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audience and even
It ignores the sordid financial aspects ( quite conveniently, too, for his audience, who could indulge in moral indignation without visible, or even conscious, discomfort, their money from the transaction having been put away long ago in a good antiseptic brokerage ).
The observer of television or other products for a mass audience has only a permit to be, like the models he sees, even more like everybody else.
Even a city of thirty thousand might have six baseball teams, sponsored by grocers and hardware merchants or department stores, that played two or three times a week throughout the summer, usually in the cool of the evening, before an earnest and partisan audience who did not begrudge a quarter each, or even more, to be dropped into a hat when the game was half over.
The big audience started applauding even before he had finished.
Despite his inelegant appearance — many in the audience thought him awkward and even ugly — Lincoln demonstrated an intellectual leadership that brought him into the front ranks of the party and into contention for the Republican presidential nomination.
Howard Hawks legitimized this style in his films, allowing characters to act, even when not talking, when most of the audience would not be paying attention.
Several performances of the play have even ignored the stage direction to have the Ghost of Banquo enter at all, heightening the sense that Macbeth is growing mad, since the audience cannot see what he claims to see.
Sandberg then shocked the national audience by hitting a second home run, even farther into the left field bleachers, to tie the game again.
The " minicomics " form, an extremely informal version of self-publishing, arose in the 1980s and became increasingly popular among artists in the 1990s, despite reaching an even more limited audience than the small press.
Simple, even stark, paintings of common household items ( Still Life with a Smoker's Box ) and an uncanny ability to portray children's innocence in an unsentimental manner ( Boy with a Top ) nevertheless found an appreciative audience in his time, and account for his timeless appeal.
The books, which are referenced many times in the Harry Potter books, even have footnotes about other books, which do not exist, for future reading, and a foreword by Albus Dumbledore, which explains why they are releasing the book to a muggle audience.
They emerge from the wreck to enthusiastic applause from the audience, who assume the crash is part of the entertainment, and when Sarris attacks again, Jason kills him with an Ion Nebulizer ( blaster pistol ) and receives even greater applause.
This main theme has drawn a larger audience of women movie-goers to the theaters in modern times than ever historically recorded .< ref name = Spines > Movie makers also go as far as to integrate women relatable topics such as pregnancy, motherhood, lesbian relationships, and babysitting jobs into their films in order to gain even more female oriented audiences.
Depending upon the performer's mood and personal experience, interactions with other musicians, or even members of the audience, a jazz musician / performer may alter melodies, harmonies or time signature at will.
After the movie had ended, Stalin often invited the audience for dinner, even though the clock was usually past midnight.
Alternative media are also " mass media " outlets in the sense of using technology capable of reaching many people, even if the audience is often smaller than the mainstream.
Mobile has the best audience accuracy and is the only mass media with a built-in payment channel available to every user without any credit cards or PayPal accounts or even an age limit.
The audience replied " no ", so he announced, I have no desire to speak to people who don't even know what I will be talking about!
Other interpretations include for example that of Antonio Gramsci, who argued that Machiavelli's audience for this work was not even the ruling class but the common people because the rulers already knew these methods through their education.
Wrestlers are generally expected to stay within the confines of the ring, though matches sometimes end up outside the ring, and even in the audience, to add excitement.
Because silent films had no synchronized sound for dialogue, onscreen intertitles were used to narrate story points, present key dialogue and sometimes even comment on the action for the cinema audience.
In the late 1990s, Buffy the Vampire Slayer drew a large mainstream audience into fandom ; greater demand allowed ( even obliged, for the sake of time management ) Buffy actors to charge much higher appearance fees than the Star Trek actors had.
Encouraged by the show's host and by an unprimed studio audience, the vast majority followed instructions even as the " victim " screamed.
In 2006, he published Hood, the first book in the King Raven Trilogy-a retelling of the Robin Hood legend, transferred to Wales, which introduced Lawhead's work to an even larger audience.
It featured panel discussions from some of the biggest newsmakers and was among the first shows to allow audience participation: members of the studio audience could question the guests or even heckle them.

audience and voiced
Babs does so, and the resulting audience laughter rejuvenates the ailing Honey and reveals the voice, as well as the vaultkeeper to be none other than Bosko ( voiced by Don Messick ) himself.
* Narrator ( voiced by Stan Freberg ): The narrator of the series, who would often be heard at intervals and broke the fourth wall, telling the audience points where he considered trouble ahead for the Wuzzles or explaining a certain facet of the island of Wuz.
It was during that period that the Guard came to be financed by Nicolae Malaxa ( otherwise known as a prominent collaborator of Carol ), and became interested in reforming itself to reach an even wider audience: Codreanu created a meritocratic inner structure of ranks, established a wide range of philanthropic ventures, again voiced themes which appealed to the industrial workers, and created Corpul Muncitoresc Legionar, as a Legion branch which grouped members of the working class.
She also has a prominent role as a virtual participant in a popular exhibit on robots with the traveling exhibit, Star Wars: Where Science Meets Imagination, interacting with a real C-3PO ( voiced by Anthony Daniels as she spoke to the audience through a pre-recorded message displayed on a large plasma flat-screen display.
* Yukon Cornelius ( voiced by Larry D. Mann )-a prospector who leads the audience to believe that he is searching for either gold or silver, but is actually seeking peppermint as revealed at the end of the original version of the special.
Armstrong has voiced her desire to reach a wide audience in her interviews, one that includes both men and women of all nationalities.
They are voiced by the actors who play Bulk and Skull, however only the audience can understand them.

