Sentences with phrase «cultural cachet»

"Cultural cachet" refers to the high value or esteem associated with a particular culture, trend, or form of expression. It means that something has a certain level of prestige and popularity within a society or a certain group of people. Full definition
So far Vice has built the valuation and cultural cachet of a major media company, but little of the infrastructure to deliver its content to mobile and TV consumers.
It's difficult to find a fighting game with as much cultural cachet as Street Fighter.
Like fellow millennial pastors Judah Smith of City Church Seattle and Carl Lentz of Hillsong New York, Wilkerson carries more cultural cachet than most evangelical pastors in urban centers.
Although it doesn't yet enjoy the same cultural cachet as Chinese, Mexican or Italian food, Indian food is starting its own rise to prominence, and that's good news for New Jersey - based Rajbhog Foods Inc..
A beach destination with cultural cachet, St. Barts has everything from picturesque nature walks to lively restaurants and bars frequented by jet - setters on holiday.
It is just aware that it will loose some of the Cali cultural cachet it has built up along its 67 - year history.
Don't expect Adidas to walk away from West after just one week of bad press about a key «creator» whose cultural cachet sparks national debate.
For years, German club football has carried with it a certain cultural cachet for its followers abroad.
That's been changing since the advent of molecular gastronomy, which has brought cultural cachet to the kinds of work industrial food scientists do all the time — albeit that many foodies would still rather their food came au naturel than highly engineered.
Big laughs from The Onion Since its founding in 1988, the hilarious satirical newspaper The Onion has gained a loyal national following and increasing cultural cachet as an outlet for scathing social and political humor.
Having an art collection, he reasoned, was a bit like owning land: Art not only appreciated in value, it also afforded cultural cachet, something he learned by watching his father, who had built a renowned collection of modernist paintings.
According to Burniske, while bitcoin has generated significant cultural cachet, it remains at the bleeding edge and could still be dethroned relatively easily.
Oreos are probably the most beloved cookie in the world, with popular cultural cachet through a lightning - quick social media strategy and an ongoing cycle of fun, limited edition flavors.
Digimon began life in 1997 as a Tamagotchi successor before transforming into a bald - faced Pokémon imitation, but it's never come close to matching the popularity or cultural cachet of either franchise.
You can't expect games to have the same cultural cachet as an established medium because that's not how things work.»
New York's ball drop in Times Square may have more pop - cultural cachet, but the real New Year's Eve capital of the world is Sydney, Australia.
«The real driver behind the show's shenanigans is that the VMAs and MTV have lost the cultural cachet they had in years past, so the network is dependent on outrageous on - stage antics and pre-show Twitter fights to get people to watch.»
David Kinnaman's UnChristian signaled that many Christians have concluded the big problem is that the evangelical church has aligned itself on the wrong side of some social issues, or with social issues that have little or no cultural cachet — and thus they move to champion more popular social...
The gay man is a stock character on T.V. and is seen as an effective marketing tool because he has cultural cachet.
WILLIAMSBURG — A slew of developers in North Brooklyn scrambled to cobble together a patchwork of properties in hopes that the cultural cachet of Williamsburg and its proximity to Manhattan would be enough to coax Amazon to build its newest headquarters there.
While Disney's cheaply made Tinkerbell films have none of the cultural cachet of more lavish animated features, they're getting slyer and more interesting on their own terms.
But what's missing is its cultural cachet and wit.
But the reason these scenes feel contrived is because of how badly Howard overestimates the cultural cachet of Moby - Dick («So it is true!»
The movie begins with TV clips of everyone from Jay Leno to Roger Ebert attesting to the cultural cachet of The Blair Witch Project, then moves on to a short video documentary about its impact on the town of Burkittsville, Maryland, close to where its action was set.
The lone holdout, Apple, is probably betting that its haughty image and cultural cachet can keep it from becoming associated with yet another revolting act of corporate brutality.
Jafa wanted to give black film the same agency that black music had developed through its cultural cachet: black visual intonation would be film's way of communicating blackness in the same way that music did.
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z