Recycling and sustainability are the keywords for this week's eco-friendly tabloids, which rehash old stories as news and return yet again to perennial favorites. "Barbra Streisand, 78 — Blindsided By… Read the rest of the article: COVID unbeatable and vaccines won't work, in this week's optimistic tabloids
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Peter Sheridan The crack squad of medically-trained psychics at the tabloids have been working overtime this week. Prince William has cancer, Ghislaine Maxwell is trapped by coronavirus, Gwen Stefani is pregnant, and… Read the rest of the article: Bill Clinton's Sweetheart deal and Billy the Kid's death in this week's dubious tabloids
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Peter Sheridan The tawdry tabloids' obsession with celebrity weight brings us the revelation that Hillary Clinton has in recent months eaten the equivalent of an entire Celine Dion, with room left over… Read the rest of the article: Obama's heartache and Hillary Clinton's heart in this week's dubious tabloids
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Peter Sheridan Disastrously doomed dynasties dominate this week's dismally dysfunctional tabloids, personified by those two blue blooded but beleaguered clans separated by an ocean: the British Royal Family and the Kennedys.
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Peter Sheridan Tabloid readers must be deeply religious folk, judging by the plethora of Christian-themed ads in their pages. Readers this week are invited to purchase a 'Reflections of Hope' hand-blown glass… Read the rest of the article: Hollywood's most hated in this week's dubious tabloids
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Peter Sheridan Fireworks and fanfare greeted the opening of the Donald J Trump Presidential Library Casino & Resort in Las Vegas, Nevada, today. President Trump, aged 84, attended the ceremony in handcuffs,… Read the rest of the article: July 4, 2030: Opening of the Trump Presidential Library
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Peter Sheridan Is America burning? Are its streets torn by riots and violence? The 'Globe' is banking on post-election mayhem, but since it went to press the day before Tuesday's November 3… Read the rest of the article: American mayhem in this week's dubious tabloids
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Peter Sheridan Failed soufflés fill this week's tabloids: unpalatable stories full of hot air that quickly deflate, devoid of nutritious content and depressingly indigestible. "Harry & Meghan. What Really Happened," screams the… Read the rest of the article: Topless teens and palace intrigue in this week's dubious tabloids
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Peter Sheridan This week's offerings certainly make it seem that way. They are losing readers, losing money, and long ago lost whatever slender shred of credibility they may once have had. American… Read the rest of the article: Are the tabloids in a death spiral?
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Peter Sheridan British pantomime embraces an ancient tradition of audience participation, in which the great unwashed throng cheerfully yell at the actors. The panto's villain will invariably be stalking the hero of… Read the rest of the article: Kenny Rogers' body is missing in this week's dubious tabloids
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Peter Sheridan Old news, nonsensical news, and non-news – this week's tabloids have it all.
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Peter Sheridan This week's tabloids prove Shakespeare wrong. "Nothing will come of nothing," wrote the Bard in 'King Lear,' but the tabloids demonstrate that they're perfectly capable of spinning elaborate tales from… Read the rest of the article: Queen ends sham marriage, JonBenet's devil cult, and killer vending machines in this week's dubious tabloids
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Peter Sheridan "Cops In The Crosshairs!" screams the 'Enquirer' cover story. "Shooter's ambush of L.A. deputies caught on camera! . . . Gun-toting goons declare war." A tragic shooting of two sheriff's… Read the rest of the article: Terrorists and spies swarm America in this week's dubious tabloids
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Peter Sheridan There are three stages of disbelief in reading a tabloid story.
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Peter Sheridan National newspapers in Britain traditionally call August 'The Silly Season,' the month when news is so slow that even the most ludicrous of stories will sometimes be used to fill… Read the rest of the article: Prince Harry a drug kingpin, Bill Clinton's latest sex scandal, and escaping Scientology, in this week's dubious tabloids
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Peter Sheridan "Hollywood Collapses!" screams the 'National Enquirer' cover. "No money! No movies! No jobs!"
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Peter Sheridan It's been said that truth is the first casualty of war, but it now appears to be the first casualty of peacetime too.
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Peter Sheridan Reading supermarket tabloids causes cancer and kills thousands each year, a shocking new study has revealed.
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Peter Sheridan Expect to see 'National Enquirer' readers driving around in Rolls Royces and hopping private jets to their private islands.
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Peter Sheridan For years the British Royal Family has been nothing but a soap opera to the tabloids.