Sentences with phrase «yelling at the screen»

If you've been watching Downton Abbey, the hit period drama that follows an aristocratic English family at the turn of the 20th century, you may have found yourself yelling at the screen whenever Robert Crawley appears (or maybe that's just me).
She imagined fellow tweeters at home, «yelling at the screen and drowning their political anxieties with whatever liquor comes to hand», and hit on the idea of providing a venue where all these armchair hecklers could yell together.
And if we're being really honest here, I cried my eyes out at several points during Downton Abbey, namely when Matthew dies (I yelled at the screen first and then cried) and also at the finale episode.
Yelled at the screen and fist shook at the producers....
Love the outdoors, and yelling at the screen when hockey is on, besides that give me a massage if you want to learn more
Zobel does a great job of just making you uncomfortable, making you want to just yell at the screen and tell the characters to just stop.
It's a fresh take on a now old idea, but with a vibrancy that makes you sit on the edge of your seat and occasionally yell at the screen.
Horror movie characters aren't generally known for their brains, but these ones make enough bad choices that audiences won't be able to help yelling at the screen (at least ours couldn't).
I get tired of mentally yelling at the screen «don't do it!!!»
I also want to mention Nicolas Winding Refn's The Neon Demon, which I kind of loved (read my review) even though critics at the first screening were so angry they yelled at the screen when the credits started rolling.
Good review of a fun yell at the screen bmovie.
Mindadze's awful film follows a series of characters so completely and utterly stupid that I wanted to yell at the screen like a horror movie.
His girlfriend told me — «He was yelling at the screen
So sit back, enjoy the show, use protection, don't yell at the screen and — if you come back from the snack bar alive — keep repeating to yourself: «It's only a documentary... only a documentary... only a documentary...»
When you hear the title «The Avengers» immediately do you picture some superhero winning over the hot chick who usually falls into some sort of despair while doing something so stupid you want to yell at the screen and or throw a shoe at her?
Play Misty for Me was showing, and I could imagine the crowd — my crowd — that would see it that night; could imagine the insults they'd yell at the screen if the dialogue was lame; could imagine the perturbed «shh!»
At this point you're probably yelling at the screen, «What?!
When it's at its peak Dead by Daylight is a tense, exciting game, the kind that makes you lough out loud nervously, yell at the screen, fist - pump in triumph and everything in between.
2 Minutes later: Game Awards exclusive: Presenting Dark Hallway 4, watch all your favorite Youtuber's pretend to be scared and unnecessarily yell at the screen constantly for 40 minutes spoiling the game 3 weeks before it comes leaving you NOT wanting more.
That often meant yelling at the screen, or taking turns with the controller.
Some of you are probably yelling at the screen: «Danger, Danger!»
Now, you may be yelling at your screen right now about how this sounds like some Apple - level shit, and it is — kind of.

Not exact matches

I'll be honest, I totally yelled at my computer screen at some point during that article.
And today I considered writing a post about racism in the South... which undoubtedly would have prompted some yelling at the computer screen.
Just say No to electronics when you're with your kids, given that you're much more likely to yell at your child if you're trying to focus on a screen.
I've started watching other parents with their phones, staring at screens even as they push kids on swings and reluctantly looking up the second time their kid yells, «Mommy!»
This means less crazy mornings of me yelling at the kids to put on their shoes or to eat their breakfast faster, it means a tiny bit more screen time in the afternoons but lots and lots of playing outside, eating popsicles and swimming at the pool.
By making her quiet corner of the screen more captivating than the portions where people are yelling or screaming, it's easy to see how Rampling won Best Actress at the Venice Film Festival.
For example, at one point during the screening someone yelled out, «I'm DONE with you, Michael!»
My tradition of late has been to watch the show at home, where I can freely groan, yell and hurl things (mainly expletives) at the screen, and then dance around the living room with my wife in celebration of another endless awards season being over at last.
Director James McTeigue («V for Vendetta») at least allows viewers to feel superior to the characters; he has fashioned a film where seemingly anything yelled by the audience has more thought behind it than what is happening on screen.
In fact, you may find yourself yelling at the characters on screen, criticizing their actions and claiming that you would handle things differently.
They are virtually yelling at their computer screens — «Just give me what I want!»
Yell at the computer screen as you pull up gmail — something disarming like, «I had pickles for breakfast, I will eat your form rejections for lunch!»
That's what I ended up yelling at the TV screen less than an hour into State of Decay 2, Undead Labs» long awaited follow up to its 2013 post-apocalyptic zombie survive - a-thon.
But this game is like Castle Crashers, and Mario Kart, like Smash Brothers or something, where you have four people on the screen at the same time and that's when the game gets tons and tons of fun, when you're all there, sitting in the same room yelling at each other.
This is a cute gimmick that perfectly plays up the game's silly tone, though tapping a button ultimately proves to be far easier and more reliable than constantly yelling at your computer screen like a rambunctious kid hopped up on cola.
Besides online multiplayer, the game now includes local split screen for those of us who prefer to yell at our friends in person than over a mic.
In 1969, with the internet still a couple of decades away, Allan Kaprow, the conceptual artist and inventor of the happening, mounted an event called Hello, in which different groups of artists and scientists in different locations could communicate on banks of television screens and yell «I see you» at each other across the ether.
The audience practically wants to yell the truth at the screen.
Now I'm not trying to say that yelling at your computer screen is an ineffective way to get your message heard; but sometimes it helps to be more proactive.
Nobody can yell at you via the computer screen.
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