0 someone who arranges publicity for a person or organization by giving information to reporters and television and radio companies and arranging public meetings and special events --
1 someone whose job is to draw attention to events and give information to reporters and broadcasters --
2 someone whose job is to provide information about a person, product, or an organization: --
I have a publicist, and she writes the press releases in language that excites press people.
However, the imprecations of party publicists were apparently to no avail.
During the revolution, many such men emerged as leading revolutionary publicists and politicians.
What may seem harder to understand is the afterlife and amplification of the ' guilty men ' interpretation among politicians, publicists, and academics.
According to their publicists, natural philosophers would enjoy a special role in a future millennial state, and deserved special privileges in the here and now.
Jobbers could not ignore these political agents and publicists and the organisations they created.
Anti-suffrage women were sometimes reluctant publicists, and preferred to speculate on gender matters in fiction rather than in political theatre or massmembership politics.
This view was shared by many other royalist publicists.