rip-and-reader

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English[edit]

Etymology[edit]

Suggesting the tearing off and reading of printed sheets from incoming news transmissions.

Noun[edit]

rip-and-reader (plural rip-and-readers)

  1. (broadcasting, slang, derogatory) A newsreader or station that delivers the news in a formulaic, uninspired manner.
    • 1977, Ronald G. Hicks, A Survey of Mass Communication, page 145:
      In between the all-news stations and the rip-and-readers are a substantial number of stations which sometimes have one or two newsmen and which try to do a respectable job with a limited budget.
    • 1987, Presstime, volume 9, numbers 1-6, page 15:
      Leave the rip-and-readers to the tender mercies of the Associated Press. Major market radio and television stations are another matter entirely. Their news interests and requirements are similar to those of newspapers.
    • 2012, Bradley Schultz, Sports Media: Reporting, Producing, and Planning, page 254:
      News director Griff Potter says he wants “a journalist, not a rip-and-reader. Someone who understands that highlights, runs, and errors are boring television.”