Sentences with phrase «public audience mean»

For these student publishers, who are now busy tracking sales and creating press kits, their project's professional aura and public audience mean more than any A on a report card.

Not exact matches

It is not stipulated that the proper exercise of your religious rights means that they need to occur in public in front of an audience.
Their licenses require them to broadcast «in the public convenience, interest and necessity,» and the courts have ruled that this means a broadcaster must provide diverse programming that meets the needs of its entire listening - viewing audience.
But «metaphysics» means nothing in American public life today, and after three decades of trying to explain the Christian «anthropology» of John Paul II to various audiences, I am still being asked what «anthropology» is, and what the behavior of primitive tribes has to do with Christianity.
TIFF doesn't go overboard with awards, but because it is a public festival in the middle of a big city, the Audience Award is one of the most important awards they give out because it not only indicates which film is truly spectacular, but it means it also plays very well with general audiences.
One of the central features of By All Means is a set of convenings which serve two purposes: 1) to bring together teams from the six or seven cities in which we'll be establishing learning labs for our design work; 2) to bring together a national audience of thought leaders to consider some controversial subjects relating to the future of public education and that system's work with economically disadvantaged students.
During all our public and private demonstrations we encourage everyone in the audience and family to feel our Sit Means Sit collar prior to ever putting it on a dog.
Graffiti is also intertwined with pop culture and politics as a means to deliver messages quickly and to a wide public audience.
The venue is meant to broaden the audience for contemporary art and spur dialogue among the general public.
They say ``... the messages made public so far reveal an exceedingly cautious politician acutely aware that anything she wrote could someday be read by a wider audience,» well, yeah, I mean, duh... New York Times is pissed.
Again, the paper had the appropriate disclaimers, but it looks like Tim Palmer decided to «simplify» things for the «benefit» of the audience, so how are journalists and the public (who don't even get to read the paper) supposed to work out what it really means?
Keeping the reviews anonymous means that the reviewers neither need to pull punches if the paper is bad (but the author is famous) nor grandstand for the public audience that will eventually see the review.
This report is meant for the public and is written quite carefully for a general audience.
It further clarifies that a «public» refers to an indeterminate number of people (para. 32) and that a public is «new» if that communication is made using technical means different from those used in a previous communication; or, alternatively, that the communication is made to an audience which has not been taken into account when the original act of communication was authorized by the right holder (para. 33).
Spotify tests a ton of different features all the time that end up on a small number of user devices — this was meant for Spotify employees but somehow got on public devices, according to the screenshots — but then don't expand to a wider audience.
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