossip accounts for a large part of his success as a writer. |
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Don't do body-shaming stories and focus on gossip that isn't tied to a weight gain or loss. |
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Her role is that of a Hollywood bon vivant and self-styled silver-screen gossip. |
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Spent afternoon catching up on gossip, and generally slobbing around and eating pizza. |
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But if you're bored of the hype and uninterested in the gossip, there's always the music. |
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It was the public's unquenchable thirst for celebrity gossip, argues Ken, that led the paparazzi to hound her to her death. |
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The bad news is that I'm vain, snobbish, a bit of a gossip and am rather divorced from most of the real world. |
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Recession is uppermost in the minds of politicians and chief executives as they gossip at the World Economic Forum. |
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I have found most performers can't differentiate between valid criticism and insane internet gossip. |
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Another motive, the sordid one, is the craving for gossip, particularly the naughty kind. |
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I sat down, drank my beverage, ate my fruit nibblies, and read the entertainment gossip. |
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He didn't say much but he was an excellent sounding board on which to try out the veracity of the latest bit of political gossip. |
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Every lovelorn track is reminiscent of high school dances, gossip sessions and adolescent broken hearts and tears. |
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According to a gossip column in the New York Post, the current frontrunner in John Kerry's Veepstakes is former Georgia Senator Sam Nunn. |
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Remember when the Washington Post was vilipended and qualified as a gossip column when it published the first article about the Watergate? |
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This gossip was denied by the government but nonetheless it influenced some to vote. |
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You may be a victim of malice, spite and slander as friends and associates indulge in negative gossip. |
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Throughout their careers, the volatile brothers have courted controversy and rarely been out of the celebrity gossip pages. |
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Collaboration and cooperation replaced gossip, and teamwork took the place of quarrels. |
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The probe had to look into a plethora of truths, half-truths, hearsay, gossip and rumours, the minister said. |
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Informal social control occurs through peer pressure, gossip, and fear of harmful magic known as obeah. |
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The steno pool had always been the hub of gossip as far as Lee Stetson's love life had been concerned, and this time was no different. |
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Each year my dad and stepmum send out a Christmas letter to the family to so we can all catch up with the family gossip. |
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But with all the hype and the hard sell, this town that loves to gossip is keeping its secrets with Sunday's Oscars just days away. |
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Ashley hung her coat on the hatstand, walked up to the table and grabbed a weekly gossip magazine. |
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They all minded themselves helplessly as they stirred with talks of gossip, death, and pets. |
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I have been around them enough to know that your mother is a manipulative gossip, and your sisters are empty-headed and vapid. |
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Old and new gossip circulated, pranks were played by students on professors, and classes went as scheduled while winter finals approached. |
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I'd better make it clear here that this is all gossip and hearsay, and I'm certainly not going to name my sources. |
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There again, who am I to make sweeping generalisations about the movie based merely on hearsay and gossip? |
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Then rando gossip magazines followed suit and here we are again. |
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The latest incident will give new life to the gossip that Trierweiler is irrationally jealous of Royal. |
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On second thought, he realizes that it would have spurred the gossip. |
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Of course, in the South, face-to-face interactions are almost always pleasant, even if people gossip behind your back. |
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You won't read this for the prose, the insight or the critical perception, but it's the fan book for fans who prefer lies, gossip and rumours to mundane day-to-day truth. |
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I can't tell you more about this fragile play, except that Vada and her coevals Enid and Marybell like to play canasta and gossip in a tree house. |
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Among the primary readjustment problems for this cohort were the poor economic situation, the attitudes and gossip of locals, inefficiency, and the slow pace of life. |
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In so doing, he heard the street gossip, upstairs as well as below stairs. |
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You can while away many happy hours looking at gossip web sites and ogling pictures of your favourite swoonsome celebrities instead of getting on with your work. |
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And a gossip columnist can get sued every bit as quickly as any reporter. |
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The theory is that each entry is judged solely on the artistic merit of the music, rather than commercial success or the number of appearances in newspaper gossip columns. |
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He was so full of gossip about what really goes on behind the scenes in politics that we could barely tear ourselves away from his glorious, indelicate anecdotes. |
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Any time he trundles back home to St. Helens he nips in his local eatery for a slap-up feed and more gossip than Heat themed chain of hairdressers. |
