Sentences with phrase «giving vulgarity»

Richard Pryor went to jail for drugs — and giving vulgarity music.
Scaramucci was ousted after he gave a vulgarity - filled interview to the New Yorker magazine and attacked several previous members o the administration — including former White House chief of staff Reince Priebus and Bannon.
By the time that David Milch's Deadwood gave vulgarity a Shakespearean poetry, the days of jail time for vulgarity were long past.

Not exact matches

Who gave us a sense that our hopes of escaping the vulgarity and banality of popular culture might be satisfied, such that we now enjoy a qualitatively different kind of experience?
They are guardians of the world of commerce, where everything is valued only as it might be bought or sold, where all giving and receiving are governed by the satanic law that each must try to take more than he gives, where everything is plunged into the abysmal shadow of that insatiable Typhon called America — that gaslit desert of barbarism, with its infantile, gigantic, exuberant vulgarity, its monstrously guileless delight in affluence, its omnivorous vacuity...» He ceased speaking suddenly, looking all at once abashed.
Flatulent animals, burly female hockey players, kids spouting vulgarities, and kooky homeless men are just some examples of the things that they've thrown in the mix in order to try to give the appearance of an irreverent, sophomoric comedy.
Asia Argento, who is far from ugly, gives a performance that is more shocking for her vulgarity than for her sexuality.
Paul Verhoeven's American phase was too nasty to last, really, with movies like RoboCop and Starship Troopers giving the audience what they initially thought they wanted, and then cranking up the vulgarity to hysterically uncomfortable levels.
In community after community, individuals or groups have sent out the alarm: Allow students Internet access and you've given them a free ticket to all varieties of pornography, vulgarity, and mayhem!
They claim the use of vulgarity quickly becomes a cheap, convenient device to give the impression that the book is up - to - date and realistic.
In the minds of many readers, authors who resort to swearing and vulgarity give the impression of lacking in class, education, sensitivity, intelligence, taste, and finally — talent.
The strangely poignant collision of sumptuousness and vulgarity, elegance and tawdriness gives these works a surprising heft.»
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