Sentences with phrase «asked everyone in the audience»

During the Future session, he asked everyone in the audience — hundreds of people — to raise their hands if they had studied mitosis in high school.
Hunt and Hendrix scream at each other, before asking everyone in the audience to do the same.

Not exact matches

An audience member asked if everyone participating in crowdfunding needs to go through a crowdfunding portal, and the answer was «yes.»
She then asked every single female nominee to stand up, prompting everyone in categories from cinematography to design and best actress nominee Meryl Streep to get to their feet while the audience in the Dolby Theatre cheered.
Cavill was also asked for his thoughts on the decision to keep Superman out of the film's marketing campaign, despite the fact that everyone in the audience already knew that the Man of Steel was going to feature:
Everyone contributes in their own small way, and most of the time acts like a surrogate audience by asking questions of the plot and wondering why they are shooting a scene a certain way.
When a frustrated Michael, his calm, collected façade all but shattered by an afternoon spent with his mercurial father, asks (to no one in particular) why he can't hold it together and reverts back to a long - dormant, destructive pattern of father - son interaction, he's both uttering a truism - bordering - on - cliché, but also speaking for every member of the audience with a parent, a child, or a sibling (i.e., everyone).
The cast's cute cue cards ask the audience to «Tune in to see what happened to everyone, and, among other things, which one of us has aged best.»
It just kinda rolled out and kept rolling and then some broke Geek decided to do a dinner and pan-handled bloggers for some wine and stuff and the next thing y» know, it's like the in thing and well I guess a blogging marketing fine wine well suited clothing type guy named Hugh just picked up the thread and took it on and it like grew so wild and humungous man and then everyone wanted in on the wine stuff and that just like freaked out the vinyard down south into sending cases of the stuff all over the world just in case they would kinda infect the brand with a virus thing and then hope they'd sneeze and spread their spit and the viral cold or flu thingy to take hold and sortoflike get its own traction and move to wider audiences who were now into asking Victoria Wine outlet staff for the wine and confusing the dudes into placing an order to meet the demand like and it is still like viralling out there.
The difference — which I appreciate more than you can guess — is that a Physicist drops two like objects — one red and one blue — of dissimilar mass off the top of Uncertainty and watches what happens, and might like Newton derive laws, and builds on those laws to the point that interesting questions might be asked about a difference of a 60 billionth of a second, while a marketing scientist draws trees of all the opinions expressed by everyone in the audience and wonders what opinions he ought repeat so he can sell more red balls.
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