Sentences with phrase «rocket science yet»

That's oxaloacetate (from the Kreb cycle) and neuropeptide Y (a brain chemical) working with your hyperinsulinemia (feel like rocket science yet?).
It's not rocket science yet I feel it would make a huge improvement.

Not exact matches

Dear Johnnie, Certainly, the 1st century culture of Jesus was much different than that of today; heck, rocket science hadn't even been invented yet.
Football is not rocket science, we have some of the best gifted young talents in the country assembled in the Arsenal squad yet why are we struggling.
And I'll tell you right up front - these principles are NOT rocket science... these are the basic things you SHOULD be doing if you want to gain mass, yet I see plenty of people only doing one or two of them and wondering why they can't put on any mass!
As I mentioned above, this ain't rocket science, yet you'd be surprised at how many people miss more than one of these items!
This is NOT rocket science and yet we have this huge debate around the world and throughout the internet that has been going on for the last 40 years.
Films that might have fit this putative strand included the charming but overlong Timeless Stories, co-written and directed by Vasilis Raisis (and winner of the Michael Cacoyannis Award for Best Greek Film), a story that follows a couple (played by different actors at different stages of the characters» lives) across the temporal loop of their will - they, won't - they relationship from childhood to middle age and back again — essentially Julio Medem - lite, or Looper rewritten by Richard Curtis; Michalis Giagkounidis's 4 Days, where the young antiheroine watches reruns of Friends, works in an underpatronized café, freaks out her hairy stalker by coming on to him, takes photographs and molests invalids as a means of staving off millennial ennui, and causes ripples in the temporal fold, but the film is as dead as she is, so you hardly notice; Bob Byington's Infinity Baby, which may be a «science - fiction comedy» about a company providing foster parents with infants who never grow up, but is essentially the same kind of lame, unambitious, conformist indie comedy that has characterized U.S. independent cinema for way too long — static, meticulously framed shots in pretentious black and white, amoral yet supposedly lovable characters played deadpan by the usual suspects (Kieran Culkin, Nick Offerman, Megan Mullally, Kevin Corrigan), reciting apparently nihilistic but essentially soft - center dialogue, jangly indie music at the end, and a pretty good, if belated, Dick Cheney joke; and Petter Lennstrand's loveably lo - fi Up in the Sky, shown in the Youth Screen section, about a young girl abandoned by overworked parents at a sinister recycling plant, who is reluctantly adopted by a reconstituted family of misfits and marginalized (mostly puppets) who are secretly building a rocket — it's for anyone who has ever loved the Tintin moon adventures, books with resourceful heroines, narratives with oddball gangs, and the legendary episode of Angel where David Boreanaz turned into a Muppet.
The idea of «friends with benefits» is hardly rocket science, yet Gluck and his three co-writers seem intent on being as dim - witted as possible.
Yet another film out of the Sundance School of Extreme Quirkiness, «Rocket Science» is like a chaotic hodgepodge of all the greatest adolescent cult films of the past decade.
It's not rocket science, most skin cancer cases are preventable, yet alarmingly melanoma is now one of the biggest cancer killers in 15 - 34 year olds.
It's not rocket science, yet the LDOE won't even entertain this for Lagniappe.
This doesn't seem like rocket science, and yet we're on the third generation device and navigating huge collections is still a ridiculous hassle.
This idea is not rocket science and yet people ignore it all the time.
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