audience and sentiments
Ulysses describes, to an unspecified audience For example, the poem's insistent iambic pentameter is often interrupted by spondees ( metrical feet consisting of two long syllables ), which slow down the movement of the poem ; the labouring language casts into doubt the reliability of Ulysses ' sentiments.
With these passages, he sets the tone for his own defense by appealing to both the reason and the religious sentiments of his audience in order to prove his innocence:
Yet the drama was also enormously popular, from the Queen and Court down to the commonest of the common people ; indeed, the odd polarity of the theatre audience in this period, with the High and the Low favoring the drama, and the middle class generally more hostile with the growth of Puritan sentiments, is a surprising and intriguing phenomenon.

audience and words
Where Edwin Othello Excell sought to make the singing of " Amazing Grace " uniform throughout thousands of churches, records allowed artists to improvise with the words and music specific to each audience.
After telling the audience " I shall now read to you the scroll of the Establishment of the State, which has passed its first reading by the National Council ", Ben-Gurion proceeded to read out the declaration, taking 16 minutes, ending with the words " Let us accept the Foundation Scroll of the Jewish State by rising " and calling on Rabbi Fishman to recite the Shehecheyanu blessing.
She introduced her daughter, Linn Ullmann, to the audience with the words: " Here comes the woman whom Ingmar Bergmann loves the most ".
" In an interview on NPR's Fresh Air, Palin attributed an almost dead audience to his seeing guests reverently mouthing the words of the sketch, rather than laughing at it.
In an audience he gave to the Cardinals, who wanted him to sign the Electoral Capitulations from the Conclave and to guarantee that he would make no more cardinals than those agreements allowed, he refused to sign, stating that he would show his intent by deeds not words.
Not only did men billeted in Greek areas have opportunity to learn sufficient Greek for the purpose of everyday conversation, but they were also able to see plays in the foreign tongue .” Having an audience with knowledge of the Greek language, whether limited or more expanded, allowed Plautus more freedom to use Greek references and words.
" On matters of style, he proposed that the style conform to the subject matter and to the audience, that simple words be employed whenever possible, and that the style should be agreeable.
Therefore, if the audience is not already familiar with the phrase used in the punch line, or is not aware of the multiple meanings of the words in the phrase, the surprise ending of the joke cannot be recovered by explaining the joke to the audience.
Different versions of Truth's words have been recorded, with the first one published a month later by Marius Robinson, a newspaper owner and editor who was in the audience.
He received a warm ovation from the mostly Nationalist audience and as he walked off the platform, he said the words Edmund Burke used on the death of candidate Richard Coombe: " What shadows we are, what shadows we pursue ".
As Bryan spoke his final sentence, recalling the Crucifixion of Jesus, he placed his hands to his temples, fingers extended ; with the final words, he extended his arms to his sides straight out to his body and held that pose for about five seconds as if offering himself as sacrifice for the cause, as the audience watched in dead silence.
In the second half of the 5th century BC, particularly at Athens, " sophist " came to denote a class of mostly itinerant intellectuals who taught courses in various subjects, speculated about the nature of language and culture and employed rhetoric to achieve their purposes, generally to persuade or convince others: " Sophists did, however, have one important thing in common: whatever else they did or did not claim to know, they characteristically had a great understanding of what words would entertain or impress or persuade an audience.
His version had a powerful emotional impact: Lear driven to madness by his daughters was ( in the words of one spectator, Arthur Murphy ) " the finest tragic distress ever seen on any stage " and, in contrast, the devotion shown to Lear by Cordelia ( a mix of Shakespeare's, Tate's and Garrick's contributions to the part ) moved the audience to tears.
The books have been praised by critics such as Charles Champlin of the Los Angeles Times, who wrote: " A cascade of language, a rumbling tumbling riot of words, a pub soliloquy to an invisible but imaginable audience, and the more captivating for it.
Webb trusted the audience to determine the meanings of words or terms by their context, and Dragnet tried to avoid the kinds of awkward, lengthy exposition that people would not actually use in daily speech.
Unlike many stars who simply greeted audiences with a few words before the screening of their film, Morris was comfortable on stage and presented an entire vaudeville magic act, featuring live animals and larger stage feats such as nearly severing an audience volunteer's head in a prop guillotine.
Rolling Stone magazine eulogized Dio with these words: " It wasn't just his mighty pipes that made him Ronnie James Dio — it was his moral fervor ... what always stood out was Dio's raging compassion for the lost rock & roll children in his audience.
His language was relatively unstudied and his delivery somewhat embarrassed, but he generally found words to say the right thing at the right time and to address the House of Commons in the language best adapted to the capacity and the temper of his audience.
Therefore, modern opera houses may assist the audience by providing translated supertitles -- projections of the words over or near the stage.
Whitman, who praises wordsas simple as grass ” ( section 39 ) forgoes standard verse and stanza patterns in favor of a simple, legible style that can appeal to a mass audience.
In Berlin the audience could not contain its applause until the end of the Symphonie fantastique, and in Monteux's words " went wild " after the slow movement, the " Scène aux champs ".
An effective communicator he was skilfully ambivalent and matched his words depending on circumstances and audience though he would always first defend constitutionalism on which basis he sought to bring about change.
Three weeks later when we got to play in Israel the audience knew the words to all the new songs and it was wonderful.

1.000 seconds.