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Then I switched on the news and everyone was having a national identity crisis.
- Whatever there is, he says, switching on the news.
I only have to switch on the news to hear things a whole lot crazier than that.'
If I want to hear about blood and death and killing, I can switch on the news."
In answer Cho Yi turned and switched on the news screen just above him and to his right.
I switched on the news station on the radio, in case there were any bulletins about the religious convention in Los Angeles.
Chekhov switched on the news feed, and as the image formed, dimly heard Nara's soft, stunned "Oh," and himself swearing in horrified Russian.
But you chose to switch on the news that day, or to hear it from a friend; and you chose to have certain thoughts in response to that news.
It's inhuman, as well as impossible, to function on constant alert, to wake up every morning afraid to switch on the news lest we be ambushed by another unthinkable catastrophe.
Switch on the news and you normally hear some minister or lobbyist (come on down, Angela Knight of the British Bankers' Association) talking about the vital contribution banking makes to employment.
On her way back with her acquisitions Hilda allowed herself a pleasant little reverie about that some man she had not yet met, idly switching on the news, half-listening to the garbled stories and wild speculations over the amazing reports from Calgary.
The reader may still be grinning over its good bits, may still feel impressed by Kunzru's verbal agility, but then he'll pick up his remote, switch on the news, and out will billow the great gray cloud of war footage, food safety warnings and terrorist threats.
I told you we should have turned on the news.
They'd checked in just before he turned on the news.
Reaching for the car radio, he turned on the news.
"Every time you turn on the news, the police is shooting someone else," he said.
At six o'clock I took another break and turned on the news.
He had gone to sleep and woke up without turning on the news.
She turned on the news, saw the burning tower, and ran to the phone.
You can go in and turn on the news, if you'd like."
He reached the eighth floor, hurried into his office and turned on the news.
They jammed the pay phones to call their parents and tell them to turn on the news.
I was waiting for her, trying to figure out what to do, and I turned on the news.
She didn't want to turn on the news and see her own home fill the screen.
He flung himself down on the bed and turned on the news.
I made some toast and turned on the news.
They turn on the news which broadcasts the worldwide lack of gifts.
She feels hurt when he turns on the news or goes outside to play some basketball and ignores her.
Time was when she turned on the news every night, but now she craves music instead.
At ten o'clock I thought about turning on the news, but didn't.
I didn't have to turn on the news and hear about the Red Sox.
She turned on the news grid Theresa put her head in her hands.
Maybe at breakfast I can turn on the news and see them being hauled off in handcuffs."
Okay, I'm turning on the news now so we can see if there are any reports on your demons.
He turned on the news, but paid little attention to it, keeping an ear tuned to alert him to anything unusual.
"When you turn on the news, you see all that mass hysteria," he said.
"She'll be in the bathroom and Daddy'll turn on the news or something.
Then they put on the news conference here this morning.
They find a picture of a naked woman and it is put on the news.
Just no one is putting on the news.
"What else would they put on the news?"
"We had no electricity or plumbing and could not put on the news to confirm what was going on."
"That's one picture of me I'll never put on the news," Joyce said.
As the episode was first broadcast, a prison abuse scandal in Iraq was put on the news.
I'm kind of laid back but now I'm speaking So that you know I got used and abused, And even was put on the news.
Jack then gives the files to reporter Kip Waterman to put on the news before he heads off to get his revenge on Hennessey.
Each day, Errera reads through the Halo.Bungie.Org forums, looking for interesting items to put on the news page and monitoring comments.
At KCNC, Denver's CBS affiliate, Marv Rockford, the general manager, said, "The route that was being pursued here led to an invitation to the Federal Government to be in news departments, and to tell them what to put on the news."
In one instance, the history says, a C.I.A. officer who had been a reporter was apparently able to use his old contacts at The Associated Press to put on the news wire an article from Tehran about royal decrees that the C.I.A. itself had written.
And there was one especially juicy quote that got picked up and put on the news, which came from one of Jacobowitz's pro bono lawyers, Arnie Silverstein, who told reporters: "I can't wait to get off Penn's campus and get back to the United States of America."