newsmagazine

noun
news·​mag·​a·​zine | \ ˈnüz-ˌma-gə-ˌzēn How to pronounce newsmagazine (audio) , -ˈzēn, ˈnyüz-\

Definition of newsmagazine

1 : a usually weekly magazine devoted chiefly to summarizing and analyzing news

Examples of newsmagazine in a Sentence

Recent Examples on the Web

But the newsmagazine has become a pop culture phenomenon, propelled by a growing public appetite for true-crime stories. Stephen Battaglio, chicagotribune.com, "How Keith Morrison and ‘Dateline’ became true crime sex symbols," 15 July 2019 The popularity of newsmagazines waned in the mid-2000s, but true crime stories continued to be strong draws. Stephen Battaglio, Detroit Free Press, "The verdict is in: Viewers can't get enough true-crime stories from NBC's ‘Dateline’," 14 July 2019 The popularity of newsmagazines waned in the mid-2000s, but true crime stories continued to be strong draws. Stephen Battaglio, latimes.com, "NBC’s ‘Dateline’ is riding high on TV's true-crime wave," 11 July 2019 Other thematic threads woven into the film include the evolution of the TV newsmagazine and the power of television to shape opinion — both of the audience and the reporter. Michael O'sullivan, Twin Cities, "Mike Wallace documentary reminds us of journalism’s power — and responsibility," 8 Aug. 2019 But the newsmagazine has become a pop culture phenomenon, propelled by a growing public appetite for true-crime stories. Stephen Battaglio, chicagotribune.com, "How Keith Morrison and ‘Dateline’ became true crime sex symbols," 15 July 2019 But the newsmagazine has become a pop culture phenomenon, propelled by a growing public appetite for true-crime stories. Stephen Battaglio, chicagotribune.com, "How Keith Morrison and ‘Dateline’ became true crime sex symbols," 15 July 2019 But the newsmagazine has become a pop culture phenomenon, propelled by a growing public appetite for true-crime stories. Stephen Battaglio, chicagotribune.com, "How Keith Morrison and ‘Dateline’ became true crime sex symbols," 15 July 2019 But the newsmagazine has become a pop culture phenomenon, propelled by a growing public appetite for true-crime stories. Stephen Battaglio, Detroit Free Press, "The verdict is in: Viewers can't get enough true-crime stories from NBC's ‘Dateline’," 14 July 2019

These example sentences are selected automatically from various online news sources to reflect current usage of the word 'newsmagazine.' Views expressed in the examples do not represent the opinion of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback.

See More

First Known Use of newsmagazine

1890, in the meaning defined at sense 1

Keep scrolling for more