Sentences with phrase «bit of a sideshow»

And in the meantime the price fluctuations are a little bit of a sideshow,» Mark David Bakacs, founder of the blockchain venture fund Venture.One and co-founder of the cryptocurrency trading platform Omega One, told IBT.
As titillating as it might be to read Andreessen's text messages to Zuckerberg, however — in which the former quotes from a 1950's film noir with Burt Lancaster, remarking «The cat's in the bag and the bag's in the river» — the whole thing feels like a bit of a sideshow.
Tony Lloyd, chairman of the parliamentary Labour Party, called the rebellion a «bit of a sideshow», [120] and Emily Thornberry MP called Brown the «best qualified» to lead Britain through the economic crisis of 2008.
This may be a bit of a sideshow in our overly leveraged financial markets, but the bets being placed here exceed ten billion dollars of total exposure.
When Russia was flavour (and performance) of the month, they could boast about their Russian allocation — and when Russia was doing a Red October, they could just waffle on about Poland and Hungary instead... Either way, Eastern Europe was inevitably a bit of a sideshow, and Russia was always going to dictate whether you had a good year's performance or not... But let us take a closer look at these funds, and see if anything interesting turns up:
At best, [the Keystone XL pipeline] is a bit of a sideshow.
At best, it's a bit of a sideshow.
But convection makes it a bit of a sideshow — albeit one that often must be taken into account, especially for smaller - scale investigations (or forecasts — cf., the story of Elsasser, which I told above.)
To this extent, the «hide the decline» debacle is a bit of a sideshow, although it was incredibly significant in drawing political attention to the problems with peer review, especially in relation to the hockey team.....
Britton: What was going on is we had some detractors that were really building a bit of a sideshow.
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