Sentences with phrase «bit of culture does»

Not exact matches

«The other thing to watch is a bit a of culture change — I am afraid Apple may soon end up with the boomer crowd if it doesn't step up to bigger screens,» he said.
That one should probably go to some kind of frugal diaries or confessions, but if you know a bit the European culture, it is not that big of a deal, actually many of my cousins who are in their late 20s / early 30s do not even have their driving license!
As important as it is to seek out better ways of reading the Bible, I think we have to start by deconstructing a bit, and Smith does a good job of addressing what has become a troublesome hallmark of American evangelical culture — biblicism.
Last, since I exist in the United States in 2013, am white, and have never been Jewish, I doubt that I do a great job getting in the mindset of, for instance, Paul, without looking to other resources that would help me understand a bit about his culture (s), religion, and times.
A slight change of plans here — I had wanted to talk about this recent Conor Friedersdorf piece about the lack of conservative rap critics as part of a three - part essay called «Paradoxes of Conservative Pop - Culture Studies,» but I realized that to really to do that, I would have to talk about rap more than a bit, indeed, enough to demand a Rock Songbook post or two.
It works great and I like to keep a bottle around for baking with, but feel free to substitute soy - milk curdled with a bit of lemon juice if you don't happen to have the cultured coconut milk on hand.
Michigan is undergoing a bit of a culture change currently and Jim Harbaugh has four things that he wants his team to do every single day.
We live in a society of busy - ness, with so mich expected of parents and so much to get on and do and so much pressure, that a EC is an inconvenience of having to go against the perceived norm, having to pay much more intimate attention to our babies, having to deal with bodily functions, having to wake ourselves up a bit to what our culture has conditioned us to and having to go against the grain — all of which take effort and all of which take time and / or energy away from other mummy efforts that bring more obvious and societally rewarded benefits.
It appears that our culture and courts have quite a bit of remedial work to do, if they want to support and honor breastfeeding mothers, babies, and families!
Some think that it has been kept a little bit secret from the rest of the world for the last 50 years, utilized by the Russian population to improve their physical stamina in both the Olympic games and their cosmonaut program (I can't really blame them if they did - this plant is incredible), but awareness of this incredible healer is now spreading, and research done around the world is confirming what their culture has known for centuries.
Besides a bit of culture and gastronomy, we also fitted in some shopping time of course... and we did well... one of my buys were these ab fab palazzo pants!
It will really help you out if you do a bit of research about the country and its culture first to avoid misunderstandings.
He's educated, intelligent, articulate, cultured — he just happens to enjoy doing sheep herding and shearing demonstrations since it's a bit of a dying art in the US.
The standouts here: Bruno Forzani and Hélène Cattet doing more experimental image - making along the lines of their gorgeous giallo homage Amer; Adam Wingard appearing on screen to puzzle out a hilarious solution to being stuck with the letter «Q»; Xavier Gens landing a grisly statement on the tyranny of body fascism in the culture; and contest - winner Lee Hardcastle contributing a clever stop - motion bit about a little boy's fears of potty training.
It's not the best film, it gets a bit repetitive with the constant barrage of American pop culture, and the second half slows down and loses the momentum it built, but it's a wild ride and totally worth seeing if you love the very dark, brutally honest humor that Bobcat does so well.
Dead - End Drive - In is a bit more literal - minded than its source material, though it does convey Carey's theme of alienation and decay in a swirl of junk culture.
Marvel's cinematic universe sometimes requires a little bit of visual homework, but superheroes are so pervasive in culture, you'd be hard pressed not to find someone who doesn't at least know of Captain America and others.
While I don't think that many of the young men I've encountered would «bite the usherette's leg in the dark» or «rub a pot roast all over his chest» during a family dinner (let alone kill a girl at the junior prom only to «dig up her body and make a cage with her bones») I do think - as the astonishing popularity of the book Raising Cain demonstrates — that we need to do a better job in terms of dealing with the free - floating and widespread anger felt by the males in our culture.
I have also added a bit of culture with an reading extract from «Les vacances du Petit Nicolas» * INCLUDE TIMERS * The objective is to be able to talk about what you take on holiday.
While it may be a bit early to tell if everything we're doing is working, we recently received our initial results from our AdvancED accreditation team, and our positive and intentional focus on culture was one of the areas highlighted in the report.
See the Mona Lisa and many other great masterpieces at the Musee du Louvre, the world's largest art museum, perfect for first - time visitors looking to see the best bits of Parisian culture.
