Sentences with phrase «met television audience»

McDonald told the Met television audience, «This may not have been the best deal we could've made, but we were restricted in whom we could talk to.»

Not exact matches

Moyers's people had swarmed over the Indiana University campus in successive waves of producers, executive producers, directors and associate directors; of lighting people, camera people, sound people and questions - from - the - audience people; had added a participant (Nicholas von Hoffman) to be sure the affair would be telegenic; had phoned the panelists before the event with their own list of topics and ideas; had thrown together a wooden platform just for their cameras, which cameras prevented many in the actual audience from seeing the panelists; had shifted the meeting rooms to meet the exacting requirements for the paraphernalia of television; had fed questions to members of the audience, and instructions «from the truck» to the moderator («move on»); and then had fashioned from 12 hours of tape one hour that might have been made in a New York city hotel room.
Instead, «news», particularly on television, is carefully filtered, edited and choreographed to fit a pattern — a pattern which meets both the need of society to have its basic cultural worldview reinforced, and even more important, the need of the communication industry to reach and hold the largest possible audience.
I saw a cultural Christianity with preachers who often gained audiences, locally in church meetings or globally on television, by saying crazy and buffoonish things, simply to stir up the base and to gain attention from the world, whether that was claiming to know why God sent hurricanes and terrorist attacks or claiming that American founders, one of whom possibly impregnated his own human slaves and literally cut the New Testament apart, were orthodox, Evangelical Christians who, like us, stood up for traditional family values.
To be dependent on one's audience for support, particularly in a fickle selective medium such as television, means that the gospel must not only be proclaimed, but it must be proclaimed in such a way that it meets with the approval of a large share of one's audience.
This time, the complaints are coming from television audiences watching Buffalo School Board meetings.
In fact, when asked by ABC anchorman Peter Jennings which one living person he would most like to meet, former president Bill Clinton told a prime - time television audience that it was President Mwai Kibaki of Kenya, «Because he has abolished school fees,» which «would affect more lives than any president had done or would ever do by the end of this year.»
Like I'm in a big hurry to go see what a television writer — of all people — thinks of writers who dare to meet an audience.
He and his colleagues at ABC have been lying about the impacts of free - roaming cats for at least 15 years now; I don't imagine him rediscovering his integrity just when he's got a television audience eager to hear all about, as 20/20 suggests in its segment title, the «Cutest Serial Killer You'll Ever Meet
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