How to Use echo chamber in a Sentence
echo chamber
noun-
And a lot of that noise is in the echo chambers on the edges.
— CBS News, 11 June 2023 -
To think with her, then, allows us out of the echo chamber of the present.
— Anne M. Thell, Washington Post, 27 June 2023 -
And, of course, the media's echo chamber didn't stop there.
— Fox News, 19 July 2018 -
But the 2022 Emmys seemed to retreat to the cozy echo chamber of show biz.
— Michael Schulman, The New Yorker, 13 Sep. 2022 -
My main goal was to get outside of my own echo chamber.
— Jessica Gross, Longreads, 1 Mar. 2018 -
Reddit, for him, was a bit like an echo chamber and a bit like a group chat with friends.
— New York Times, 15 Feb. 2022 -
The months of working from home, in an echo chamber of their own thoughts, was starting to get to them.
— Julissa James, Los Angeles Times, 13 May 2021 -
At a tribute to Aretha Franklin, the theater felt like an echo chamber.
— Washington Post, 16 July 2021 -
For too long, the real story of cannabis was drowned out in those echo chambers.
— Dr. Sanjay Gupta, CNN, 27 Sep. 2019 -
Is there a risk that Red Yenta can feel like an echo chamber?
— Danyoung Kim, The New Yorker, 7 Oct. 2019 -
Our industry tends to live in a bit of an echo chamber.
— Cherie Hu, Billboard, 5 Mar. 2019 -
The Crystal River Ranch area is kind of an echo chamber.
— Evan Bush, The Seattle Times, 2 July 2018 -
Reuters Subscribe to The Week Escape your echo chamber.
— Harold Maass, theweek, 22 Jan. 2024 -
Instead of getting caught in the echo chamber, express your opinions in a way that stands out in the crowd.
— Rena Fallstrom, Forbes, 26 Jan. 2022 -
No one’s listening, they’re getting caught in the echo chamber of their own points of view.
— Jem Aswad, Variety, 20 Oct. 2023 -
The result is an echo chamber of Good Trump News that diminishes all the bad news.
— Aaron Blake, Washington Post, 14 May 2018 -
The acoustics were going to be dreadful, like an echo chamber.
— The Economist, 28 Mar. 2018 -
The modern echo chamber ensures that errant ideas can bounce around a long time.
— Daniel Henninger, WSJ, 1 Mar. 2023 -
Anybody who wants to hide in their own echo chamber can easily find places to do so.
— Star Tribune, 22 Apr. 2021 -
Far from all CEOs rely on intuition and the echo chamber in the return to office.
— Gleb Tsipursky, Fortune, 5 Sep. 2023 -
His 130-foot-long echo chamber is covered in a layer of beeswax that, after eight years, has begun to melt from the walls.
— Jay Cheshes, Smithsonian Magazine, 8 Dec. 2022 -
At its worst, the comment section could be a bit of an echo chamber nestled inside a snake pit.
— Erin Gloria Ryan, Rolling Stone, 11 Nov. 2023 -
But with the advent and explosion of social media, echo chambers took on a life of their own.
— Ian Bremmer, Time, 4 May 2018 -
Her words, succinct and direct, will be a big part of the political echo chamber to come.
— Gloria Borger, CNN, 12 May 2021 -
In too many red districts, there is an issue and media echo chamber.
— David R. Eichenthal, The New Republic, 19 July 2021 -
But with its inquiries and insinuations, VoteRef, as it is known, has added to the volume in the echo chamber.
— Megan O’Matz, ProPublica, 7 Mar. 2022 -
Gab even left its own echo chamber to post an update on its Twitter account, where it would be seen by the masses.
— NBC News, 19 Apr. 2018 -
The media echo chamber ensures that bad news never sticks to the government.
— Debasish Roy Chowdhury, Time, 3 May 2021 -
Without a good-natured back and forth, a company risks becoming an echo chamber.
— Paolo Confino, Fortune, 14 Oct. 2024 -
Trump and other Republicans are spending more to amplify their beliefs in an echo chamber.
— Megan Poinski, Forbes, 9 Oct. 2024
Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'echo chamber.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.
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