Sentences with phrase «american dream the baby»

The Chevrolet Spark starts at $ 13,875 and is a fine little Korean automobile, but a few grand added to your debt is going to feel awfully heavy if you're just trying to scrabble a tiny mousehole into the little corner of the American Dream the Baby Boomers have relegated to you.

Not exact matches

The presiding judge continued that «I am at my wits end to comprehend how a couple with three children living in the American dream would agree to relocate to Ghana because they were enticed by plaintiff to bring her son to Ghana to baby - sit.
Back in the 1980s, I was living the American dream: I was healthy, happy, married, and had a new baby girl on the way.
Neighbors By all appearances, new parents Mac (Seth Rogen) and Kelly Radner (Rose Byrne) are living the American dream — complete with an adorable baby girl and a beautiful new started home in the suburbs.
Since Scott Simon has chronicled the American experience for years as the host of NPR's «Weekend Edition,» it seems only fitting that he should apply his prizewinning reportorial skills to a personal experience that has enriched his life beyond his wildest dreams: adopting a child.In his new memoir Baby, We Were Meant for Each...
alternative assets, American Dream, austerity, baby boomers, consumerism, emerging markets, entitlement spending, fall of communism, frontier markets, globalisation, Japan, Me Generation, Millennials, USA
The majority of Smith's work chronicles the dreams and adventures of his two main alter - egos: the extraordinarily prescient and sympathetic alter - ego, the naïve and somewhat inept Everyman «Mike» and «Baby Ikki», an ambiguously ageless, sexless figure, as they each navigate (to varying degrees of success) the absurdities and alienation of the tragicomedy that is contemporary American life.
Exhibition Checklist Main Gallery (Clockwise from entrance) Robert Arneson Splatt, 1983 bronze with unique ceramic base 71 x 21 x 21 inches RAs 130.01 Robert Arneson Elvis II, 1978 conte, pastel on paper 41 5/8 x 29 7/8» RAd 04 Joan Brown Self - Portrait at Age 42, 1980 enamel on canvas 71 3/4» x 60» JBRp 19 Steven Campbell Men Insulting Nature and the Notion of Travel, 1986 oil on canvas 83 x 99 inches SCamp 01 Carol Cole Tar Baby, 2004 mixed media 7 x 13 inches CCs 1 Peter Saul Come and Get Me, 1968 oil on canvas 63 1/2 x42 inches PSp 118 Richard Shaw Figure on a Palette, 1980 glazed porcelain 39 x 13 x 18 inches RSs 68 Andrew Lenaghan Big Sarah, 2005 acrylic on canvas 77 1/2 x 58 inches AnLp 395 Yoan Capote Madness II, 2004 steel 70 1/2 x 40 x 23 inches YCs 19 Collier Schorr Esther's Fine Dream (Ashes to Ashes, We All Fall Down), 1991 cast paper, acrylic, pencil, and collage L 18 x W 12 x D 10 inches CoSs 1 James Barsness Untitled (Red nude on street), 2004 acrylic, ballpoint pen 12 x 9 inches JBARd 60 James Barsness Untitled (with jack o'lantern), 2004 acrylic, ballpoint pen, inkjet archival print on paper 11 7/8 x 8 5/8 inches JBARd 61 Anthony Kulig Look - Out, 2005 plaster, acrylic Two figures 17 x 4 1/2 x 3 inches each AKuls 8 Don Colley Weave 2003 7 x 6 1/2 inches scratchboard, artist's frame DCp 10 Don Colley Reel, 2003 scratchboard, hand - made hardwood frame 6 x 6 inches DCp 09 Side Gallery Diane Edison Self - Portrait Interior (striped robe), 1992 color pencil / black paper 30 x 22 inches DEd 8 Adolph Gottlieb The Watchers, c. 1941 oil on canvas 30 x 24 inches AGotp01 Lesley Dill Of, 2005 unique bronze with oil paint 67 x 58 x 28 inches LDs 207 Alfred Leslie Bread and Coffee, 1983 oil on canvas 84 x 60 inches ALp 02 Stanton Macdonald - Wright Study for American Synchromy # 1, 1919 charcoal on paper (2 - sided drawing) 25 x 18 1/2 inches SMWd 3 Stanton Macdonald - Wright Study for American Synchromy # 2, 1919 charcoal on paper (2 - sided drawing) 25 x 18 1/2 inches SMWd 4 James Valerio David, 2004 pencil on paper 30 1/2 x 25 inches JVd 52
They are also more optimistic than Baby Boomers and Gen Xers that they will be able to achieve the American Dream.
According to two recent studies, more than half of millennials no longer believe the American Dream is possible and half of baby boomers don't believe their children will enjoy the same level of success they have.
«Buying a home is a big part of the American Dream — equally shared by millennials and baby boomers alike — but it's becoming extremely difficult to make it work on a single income,» Gudell says.
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