Not exact matches
Very straightforward «
prediction», and although I am also Wenget out I am very
happy that club I support will have those two players in the next 4 years on the peek of their cariers... And with Mhki
as well I will enjoy watching Arsenal much more then with Alexis and his desparate faces of a child.
My friends from Bet4Rate and other gambling sites are not at all
happy as they made Arsenal a certain banker in their football
predictions!
As such, I'm
happy to announce Awards Daily's first
prediction contest of the year!
Happy to be there:
As was the case yesterday in my
predictions of a few technical categories, this is the lone Oscar nomination for Robert Zemeckis's tepidly - received «Allied.»
And while my
predictions suffered for not including either, all in all, I'm really
happy with those switches
as I believe Bale and DiCaprio put in two of the best performances of the year.
Tags 2019 oscar
predictions a star is born adam mckay alice rohrwacher backseat barry jenkins blackkklansman bradley cooper cannes film festival capernaum damien chazelle first man
happy as lazzaro if beale street could talk Jason Reitman josie rourke lazzaro felice mary queen of scots nadine labaki spike lee steve mcqueen the frontrunner widows
Looking at the Cannes lineup and winners this year it's unlikely anyone outside of Spike Lee, who was already a top contender, will factor in the upper tiers of Best Director
predictions but I am adding Jury Prize winner Nadine Labaki, whose Capernaum was picked up by Sony Pictures Classics and Screenplay winner Alice Rohrwacher, whose
Happy as Lazzaro was picked up by Netflix.
This article won't diverge from that
prediction, and of the three possibilities, Alice Rohwacher's
Happy As Lazzaro still seems like the safest bet, even with reports coming in that Blanchett teared up at the world premiere of Nadine Labaki's Capernaum.
First things first; we all wish you a
Happy New Year and hope that 2010 was
as amazing for you
as it was for us, and even though we've been absent these last couple of days — taking a break to celebrate the coming of 2011 with family and friends instead of making
predictions — we'd like to think this year won't be any different, neither in gaming nor here at TVGB.
Also, Roy and / or Ryu confirmed
as DLC characters (I may have been wrong about my Ice Climbers
prediction, but if the Roy and Ryu rumor is true, I'll be MUCH
happier).
At the same time some other people may be
happy without any
predictions as they believe that the resulting decisions will turn out to be those they prefer for some reason.
It is not legitimate and certainly of no scientific value (although there may be political value) to attack a
prediction because you don't like the consequences, or you don't like the sort of people who are
happy with the
prediction, or you don't like the people who made the
prediction, or you don't like the sort of policy responses that
prediction might suggest or encourage, or even if you simply see yourself
as a challenger of consensus views in the name of some ideal or other.
But in general, on average, increasing wealth (especially past the point where all your basic needs are met) doesn't make people nearly
as happy as they would have predicted, and this goes back to our flawed
prediction mechanism.
Perhaps
as a matter of triage they could be useful, but such a use assumes we're
happy with the underlying success metrics, and I strongly suspect this use case is not the one most often sought by consumers of «crime
prediction.»