15 signs you might be a word nerd
Ever corrected the grammar in a story you read to your kids? To how many word-a-day emails do you subscribe? Uh-oh, you might be a word nerd. (Join the club.)
Ever corrected the grammar in a story you read to your kids? To how many word-a-day emails do you subscribe? Uh-oh, you might be a word nerd. (Join the club.)
The Oxford Dictionaries gave the honor to “squeezed middle.” Your move, Dictionary.com.
Animals, parenting, superstitions, and more dominate this list—so do stories from CNN and Yahoo.
An analysis of the Republican presidential candidates’ performance at this year’s debates gives grades to each contender. No A grades. No Fs (or Ds), either.
Stop writing boring headlines and make them pop with these proven techniques.
From clients to new approaches to measurement, the author shares the many reasons to be thankful if you work in public relations and marketing.
Remember the seminal half-hour comedy from the early ’90s? Turns out Zack Morris, Screech, Kelly, and the gang knew a thing or two about PR, sort of.
From showing up too casually attired to giving a weak handshake, committing these mistakes will make sure you don’t get a callback (much less a new job).
The Occupy Wall Street movement draws mixed reviews from PR pros. Some say protesters have effectively highlighted financial inequality, but others say its messaging is murky.
Americans love small business and don’t seem to mind large companies. They’re not fond of CEOs, the federal government and, to an extent, the media.
The author, a PR and journalism major at Penn State, experienced the week’s big story from a unique vantage point. Here, she explains what it was like in the classroom and on the street.
After 12 years, the man behind the popular media blog steps down following concern over ‘incomplete attribution.’
While the Academy has named Billy Crystal as its replacement emcee for Eddie Murphy, the social media world had its own suggestions. Plus, NCAA marketers slam dunk on NBA lockout, Kim Kardashian’s ex-publicist claims wedding was staged, on-flight porn, and more.
Amid the firings of head football coach Joe Paterno and university president Graham Spanier—both effective immediately—one writer (and mother) conveys her take on the crisis and its subsequent student riots.
You’ve got a dynamite opening and a brilliantly-reasoned argument. Now how do you end the speech?