Sentences with phrase «culture shock sets»

This stage is actually a kind of crisis as the «disease» of culture shock sets in with full force.
If culture shock sets in, don't jump on the next plane for home but wait it out for a few days.

Not exact matches

Heavy set Lebanese born in Lebanon, my father was the Fire Chief in Beirut, Lebanon... When I came to the United States, it was Culture Shock and Shell - shock at the same Shock and Shell - shock at the same shock at the same time.
Tagged With: bollywood, comedy, compassion, culture shock, Heather Graham, Jimi Mistry, nudity on set, playful, porn film, sex, spirituality
This is the latest attempt, by yet another director, to make the next «Pulp Fiction», which set the standard for it's combing elements of a crime drama with comedy, shocking violence, wacky characters, drugs, sex, over-the-top atmosphere and pop culture.
The narrative is partly driven by the culture shock produced by Everett's incongruous arrival in the rural Irish outback, a bit like those recent scenes of President Obama quaffing Guinness in the Emerald Isle except transplanted to the set of Father Ted, and partly by the impudent, ambiguous, seemingly indolent figure of Boyle.
After ruminating on my nerd - induced culture shock, the reality of my impending graduation set in, and I began exploring the potential for this experience to be catalytic in my educational and professional work.
It's useful for students to learn to interact with other instructors so that it's not such a culture shock when they go to college or into the workforce or even when they find themselves in classroom settings within the community.
After running the cars with the highest levels of downforce possible for first part of the year, it was a bit of a culture shock to how the car needs to be set up and how it needs to be in order to go fast around 8.3 miles at Le Mans.
The answer is long and complex, and has much to do with the radical shifts in culture that have occurred over the past 25 years or so, both in Britain and the world: the unstoppable rise of art as commodity and the successful artist as a brand; the ascendancy of a post-Thatcher generation of Young British Artists (YBAs) who set out, unapologetically, to make shock - art that also made money; the attendant rise of uber - dealers such as Jay Jopling in London and Larry Gagosian in New York; and the birth of a new kind of gallery culture, in which the blockbuster show rules and merchandising is a lucrative sideline.
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