Media outlets starting with A
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AAdentro StyleUnited States of America
Covers men's fashion. Offers style ideas, information on trends and more. The fundamentals of working with bloggers are the same as with traditional journalists at traditional media outlets: respect their schedules; take time to read their material to learn their interests; and only contact them if/when they want to be contacted. You will also find that if a blogger is a journalist for another outlet(s), Cision tracks their contact preferences there as well. The outlet offers RSS (Really Simple Syndication).
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AAdeptus RidiculousUnited States of America
Lifelong Warhammer fan Bricky and grimdark greenhorn Dkdiamantes delve into the incredibly vast ocean that is Warhammer 40000 lore in this unofficial Warhammer 40k podcast. From superhuman space warriors to depraved cultists and green-skinned Mad Max rejects, not even the most ridiculous aspects of this setting are off the table for these two mad men.
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AAdExchangerUnited States of America
AdExchanger.com is designed for advertising agencies, advertisers, publishers, data providers and ad technology companies. Editorial content contains up-to-date news on digital media optimization. The outlet offers RSS (Really Simple Syndication).
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AAdFreakUnited States of America
This blog is hosted on adweek.com. Focuses on current advertising trends, ad reviews, gossip, new niches and general advertising news. The fundamentals of working with bloggers are the same as with traditional journalists at traditional media outlets: respect their schedules; take time to read their material to learn their interests; and only contact them if/when they want to be contacted. You will also find that if a blogger is a journalist for another outlet(s), Cision tracks their contact preferences there as well. The outlet offers RSS (Really Simple Syndication).
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AAdga News & EventsUnited States of America
Written for dairy goat breeders. Committed to improving public perception of dairy goats and dairy goat products. Provides information on news and events of interest to ADGA and its members.
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AADHD Aha!United States of America
Listen to people share candid stories about the moment it clicked that they have ADHD. Host Laura Key, who's had her own ADHD "aha" moment, chats with guests about common topics like ADHD and shame, mental health challenges, and more. Through heartfelt interviews, listeners learn about the unexpected, emotional, and even funny ways ADHD symptoms surface for kids and adults.
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AADHD ChatterUnited States of America
I had my first anxiety attack in a classroom when I was 6 years old. I started LADBible when I was 22 years old. I was diagnosed with ADHD at 34. Suddenly, everything made sense. Join me every Tuesday as I chat with leading experts, celebrities and psychiatrists. This is the podcast I wish I heard when I was younger. None of us are broken, just different. We have all always been enough. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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AADHD Experts PodcastUnited States of America
Leading ADHD experts give real-life answers to questions submitted by ADD adults and parents raising children with attention deficit disorder across a range of topics covering symptoms, school, work, and family life. Download the accompanying slide presentations here: additudemag.com/adhd-expert-webinars-index (look for the episode number). Note on audio quality: This podcast is a recording of a webinar series, and the audio has been captured from conversations recorded via a computer or telephone, not in a studio. Register to participate in the live webinars at: additudemag.com/tag/webinar.
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AADHD for Smart Ass Women PodcastUnited States of America
Podcast is for DD/ADHD (diagnosed or suspecting) women who see their symptoms as more positive than negative. A podcast is a downloadable video or audio broadcast show. Most podcasts are available by subscription through an RSS reader or other aggregator. The fundamentals of working with podcasters are the same as with traditional journalists at traditional media outlets: respect their schedules; take time to watch or listen to their material to learn their interests, format of content; and only contact them if relevant.