Your English writing platform
Discover LudwigThe phrase "a media class" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to refer to a group of individuals or entities involved in the production, distribution, or consumption of media content.
Example: "The rise of digital platforms has significantly transformed the dynamics of a media class, influencing how information is shared and consumed."
Alternatives: "a media sector" or "a media group".
Exact(3)
To most outside the bubble, this excessive navel-gazing is wearying, even alienating: it fosters the sense of a media class which is only interested in what people like them have said about other people like them.
In the mid-1970s, she attended Otis College of Art and Design in California and, briefly, York University in Toronto, where she played in a band called Below the Belt, formed for a media class.
"When you take a class, especially a media class, you start to understand what that means, how the First Amendment is behind the scenes".
Similar(57)
Of course none of those men are to be found on "Girls," which set off a media-class kerfuffle upon its debut this month, assailed -- though with concern, not vitriol -- for failing to depict much beyond the wages of white privilege.
She also teaches a new media class for SVA's Design Criticism MFA program and is a Young Leaders Forum Fellow with the National Committee on United States-China RelatioNational Committee on United States-China
In a digital media class sixth graders form record companies recording, marketing and planning the enterprise on their Apples.
Masquerading as journalists allows these figures to present their controversial worldview based on half-truths and distortions as a set of facts that an elite media class has hidden from the public.
Rather than be labelled sore losers, an entire media class has elected not to mind about the grotesque untruth of Iraqi WMD.
One of the most highly rated TV shows on ABC has students in a Journalism and Media class at San Diego State University going wild.
In his admiring book, Alastair Campbell: New Labour and the Rise of the Media Class, Peter Oborn, a very talented but mercurial political writer, provides a lengthy and inaccurate account that I have no wish to disturb.
For someone whose every move is picked over by a frenzied and spittle-flecked media class (Jeremy Corbyn picked up some sandwiches! Traitor! Jeremy Corbyn didn't match his jacket with his trousers! Bolshevik!), whose first PMQs were bound to be the subject of intense and bizarre scrutiny, it's a very good damage limitation strategy.
Write better and faster with AI suggestions while staying true to your unique style.
Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com