Sentences with phrase «public notoriety»

"Public notoriety" refers to when someone or something becomes well-known or famous in a negative or controversial way among the general public. Full definition
That's it for a quote the post special story so far down in public notoriety.
But Saraki himself, seeming unfazed poster boy of public notoriety, is only a fitting metaphor for the rotten chamber he heads.
Richard Dawkins (1941 ---RRB-: The biologist, a charismatic speaker, first gained public notoriety in 1976 with his book The Selfish Gene, one of his many works on evolution.
When he returned from the Apollo mission in 1969, Aldrin, the second person to walk on the moon, struggled with both the exhilaration and overwhelming public notoriety of...
One of the most nonconformist of theoretical physicists, Richard Feynman (born May 11, 1918) gained public notoriety late in life as a member of the Presidential Commission investigating the space shuttle Challenger explosion.
Yet for all its ambition, the $ 7 billion program, rolled out in Cape Town, South Africa, in 2013 and likely to be touted by Obama on his upcoming trip to East Africa this month, has gained relatively little media attention or public notoriety compared with other major energy initiatives happening here.
Now serving a life sentence for child sexual assault, Rachel Jeffs» father participated in and arranged marriages between young girls and male members of the FLDS, which gained public notoriety after the publication of Jon Krakauer's exposé Under the Banner of Heaven.
The contents of European treaties do not generally achieve public notoriety.
This statue attained quite a bite of public notoriety, as it was located on...
When he returned from the Apollo mission in 1969, Aldrin, the second person to walk on the moon, struggled with both the exhilaration and overwhelming public notoriety of having reached the grandest goal of his career at age 39.
Horizontal leaders are so immersed in day - to - day operations that they seldom rise to public notoriety.
Mark one thing: an age that adores mediocrity, the obsequious conformist, and whose judgment of a man is confined to his wealth or to his public notoriety needs desperately, second to its need for God, the antipodean sympathy of a wilderness.
Her 2014 book Citizen: An American Lyric brought her mass critical acclaim, public notoriety, and numerous awards.
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