Sentences with phrase «written train wrecks»

Picture this: You're looking at hundreds of papers scattered on your desk that should be resumes and cover letters but resembles a bunch of written train wrecks.

Not exact matches

Written by Kingsbury and directed by Scott Ellis, Fam is about a woman, Clem (Dobrev) whose younger half - sister, Shannon (Odessa Adlon), comes to live with her and her fiancé to escape their train wreck of a father.
Marius Balchunas's first and only shot at the hyphenate brass ring is a roundelay farce set at a seedy California motel, shot like a television sitcom, and written like a train - wreck.
With their previous outing being a complete and total train - wreck, I was worried that these two guys had no idea how to write females based on how they were written in that film.
In the build - up to this special round, the government offered webinars and training to ITTs on how to write their bids because the first time had been «such a train wreck».
Given the slow motion train wreck that publishing seems to be right now, I'd say quitting your day job to write full time might be... risky.
The endangerment finding will «set the stage for an economic train wreck and a constitutional crisis,» wrote the Competitive Enterprise Institute and seven other «free market» groups in a letter sent to EPA's Jackson on Wednesday.
As two Republicans wrote in a Sept 20th op - ed, «President Obama and his extreme EPA have issued new rules and regulations that are crippling the coal industry» and «this «Train Wreck» of new EPA regulations is already... costing jobs in places where unemployment is staggering.»
«Watching the RIM - NTP battle over the BlackBerry is somewhat like watching a soap opera or a train wreckwrites The FutureLawyer.
«Just as it's hard to avert your eyes from a train wreck,» Kozinski writes, «it's very difficult to put down a book that repeatedly illustrates not only how easily one can be swept into the sausage factory, but how hilariously difficult and Byzantine things can become once there.»
But I saw it recently, and it's a little like watching a train wreck: this woman wrote a book called Big Pharma's Sexy Little Secret about how (and it's possible I've missed everything there is to see here...) pharmaceutical companies purposely hire «cheerleader» types so that they can use sex — or the idea of it, anyway — to manipulate doctors into buying more of their product.
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