Just being
part of the conversation seems to be enough to keep people involved.
Not exact matches
A large
part of our post meeting
conversation was how we felt the individual
seemed to be
of low integrity.
Part of me wants to enagage ND in
conversation, to help to show where things
seem to be going off the rails.
It almost
seemed as if the book was a record
of a
conversation, but with only one
part of the
conversation recorded.
Still, from the phone records in the FBI affidavit,
parts of which are up on the Smoking Gun, it didn't
seem like it was a woman - friendly workplace, from the male founder who said that a would - be call girl «looks like a butcher in my opinion» to the
conversation about the «baggage» a worker with kids has to the outraged indignation
of an applicant who was «shock and confuse» that the company expected its employees to have sex with men who don't even take them out to dinner.
He may have
seemed to be into the
conversation, but was he an active
part of the
conversation, or just a passive bystander, politely listening to you most
of the time because he couldn't get a word in?
But it also reads like a crash course in a kind
of international, intellectual cinema that
seemed to be a larger
part of the
conversation in the Fifties, Sixties, and Seventies than it is now.
This time out, this story
of a claim jumper teaming up with a pioneer woman to transport three mentally unstable women from Nebraska to Iowa has such an insanely heavyweight cast that, assuming it's ready (and it shot all the way back in May
of 2013) we can safely assume it's heading for the Croisette, and it
seems likely to offer the kind
of attention - grabbing roles to its principals that may well make it
part of the awards
conversation beyond Cannes too.
The typically reliable Joan Allen, as Larson's bereaved mother, has some great scenes, but the movie
seems to be unsure
of how to connect the mother and daughter conflict as potently as the mother and son dynamic, even though they are
part of the same thematic
conversation.
The soft lighting, period setting, and expositional dialog all
seem reminiscent
of director Hooper's last sweeping Oscars success, The King's Speech; however, the depiction
of Lili's transition from a man to a woman is bound to become a discussion point as The Danish Girl aims to be
part of awards
conversations.
And it
seemed clear that some desperately needed to be a
part of a
conversation that had some hope.
But the worrisome
part of Nourry's
conversation with Gill may not be in his colorful disdain for the basic ebook as «a stupid product» but in how some in the industry
seem unsatisfied with a consumer desire that an ebook be, as he puts it, «exactly the same as print, except it's electronic.»
Conversations seem to last an eternity at times, and the main story feels lazier than any other
part of the game.
Twitter
seems to have a way
of alienating a large
part of a blog audience, the readers, (as opposed to the «participators», who join in the
conversation via comments or blogging).
Among other comments, the employee (who the NLRB memo refers to as the Charging Party) wrote that the company is «full
of shit... They
seem to be staying away from me, you know I don't bite my [tongue] anymore, FUCK... FIRE ME... MAKE my day...» No other current employees participated in that
part of the
conversation, but later on, one employee did write that «it's getting bad» at Tasker and that «it's just annoying as hell.
The debate over whether a national MLS would benefit the real estate community
seems to be
part of an ongoing
conversation.