Editorial [noun]
Definition of Editorial:
commentary
Opposite/Antonyms of Editorial:
-
Sentence/Example of Editorial:
TechCrunch Include aims to promote diversity by applying resources uniquely available to TechCrunch, including our editorial and events platforms, and by exemplifying the diversity mission in TechCrunch’s own staffing and culture.
In past, these editorial pushes have made a real impact in not only driving people to the polls — but also in driving engagement with the brand.
One agency executive said that it is technically possible to control creative separation through server-side ad insertion, a programmatic ad technology that stitches ads and editorial content, such as a show, together on the fly.
Advertisers’ brand suitability concerns are not limited to the editorial content against which their ads appear.
Condé Nast Traveler, for example, will launch an editorial program next month called The New Standard, which seeks to recognize the improvements and changes that hotels and other businesses have made to make customers feel safe.
CBS News’s digital channel, CBSN, for example, launched a new editorial series Monday focused on voting rights, a topic that few expected to be as pressing a topic in the 2020 presidential race.
No, the endorsements represent the editorial board and the editorial board alone, they say.
Hearst’s Delish also does not have plans to return to its test kitchen, according to Delish editorial director Joanna Saltz.
Cho said that the items included in the sale came from a set list created by the editorial team, all of which had previously been covered on the site.
Code and Theory isn’t hiring an editorial team to run Decode.