Sentences with phrase «audience does»

In 2008, the Walker Art Center presented «Trisha Brown: So That the Audience Does Not Know Whether I Have Stopped Dancing.»
The audience does not see the invisible personal investment, just the conditions which shape the final product.
What do you think about what the audience doesn't know?
Her latest semi-abstract color - block paintings, reminiscent of those by modernists like Agnes Martin and Ad Reinhardt and Russian Suprematist Kazimir Malevich, both conceal and broadcast various declassified military reports — papers that relate to everything from medical guidelines for detainees to the legality of interrogation methods — in a sense showing by painterly example how certain words are cut from the page so the audience doesn't suffer the brutal truth in favor of the prettier surface.
The fact that your current target audience does not like you is not the end of the world and it does not mean that you have to change who you are completely to get love.
This means that high quality content created for a specific audience does a better job of ranking in search engines and being shared on social networks than content that is intentionally created just for marketing purposes.
However, the real question is: can a Western audience appreciate Omega Quintet as much as Compile Heart believes their Japanese audience does?
I remain cautiously optimistic about the game, but regardless if the producer of the show thinks they aren't talking down to the audience it doesn't make the dialogue / banter any less cringe worthy.
If the audience does not feel the intended emotions the artist has failed.
While it's awesome that Nintendo has this incredible IP, it really boils down to being a game that the Nintendo audience doesn't really care for.
If your audience doesn't want to buy until hooked, it's a very logical transition.
The same goes for 360 videos; the director needs to be sure the audience does not miss any key moment because they were looking in the wrong direction.
-- What kind of audience does Microsoft want for Xbox?
Knowing that our audience does not appreciate being bombarded with advertising when they look at our site, we have very limited space for banner ads on South East Asia Backpacker.
During the Q&A, if the audience does not have any real question, they should stay calm and be refrained from making a self - promotional statement.
All reasonable assumptions, particularly the «this is what we can charge if everyone goes digital and the audience doesn't grow and still retain some kind of profit» which I hadn't really considered, but should have.
Concerns about finding readers when one's target audience doesn't have credit cards and doesn't shop on Amazon.
If the target audience doesn't buy, it's perhaps worth tweaking the cover, price, product description, title, etc., or to write the next novel with the last book's results in mind.
The online audience doesn't always have the time or the patience to sit through a 100,000 word novel.
Maybe your audience doesn't read on ebook (based on your genre or or sub-genre or age group or whatever).
As an author, your relationship with your audience doesn't end after they've bought your book.
Making your book launch crystal clear and narrowed to a certain audience does not mean you have to take fun away from it.
You are more likely to do that when you (and, maybe, an intern) invest some time in finding those bloggers who reach those people who are going to be interested in your book — not bloggers who review any book that a service sends them or bloggers whose audience doesn't include the people who will want to read your book.
Your audience doesn't know anything exists until it's done.
How large an audience does the 1D fan fic have?
Traditional media can be awesome, but maybe your perfect audience doesn't read that national publication or watch the local news station where your interview aired.
Flannery O'Connor once wrote that when you have to assume your audience does not know what you're talking about, «then you have to make your vision apparent by shock — to the hard of hearing you shout, and for the almost blind, you draw large and startling figures.»
My audience doesn't care.
I agree with Ms. Meyers about this: Your audience doesn't care about your stagefright (unless you can make that funny, of course.)
Once again, the audience does not necessarily have to be human.
What are they doing differently or what do they have access to that your audience doesn't?
He pointed out that the audience doesn't care at all about the MacGuffin.
The hero in the movie itself cares, but the audience doesn't...
The purpose of training is to achieve an outcome - today, our target audience does «x», and tomorrow, we want them to do «y».
There's a fierce intensity there because the audience doesn't know how the scene will play out or what this blind man is capable of.
They know what they're doing, but the audience doesn't — until the end.
While A Wrinkle in Time is incredibly ambitious in its endeavors, both visually and tackling such a beloved story, the audience doesn't feel a strong enough connection to the characters and therefore the whole film suffers.
The active audience doesn't hesitate to dole out colossal laughs and even rounds of applause several times each episode.
While it's awesome that Nintendo has this incredible IP, it really boils down to being a game that the Nintendo audience doesn't really care for.
How and why does it occur that the film's intended American audience doesn't choose to empathize with the brave Iraqi mother and child whose military - aged male relatives and friends have all been killed or hauled off to prison?
The first Deadpool movie made it clear that Wade Wilson enjoys himself the very same superhero movies that the audience does.
Of course, such an experimental, for lack of a better term, «stunt» would not work if the audience does not care for any of the characters.
When Watts» character learns of her family's tragedy, she is clearly devastated, but as the audience doesn't know her or her family, we feel nothing.
These District citizens have reasons to catch revolutionary fire that the audience does not have.
Maybe it's because the enormous muggle Call of Duty audience doesn't know Battlefield 1 exists.
(For the record, I nearly always identify with the «victim» when watching horror films, and I think most of the audience does, too — teenaged girls, especially, flock to movies like the Scream series or I Know What You Did Last Summer for three reasons: they like to see strong actresses in the lead roles, they enjoy watching the cute young guys cast opposite the girls, and finally, they want to be scared.)
That's kind of a critical moment there, because if the audience doesn't know what the other's thinking, then the whole movie collapses.
The film barely stands up to scrutiny, and perhaps isn't meant to be considered in depth, but as it takes itself so damn seriously it demands the audience does as well.
It's already sewn so many questions that it's almost reluctant to solve that mystery and the audience doesn't want it to: they want to make their own minds or have their suspicions but never know for sure.
The audience does not exactly have an emotional reaction to Z - movies, they just watch them in a sort of dissociated daze.
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