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Hearst
[ hurst ]
noun
- William Randolph, 1863–1951, U.S. editor and publisher.
- his son William Randolph, Jr., 1908–1993, U.S. publisher and editor.
Hearst
/ ɜː /
noun
- HearstWilliam Randolph18631951MUSWRITING: newspaper proprietor William Randolph. 1863–1951, US newspaper publisher, whose newspapers were noted for their sensationalism
Example Sentences
Hearst, in a fury, tried to shoot Chaplin but wound up shooting Ince instead, and the whole thing was supposed to have been covered up.
Controversy: The movie was considered a thinly veiled swipe at real-life newspaper tycoon William Randolph Hearst, who did not take kindly to the celluloid portrait.
She was about to play Patty Hearst in a film for Mangold before that project fell through, and had become friends with Chalamet on Woody Allen’s “A Rainy Day in New York.”
“Reminds me of Hearst Castle,” said visitor Cherie Visconti, eyeing the dining room.
The SLA claimed credit for the kidnapping, and demanded that the Hearst family feed the poor en masse.
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