Sentences with phrase «ironic comments on»

In his project Lovely Planet: Poland, Jakob Ganslmeier adopts the typical categories of a travel guide to formulate ironic comments on the structural changes taking place at Europe's centre.
Thompson will be replaced by a Yahoo insider — an ironic comment on the search engine's inability to search outside its own building for a new leader.
Painted in the last phase of the artist's career, this work is an ironic comment on low - life urban society.
as a critical or ironic comment on traditional fine art values.
In a 1962 letter to his sister, he described a new series of red, white and blue works as «an ironic comment on my growing patriotism,» and observed, referring to Leo Castelli, «They are quite different from the group of paintings called Barrier series, so different that I have Leo quite worried.»
Take People of the Garden City, an ironic comment on the name by which Georgetown was then known outside the country, as if it were all flowering trees on beautiful avenues alongside fine colonial buildings.

Not exact matches

How ironic that you'd post a semi-public comment on the Internet telling people that their belief system should be a private affair.
But last week I posted two blog posts that got quite a bit of discussion, and I found the comments on these two posts quite... ironic.
First of all I find it ironic for you to be commenting on such for as far as you are concerned there is no such thing as God as believers would talk of, but just an «imaginary friend» in the alleigance to Hawardism, a United Nations of Spiritualiy and the goddess Sophia.
I used to quite enjoy his ironic AOB pi ** take but bit of a blunt instrument now — he wheels it out on every comment.
Lord Falconer said that the fact this comment was made on Newsnight was ironic, but it was also «ridiculous and depressing».
The WFP in a statement issued Tuesday evening noted it was particularly ironic, given how the comments came the same day in which two wings of the Democratic Party — liberal and moderate — came together on the national stage.
P.S. I find it ironic that a post about social reading on a site about social reading (Findings) doesn't allow you to leave comments!
I haven't read the book so can't comment on whether this placement is intentional or ironic, but it does tee up a discussion about the «collective hallucination» of Macmillan's pricing.
In the most ironic twist since it rained on Alanis Morissette's wedding day, that comment was deleted.
I find it ironic that this article and my comment are on a blog, because 10 - 12 years ago people were saying the exact same thing about blogs (versus the «real» journalism vetted as fit to print).
I'm not being rabbid, I'm just telling the truth and its ironic that a guy like me has to point this out when its so obvious, of course I'm going to always laugh and make fun of you sonykids every chance I get but the news itself should not be editorialized / slanted by the CONTRIBUTOR when it is submitted, just wait for the comments section and then FLAME ON!
Thats a lil ironic saying they have alot of time on their hands to comment.
I have no idea why you guys were here in the first place making all sorts of silly comments when you clearly have no interest in this game or the console it's on and your comment above is quite ironic too cos Xbox fans ai nt the sheep here, this is clearly an article about an Xbox game, you are the one who shouldn't even be here.it's clear who the sheep are.
Killing Floor: Incursion is a bit more story - driven than the other games in the franchise and happily, all the gore and violence is countered by a sense of ironic humor, largely in the form of the companion voice that guides the player and comments on the action.
The latter used abstraction as an ironic paraphrase, commenting on the veracity of the brush stroke as a mark of the artistic self.
The extent to which either could conceivably be ironic would be the extent to which you were recognizing an interpretation of a reference, a critical comment on a quote.
: cool:: cool:: cool:: cool:: cool:: cool:: cool:: cool:: cool:: cool:: cool:: cool:: cool:: cool:: cool:: cool:: cool:: cool:: cool:: cool:: cool:: cool:: cool:: cool:: cool:: cool:: cool:: cool:: cool:: cool:: cool:: cool:: cool:: cool:: cool:: cool:: cool:: cool:: cool:: cool:: cool:: cool:: cool:: cool:: cool:: cool:: cool:: cool:: cool:: cool:: cool:: cool:: cool:: cool:: cool:: cool:: cool:: cool:: cool:: cool:: cool:: cool: I am calling on a blanket ban on emoticons in comments — but I am sure that Joshua will deem that unconsciously ironic.
I do think there is something ironic, given their touchiness about people commenting on documents whose authenticity hadn't been confirmed, that when Suzanne Goldenberg of the Guardian asked Heartland to confirm the authenticity of the recent fund - raising e-mail they refused to comment.
So Bertram's other comment — that the TfL climb - down on more stringent measures means «Uber can continue to keep London moving with a convenient, safe and affordable ride at the push of a button» is not a little ironic.
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