Sentences with phrase «too wide a net»

Yes, there's a lot of choice and options on the biggest BBW dating sites, and that encourages many BBW admirers to cast too wide a net.
Casting too wide a net in your marketing efforts will get you nowhere, especially considering the absolute deluge of new books that become available to readers on a daily basis.
Perhaps we were casting too wide a net in our comparison — after all, many of those subcategory «best sellers» we were including, particularly the ones from obscure nonfiction categories, were selling less than a book a day in the UK.
It's entirely possible that their solution to the scammers is casting far too wide a net and damaging the honest.
On closer inspection, as is often true of thematic group shows, it sometimes casts too wide a net in trying to update the readymade while leaving out works by artists whose engagement with the form is clearer and more compelling.
«China 8» has been openly criticized for casting too wide a net of old and new faces, all under the name of contemporary Chinese art.
The move even caught the attention of Congressman Ted W. Lieu (33rd District, California), who told Apple it was «casting too wide a net» in its effort to remove spam and illegitimate apps from the App Store, and was «invalidating apps from longstanding and legitimate developers who pose no threat to the App Store's integrity.»
The Congressman suggests that Apple is now casting «too wide a net» in its effort to remove spam and illegitimate apps from the App Store, and is «invalidating apps from longstanding and legitimate developers who pose no threat to the App Store's integrity.»

Not exact matches

But, we're not looking to be on NBC at 8 p.m. on a Saturday broadcasting to all of America, because we don't think that's where our fans want to watch, and we think it would probably be casting too wide of a net.
Companies that move from the startup to mature phase often cast too wide of a net when looking for future growth opportunities.
He warned that they were in danger of «casting their net too wide thereby making mission enquiries almost meaningless.»
All around us are pockets - vast stretches, too - of deprivation so severe that you can travel blocks, even miles, through Chicago and some suburbs without seeing things that so many of us take for granted: grocery stores, basketball hoops with nets, Starbucks, wide lawns and houses whose windows are not boarded over or shattered.
Yes, we recognise the risk that from time to time the net may go too wide.
With fairly cursory critical discussions, perpetual plot synopses, and adjective - driven lauding («an acidulous commentary on class» or «a masterclass in film acting,» to name a couple) in place of detail - driven social criticism, Forshaw has placed himself between a Brighton Rock (1947) and a Kill List (2011), casting his historical net too wide for anything more than introductory textual assessment.
The street workers are constantly present among the area of Santa Maria Novella station, and this fact gives a wide and focused vision on the phenomenon of marginality in our city, allowing us not only to observe specific aspects (as characteristics of the target, relationship with services / associations and drug use), but also to act in a specific way to a specific person (a way shared with people, too) and to activate the already mentioned net.
These new environments also shake up the dynamics of gameplay a bit by removing the safety net of having a building nearby to scramble up if things get too hairy; instead you'll find yourself sprinting across wide open areas that put you directly into the crosshairs of any Zombie you happen to be in the line of sight of.
«Since the mobile space casts such a wide net, it can be easy for a company to spread their game concept too thin to appeal to both ends of the spectrum,» Ishii told Polygon in an email.
Yet while the broader impression is of a net cast a little too wide in an attempt to catch the artworld's latest preoccupations, Mark Leckey's installation at Tramway condenses the festival's themes into a single, idiosyncratic expression.
Perhaps I cast my net too wide.
Currently, the regulations imposing the duty are too broad and cast too wide of a net.
They illustrate that the duty of confidentiality casts too wide of a net and exposes the otherwise ethical legal professional to regulatory sanction.
While not categorically prohibiting the use to Rule 317 as a means of obtaining such documents in other proceedings, the court that given the available evidence of what the cabinet did consider (mainly the reasons given in the gazette notice of the decision), the applicants had cast the net too wide in this case.
CCLA continues to argue against disproportionate knee - jerk reactions to terrorist threats — such responses overlook the robust broad powers already existing in the Criminal Code and other laws in place — and argue for more and more state powers and new offences which may cast a far - too - wide and ineffective net, while simultaneously threatening to normalize exceptional powers.
The companies also complain that law enforcement officials are casting a wide net over online communications — often too wide — in their investigations.
What legions of job seekers everywhere like about the all - purpose resume is that it casts a wide net to snag the attention of many employers — and it saves time for those who are too busy to write different resumes for different jobs.
Most job seekers make the mistake of casting their net out too wide expecting to have multiple opportunities.
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