Exact(5)
Those are the preachers who won headlines and disdain.
Despite his relative anonymity, Michele's dramatically different aesthetic, also in evidence in January's rushed-together menswear show, won headlines.
Although he earned some (deserved) criticism for advocating a timetable that owed more to electoral populism than to concern for Britain's responsibilities, it won headlines.
Shortly after he was elected treasurer in 2000, Moore won headlines demanding that Wall Street clean up its act.
The howls and hand-wringing over global capitalism and its trapdoors of "hot money," hedge fund hocus-pocus and derivative meltdowns have won headlines for shouters like George Soros.
Similar(53)
Each side has won headline-grabbing victories against the other at the World Trade Organization in Geneva.
The Saints' brilliant back play may win headlines, but Diggin emphasized the forward foundation.
Politicians, meanwhile, like big, splashy projects that will win headlines and capture the public's attention.
But Shapps's department, Communities and Local Government, is notorious for winning headlines and then failing to deliver.
After more than 70 albums, the 85-year-old crooner is winning headlines with an impromptu PR strategy, blaming the 9/11 attacks on the United States' actions abroad.
That was done, above all, to win headlines in the Tory press, proving that your party knew how to deal with loony lefties.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com