The entire country of Chile is a pretty gritty place, but as long as you don't mind authentic Spanish culture and bit of poverty, you'll feel right at home in this mountainous country.
We want to do our bit towards nurturing the culture of game development.
It is an endearing mixture of high and low culture that leaves you puzzled for a bit, as you're not sure whether to like it or not, but when it comes to their execution, there is no doubt that the artist took figurative painting to a whole new level, and one that we certainly haven't seen in a while too — if we don't take art history books into consideration.
Art Slant Chicago Art Talk Chicago Bad at Sports Bite and Smile Brian Dickie of COT Bridgeport International Carrie Secrist Gallery Chainsaw Calligraphy Chicago Art Blog Chicago Art Department Chicago Art Examiner Chicago Art Journal Chicago Artists Resource Chicago Art Map Chicago Art Review Chicago Classical Music Chicago Comedy Examiner Chicago Cultural Center Chicago Daily Views Chicago Film Examiner Chicago Film Archives Chicago Gallery News Chicago Uncommon Collaboraction Contemporary Art Space Co-op Image Group Co-Prosperity Sphere Chicago Urban Art Society Creative Control Defibrillator Devening Projects Digressions DIY Film ebersmoore The Exhibition Agency The Flatiron Project F newsmagazine The Gallery Crawl... Galerie F The Gaudy God Happy Dog Gallery HollywoodChicago Homeroom Chicago I, Homunculus Hyde Park Artcenter Blog InCUBATE Joyce Owens: Artist on Art J - Pointe Julius Caesar Kasia Kay Gallery Kavi Gupta Gallery Rob Kozlowski Lookingglass Theatre Blog Lumpen Blog Marquee Mess Hall N'DIGO Neoteric Art NewcityArt NewcityFilm NewcityStage Not If But When Noun and Verb On Film On the Make Onstage Peanut Gallery Peregrine Program Performink The Poor Choices Show Pop Up Art Loop The Post Family The Recycled Film Reversible Eye Rhona Hoffman Gallery Roots & Culture Gallery SAIC Blog The Seen Sharkforum Sisterman Vintage Site of Big Shoulders Sixty Inches From Center Soleil's To - Do's Sometimes Store Steppenwolf.blog Stop Go Stop Storefront Rebellion TOC Blog Theater for the Future Theatre in Chicago The Franklin The Mission The Theater Loop Thomas Robertello Gallery threewalls Time Tells Tony Wight Gallery Uncommon Photographers The Unscene Chicago The Visualist Vocalo Western Exhibitions What's Going On?
She absorbs influences from pop culture as much as she does from high art, and I think sometimes she feels a bit divorced and distanced from the grand tradition of painting.
It certainly makes me feel good, it tastes good (to me), and I kind of have the feeling for my kombucha culture that I do for my vegetable plants: excitement, gratitude, and even a bit of awe at what sustenance I can get from so little material.
This, of course, is nothing new of scandalous, as all cultures tend to think of their own as the most important one, but when it comes to unfairly crediting a western artist for something the Chinese have been doing for centuries, the Western - centrism becomes a bit of a problem.
Feeling a bit like I was punching above my weight in this august group, I was nonetheless gratified and proud that so many friends recognized, as we do, that artists truly do represent an important foundation of creative culture and deserve recognition and support — and that we all have the opportunity to participate in building what will become our cultural legacy.
I thought about just doing this post as a way to laugh at how silly conservative outrage over another bit of pop culture they don't like is, especially this guy's movie review, but I just can't get over how wrong his assumptions are about what most people that call themselves environmentalists really believe and want for themselves and the environment.
The firms within the market, is giving a little bit more of a character, a little flair, around what they do, so it's personally and professionally or what they do to sell the firm's culture.
We've talked quite a bit about sort of the importance of environment and culture at the firm and making sure that maybe checking implicit bias» and then doing training around them I think is going to be part of it.
We suspect this is indicative of the compensation culture in which we now live and the fear on the part of the ex-employer that if they do say anything bespoke about the employee, it could come back to bite them:
Do a bit of smart company research (hint: company career websites talk a lot about culture), understand what you want out of your next workplace, and look for a place where you'll feel more at home.
«It's a breath of fresh air to speak with a candidate who has done a bit of research on our company's history and culture.
Fact:» [A] number of studies that have pointed to the fact that fathers engage in more playful kind of «companion'types of interaction with their children, whereas mothers» interaction is less playful and little bit more focused... those differences are seen in many of the Anglo Saxon countries... you don't see it in many other cultures.
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