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In this time of tribulation for these two gorgeous, devastated stars, I would like to offer my services, not as transcontinental gossip provider, but as celebrity matchmaker! |
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Obviously she at least was mindful of the rudeness of gossip. |
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My innocent pleasure in those evenings shattered when a local gossip spread the word that I was on the prowl for other women's husbands, one in particular. |
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And they sound like gulls, you know, when they sit and gossip in a bar together. |
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Liz Smith, journalist and gossip columnist My mother was sweet, kind and gentle, a regular Hallmark greeting card kind of mom. |
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Tom, in the meantime, has repeatedly taken to the courts in an effort to dispel persistent gossip suggesting that the couple are not conjugally compatible. |
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After much pleading, she wins permission to visit his lavender farm, on condition that she's accompanied by an elderly relative, to deflect gossip from William. |
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Much of the corridor gossip centred on the success of Justice Minister in inveigling his cabinet colleagues to hold a special meeting in his beloved South Kerry next Monday. |
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In these circles, the endless luncheons and dinners of rich foods and rare wines were battlegrounds of ambition, where gossip was often the weapon of choice. |
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The gossip magazines and tabloids try their best to get something new. |
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I have been a Crikey subscriber twice since you began but each time I have unsubscribed because I did not like the gossip and general nastiness in most of your material. |
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Of course, on the downside, his trial will be a media circus and the seriousness of the allegations will undoubtedly take second billing to salacious celebrity gossip. |
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The gossip site posted video of a seriously injured comedian riding with the star being pulled out of a mangled car. |
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And a bracing four-mile walk on Saturday afternoon was well received and gave everybody an opportunity to get some fresh air and have a good gossip. |
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She has lifted circulation from 64,000 to around 68,000 in her first year, by bringing in a less fusty design, more features and columns, and even a number of gossip columns. |
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Usually, it's just me and the gals, and we do gossip and girl stuff. |
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This is unexpected because the reader is lured into devastating news by a long preamble that seems absorbed with French manners, salon gossip and where to find a good chef. |
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He points out the sights, offers the local gossip, reminisces about old haunts, and finally stops in front of his childhood home. |
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The day we visit, we are caught between an American tour group and a group of retired upper class Copts who have come to smoke shisha and gossip about old times. |
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The next day of school was one of those great days in a young girl's life, when you're psyched to go to school and find out if there is any gossip about you. |
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All the rest, from gossip to gospel, remains conjectural-unproved belief. |
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Think of all the miserable children of millionaires with more money than they know what to do with, washing around the gossip columns, famous for their names and nothing else. |
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The love triangle became the subject of local gossip and he was shattered. |
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Most of my life has been documented in one gossip mag or another, Lisa. |
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Read a few gossip mags and call your astrologer in the morning. |
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She has been a regular fixture in the British gossip pages despite a hectic schedule of rehearsals. |
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It all became as terrible as completely true gossip would be. |
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When Mr. Mica Crawler, the old mailman, came by the blacksmith shop John thought the old man had come to gossip for he was known to do that a lot. |
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We went to Paul's brother's for a BBQ last nite and it was lovely, its nice to have a gossip and relax, Paul as usual decided to drive, think its cause he loves the new car. |
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The fashion-forward first lady joked in an interview with Oprah Winfrey that she was miffed when she heard the online gossip dishing on her alleged baby bump. |
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Ursula was in for news again so we had a good gossip before the show and during the travel news, and sorted out a weekend for her to come over for dinner. |
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They are a chance to have a gossip about what's new on the internet. |
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But Kholos stresses the positive, depicting the strong community life, centering on the front stoop, where the women gossip and the boys play stoop ball. |
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Their breakup is gonna be enough to feed the gossip mills for months. |
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One can only imagine what it must have been like for her, having to be civil amid a group of Washington vipers eager for salacious titbits to grind on the gossip mill. |
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Merry points out the role of gossip and scandal in social control, especially in bounded social systems where interdependence and ostracism costs are higher. |
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The Bill carries local humour, scandal and gossip from the past year. |
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As the awards ceremony approaches, there is always scandal and gossip. |
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Like any good curator, of course, he digresses, pausing to impart a bit of gossip or whimsy, spicing the historically significant with the genuinely weird. |
