Dictionary
be tabloid
noun
A newspaper having pages half the dimensions of the standard format, especially one that favours stories of a sensational nature over more serious news.
Exact(8)
Monday morning will still see a nominal "Sun," but it will be tabloid and unrecognisable.
Then, again, anything with the name Pirro seems to be tabloid fodder these days.
My first instinct, of course, was to find a pay phone and call in the photographers — I knew the pictures could be tabloid gold.
Church's story was always going to be tabloid gold – the working-class Welsh girl who sang like an angel and would be our own Maria Callas.
Scotland Yard collected evidence indicating that reporters at News of the World might have hacked the phone messages of hundreds of celebrities, government officials, soccer stars — anyone whose personal secrets could be tabloid fodder.
"Kids shouldn't be tabloid fodder nor the target of ongoing harassment," he said.
Similar(49)
In addition, the testimony during the trial will be tabloid-friendly stuff, replete with sex, lies and videotape.
This is tabloid journalism.
It was tabloid; it was Plato.
Or, are tabloid scandals just entertainment?
It's tabloid fame that dooms you.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com