Hidden in all the dreck that floods your e-mail inbox, you find the occasional gem.
From the post-gazette.com
As we've seen with any democratizing medium, we always get a lot of dreck.
From the time.com
Because he gets a significant number of people to pay to see him in dreck.
From the time.com
Why do these people still earn obscene amounts of money churning out dreck?
From the washingtonpost.com
This stuff could blow away the dreck that other brands smear all over the social web.
From the forbes.com
Publishing dreck like this is the surest way to lose your reader base.
From the forbes.com
I also assumed from everything I've seen about it that it's just dreck.
From the tunedin.blogs.time.com
Most of it is dreck, not worthy of having been read in the first place.
From the newsday.com
He signed his next deal before the first reviews of this dreck became his career Doomsday.
From the kentucky.com
More examples
Schlock: merchandise that is shoddy or inferior
This is a list of English words of Yiddish origin, many of which have entered the English language by way of American English. Spelling of some of these Yiddish language words may be variable (for example, schlep is also seen as shlep, schnoz as shnozz, and so on). ...