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Remember to email me all your newsy bits, scandal and gossip. |
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In this case, however, Lee was swept from the stage by the gossip gurus at Gawker before the msm could clear its throat. |
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They were clearly hoping that perhaps they would learn some interesting gossip about this obviously scarlet woman being entertained in the Whitman household. |
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But for the past decade it seems that even the lowliest gossip columnist or weather girl has to have a double first from Oxbridge or a famous father. |
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She will gossip about you if she sees you behaving outside of the boundaries of moral decency, especially with someone that happens NOT to be your better half. |
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The California Anglophile spent days before this trip poring over British gossip blogs to identify the hottest royal hangouts. |
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Now for the complications and awkwardness, to say nothing of elbows and gossip and rivalries and all that other stuff. |
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As long as we have baby-boomer nostalgia and Internet gossip, the tendencies to idolize or vandalize will be indulged. |
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Trouble seemed to arise not from big issues like race but from petty gossip and backbiting. |
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For Sanders, all of that speculation is nonsense, beltway gossip that is distracting people from running to the barricades. |
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The early scandal, but really it was a blip of gossip with half-hearted twangs, was that Sonja had a younger beau. |
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All you've got for me is warmed-over rumor and Beltway gossip! |
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On the rare occasions when they turned up in gossip columns, it was for sightings of parents and kids piling into a station wagon. |
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Hillary Luigio was a sporty half-Italian girl who was the queen of gossip. |
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After he went public, steed was the target of ridicule and gossip and even received hate mail. |
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But at least there's some attempt to deal with and current affairs amid all that girl-mag blizzard of fashion, bizarre beauty treatments and gossip. |
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If you miss out on the water-cooler gossip, you can become desocialised. |
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She despises George and is diverted by the renewal of her acquaintance with the rakish Judge Brack who offers the possibility of flirting, gossip and intrigue. |
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The party's hostess is Amanda Brunker, a gossip columnist who, one would have assumed, was chosen for the role because of her unblushing ease with sexual candour. |
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Nevermind that newspapers got in on the act of turning unsubstantiated gossip into an art form, long before TV, radio and the Internet were around. |
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They didn't like little ears to hear their juicy if not racy gossip. |
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My mom, being the rich socialite that she was, had an ear for gossip. |
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Around here, gossip is a well-oiled machine, traveling at mind-boggling speeds, and this is just one more thing that I will not miss about the place. |
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My mother would scold for being a prideful and uncompassionate gossip. |
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She said it as if it was something keenly interesting, some juicy gossip. |
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Her letter was decent in length and had tons of juicy gossip. |
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Fledgling gossip columnist Louella Parsons is there, played by Jennifer Tilly, squeaking and squawking her callow excitement at meeting so many A-list players. |
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His indifference to the gossip has always struck me not as a decision so much as an involuntary and organic reaction. |
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I have had it up to here with your silly nonsense and gossip. |
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If someone wanted a juicy piece of gossip, they would turn to her. |
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Now's the time to refine yourself, perhaps by nixing the gossip. |
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There was always gossip about longtime rivalries and unforgiven grudges, but they were reluctant to air secrets which might tarnish their collective image. |
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We live in a negative world where we are constantly bombarded with bad news, hurtful gossip and sometimes people we hold in high regard trying to keep us down all the time. |
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In person, the foreboding man in the trench coat on the back cover of The Manhattan Hunt Club is a jovial, mischievous elf with a wicked sense of humor and a love of gossip. |
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Despite plenty of gossip in Copenhagen cafes, no politician has ever been booted from office because of a dalliance. |
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This brief, innocent encounter was talked up by the waspish gossip columnist Rona Barrett. |
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Damascene gossip has it that Maher intimidates even his older brother, the president of Syria. |
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It's what is ongoing and visible, so it's the part that people get to judge and assess and gossip about and declaim on. |
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Writing on stars are mostly about gossip and scandal, a degeneration into lifestyle reporting. |
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My Life and Living History hit the perfect intersection of news and gossip, and people who salivate for both bought those books. |
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Women who were washing laundry outside their houses, and talking to their neighbour about the latest village gossip, looked up in surprise at the sound of hoof beats. |
