The phrase
"to be in the public eye" means that a person or thing is being noticed or observed by the general public. They are attracting attention and their actions or behavior are being watched by others.
Full definition
You kind of have to not
be in the public eye for a period of time while you truly are trying to deal with some of the issues.
The next and most common developmental stage was found to be characterized by self - doubt and the costs and benefits
of being in the public eye.
The former secretary of state — and, as of Sunday, a presidential candidate for the second time — has
been in the public eye since serving as the first lady of Arkansas, when her husband Bill Clinton was governor of the state.
those
who are in the public eye specially sports personalities have to set an example to the younger generation, so yes i see a problem with any famous personality's smoking, drugs, driving fast, extramarital affairs, all things we the ordinary folk love to do but they cant
The pieces selected represent styles, subject matter and explorations that have not
been in the public eye as much as the classic «soot and spit» drawings.
Bill noted that because he has
been in the public eye longer than his wife that he is sometimes viewed, from the outside, as the final word about foundation decisions, but he explained why that couldn't be further from the truth.
On the bright side, Bloomberg just committed political suicide with that statement so he won't
be in the public eye much longer.
Wallinger took the prize for his painstaking recreation of Brian Haw's protest against the Iraq war, State Britain, and has
recently been in the public eye again for his proposals for the so - called «Angel of the South», which would involve creating a 50m - high white racehorse near the A2 in Ebbsfleet.
MAT CEO pay
is in the public eye again and, given how high it is, it's right that trustees should think hard about how they work it out,...
Advising an UHNW individual and an English company in relation to a potential claim arising out the breach of a non-disclosure agreement entered into with another individual to protect the first individual's privacy, where both
people are in the public eye.
If, say, questions about austerity or the regulation of
banks are in the public eye, different ideologies will try to win the debate by appealing to the virtues of private enterprise, or to the need for public transparency and accountability, or to the greater redistribution of wealth.
«But these individuals love to
be in the public eye commenting on all these issues but don't have the guts to run for office really shouldn't be doing that.»
Mr. Phillips has repeatedly declined to answer news media requests to explain his platform or how he would vote on the majority of issues that have been headline news in the 6 years since he
last was in the public eye.
A 1965 documentary about that work, Miss Goodall and the Wild Chimpanzees, turned Goodall into a global celebrity, and she has
been in the public eye ever since.
On the most recent episode of Keeping Up with the Kardashians, Kim opened up about the
toll being in the public eye has had on her body image.
I think every veterinarian who
is in the public eye gets these types of emails all the time: the ones that ask for our help, but when we give our expert opinion that the pet needs some tests run, respond that we're just trying to rip them off.
Some people just have the ability to make big social changes and have no
problem being in the public eye, like this man in the blog, and some go under the radar and do amazing things without ever getting noticed.
It's a great game, to be sure, but the Tomb Raider games haven't
really been in the public eye for a while, and the series had been in a pretty steep decline.
Businesses that
are in the public eye rely on good PR and will not want to be splashed across the tabloids if they're going to be seen to be doing anything that could be construed as tax avoidance.
In 1992 - 93, during my tenure as chair of the Real Estate Council of B.C., a little fuss had
been in the public eye involving a real estate licensee, the former premier, a foreign buyer and a bag of cash.