Sentences with phrase «train wreck known»

When we first posted this article, the Rams were receiving just 4 % of spread bets at our contributing sportsbooks — roughly the same level of public support received by the Hollywood train wreck known as I, Frankenstein.

Not exact matches

I didn't know much about Spenser Stastney but what a train wreck... I wouldn't select this kid with a 7th round pick.
So to answer your question, no I can not sit back and enjoy this train wreck to fourth year after year.
Says Calcavecchia's longtime agent, Steve Loy, «When I saw her, I thought, Oh, no, this is going to be a train wreck
We already know that our current governor, ethical train wreck Andrew Cuomo likes to get a little too touchy - feely with the levers of government.
The latest research into the little known, fault - riddled, undersea landscape off of Southern California and northern Baja California has revealed more worrisome details about a tectonic train wreck in the Earth's crust with the potential for magnitude 7.9 to 8.0 earthquakes.
My friends ran into me post-doctors appointment and immediately sent an «are you ok text, because I know I looked like a total train wreck
There are some styles that even though I love in principle, I know they look like absolute train wrecks on me (mandarin collars, most
That cycle was started when Italian actress Monica Vitti, known for her brooding films with Michelangelo Antonioni («L'Aventurra,» «L'Eclisse»), exquisitely took up the mantle of popular British comic strip heroine «Modesty Blaise» (1966), a pop art masterpiece (or train wreck, take your pick), which makes up a double feature with Jane Fonda's turn as «Barbarella» (1968), based on a French comic strip, on Thursday, May 17, at the Castro Theatre.
The cops on this list might shame those who loyally «Protect and Serve» but you know what they say, it's hard to look away from a train wreck.
As it stands, Gigli is a train - wreck of missed opportunities which will now only be known as a novelty piece.
I wish Stoller had been more willing to simply throw us full bore into the train wreck that is Aldous's life — you know, like This Is Spinal Tap did with its horrifying rock star idiots we couldn't look away from — but I'm struck with a terrible certainty that Greek believes that it needs to spell out, in no uncertain terms, a cautionary tale about how the «glamorous life» ain't so glamorous and «ordinary life» as lived by us mere mortals is far better.
, and a fascinated follower of the train wreck commonly known as «The Bachelor» franchise, this announcement pretty much blew my mind and inspired me to create the following graphic.
I can certainly claim that, knowing 2 — one a non-stop eating machine, the other a nervous / anxious wreck — both of whom were «brought up» in a loving family, (albeit lack of training) that they are indeed high maintenance.
That's good to know, because finding out where you're supposed to go in this train wreck is even more complicated than in any of the other Soulslike game I've played, so you'll spend a lot of time in that gameplay loop.
I'm left thinking that Sony Santa Monica tried to be serious about its protagonist in the same way it tried to create a meaningful ending, and as we know from the last post, the ending was a complete train wreck.
It says nothing about people rushing to stoke the engine with more and more coal, or how much actual coal is added (thus the actual range of speeds to expect), or the possibility of a precipice with bridge out up ahead (runaway GW), how dangerous that might be at various speeds, entailing greater or less number of deaths, or how far or close that precipice is, which we don't know either (except we have some fossil evidence of train wrecks in which 90 % of life died, so we know it could be bad).
If being approved for life insurance was guaranteed then there would be no need for independent life insurance agents that specialize in impaired risk underwriting and know how to pick up the pieces after an underwriting train wreck and get things back on track.
It was like watching a train wreck in slow motion, knowing that I was driving the train.
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