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The plant is noisy, and she and her co-workers pass the time by shouting over the din, catching up on gossip and talking about food and cosmetics. |
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To explain this ghostly occurrence, we get a dollop of gossip concerning the recent death of a hated bishop. |
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This week, Liz Smith, the doyenne of gossip columnists, was fired after more than 30 years of writing for New York newspapers. |
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To further mould and mythologise their stars' personae, the studios regularly fed gossip to fan mags, engineered spicy, fitting off-screen scandals. |
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It is the same in all the broadcasting groups and in many newspapers, where hard news long ago lost the battle with celebrity gossip and vapid opinionising. |
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It's a strange combination of gossip and in-house tittle-tattle. |
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An office would not be an office without gossip and catty remarks. |
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As a consequence, the white-collar gays of D.C. have turned Secret into a dumping ground for personalized gossip. |
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Legendary gossip columnist Liz Smith grew up on grits and gravy and chicken-fried steak, and fortunately for us, she's not about to switch sides now. |
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Ever since the advent of the information superhighway, I have been able to keep myself updated with the latest transfer gossip throughout the day, whilst sat at my desk. |
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Elsa Maxwell was famous for being famous, a gossip columnist and party planner who knew whom to invite and whom to leave out. |
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And her taste in clothes is almost as bad as her taste in men judging by the getup she wore to catch up on gossip about herself in an LA store. |
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At our family reunion, the menfolk generally have a ball game, while the womenfolk gossip and trade snapshots. |
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The photos quickly went viral, popping up on a number of gossip blogs. |
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The back and forth has sent the gossip blogs into overdrive. |
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There's a good deal of light-hearted gossip too, and this page could well develop a cult following before too long. |
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There is always some thoughtless talebearer ready to gather up the arrows of gossip and thrust them into the quivering heart of the victim. |
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For, innocent and unsuspicious as she was, she could not help understanding the gossip of her friends. |
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This is not some low-rent gossip columnist or celebrity stalker. |
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Hard-nosed criticism is squeezed out by soft stories, gossip and fluff. |
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If you listen for nothing else, listen for the village gossip Lynda Snell. |
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I am growing more and more sick of factions, gossip, jealousies, recriminations, excoriations and the whole literary shee-bang. |
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Some folk don't know when to haud their wheesht, to stay silent and neither spread gossip nor comment on things that could turn into hearsay. |
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The life of a muckraking gossip columnist is buckets of fun. |
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Oh sure, the kids are just using it to gossip and play sudoku. |
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The gossip surrounding the pair has apparently got Katie's representative hot under the collar. |
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Your delightful gift of gab can get you in gossip trouble but, of course, you can talk your way out of it. |
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Her latest article has the usual fluff about movie stars and gossip. |
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The mayor and Biasi are a popular topic of gossip in Matamoros. |
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His antics always make good fodder for the gossip columnists. |
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They came down to buy sugar, flour, saltfish or candy from Nana, to collect letters and exchange gossip. |
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Who had been tapped for the new society, and why, had become a topic of local gossip, conjecture, and even cattiness. |
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Sitting in front of the fire, they became quite confidential, and began to gossip. |
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He settled down to the cryptic in the Independent. He loved his crossword. It kept him mentally active, just as gossip did his wife. |
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Crammed with gossip, anecdotes, and confessions..., his garrulous, untidy narratives read like a good novel. |
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Should a great lady that was invited to be a gossip, in her place send her kitchen maid, 'twould be ill taken. |
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The gossip alienated Richard from some of his northern supporters, and upset Henry across the English Channel. |
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Through May and June, the apparent delay in delivery fed gossip that Mary was not pregnant. |
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Belinda was a jaybird and could prattle on for hours about the latest gossip. |
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During this period, Nelson was reported as being cold and distant to his wife and his attention to Emma became the subject of gossip. |
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Catatonia could always count on a place in the gossip columns, too, thanks to the lagered-up antics of their boisterous lead-singer-about-town. |
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Apneics, Others, and Narcos all gossip merrily on the walk back to our cabins. |
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We develop new methodological tools to appropriately analyze the triadic nature of gossip embedded in network flows of information. |
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A single quote from an anonymous source has been used by celebrity blogger Norm Clark on his Las Vegas gossip page, the Daily Mail reported. |
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