The flags were bright, the country and western music loud, the TV monitors huge and blaring. |
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The big bag of popcorn she bought could serve as hours of TV snacks for her. |
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We passed around popcorn and candy but when it ran out no one left the TV to get more. |
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He co-starred with her in a TV film never completed due to her tragic death. |
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For all you know, someone might all want surround sound with remote, flat screen plasma TV and all the fluff! |
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Although digital channels can be heard via a digital TV or over the Internet, portability of the radio makes it an attractive option. |
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He had plans to watch every single game and knew his girlfriend would go potty if he was in front of the TV constantly. |
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Playing with these toys while watching TV is much better than being a couch potato! |
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By lunch-time I could hardly walk and by evening picking up the TV controller made even being a couch potato a painful exercise. |
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Many punters in the town had a flutter on Saturday's winner, watched by millions of TV viewers throughout the world. |
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When TV Licensing officials call round, householders often claim they do not possess a television. |
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She catches up with the colourful TV cosmetics expert ahead of his flying visit to York next week. |
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There is unquestionably some truth in that counter argument, which isn't voiced only by hawkers of Hollywood movies and TV shows. |
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Her work has also appeared in The New York Times, The New York Post, Wired, Money and TV Guide. |
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Unfortunately, this utterly disposable post-feminist tract is so misguided that it ends up making most reality TV look thoughtful. |
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Just as she gets stabbed through the neck with a fencing foil, it is revealed that what we've just seen was nothing but a TV movie. |
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Play-by-play Michael Kay has moved from radio broadcasts and postgames to the TV booth. |
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In Changsha, the four arbiters were an agent, a composer, a TV producer and a folk singer. |
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I've always been fascinated by sheepdog trials, though I watch it on TV rather than go to the real thing and have to peer into the distance. |
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After this current tour, Jason will embark on an exciting new TV project as a follow-up to his recent BBC2 hit show Jason Byrne Hates. |
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Already listed in his CV are such early potboilers as a novel linked to the New Avengers TV series. |
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Police are studying closed circuit TV footage to trace everyone who used the road between 2.15 and 2.30 am. |
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Successful applicants will get their rural trip courtesy of a new TV programme. |
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A simple TV showing some footy is all you need to guarantee that people will keep coming back to your stand. |
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I've been watching a great deal of coverage of the imminent US Presidential elections on TV and reading about it in the papers. |
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By saturating the airwaves, candidates and news directors could force-feed information to all but the few Americans who eschewed TV altogether. |
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It may include dramatic strikes visible on TV, and covert operations, secret even in success. |
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We tried our damnedest to make it special entertainment, but I'll admit I'm a contributor to the decline in TV standards. |
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Anyone on TV or in a major newspaper gets a lot of nasty mail, some from unhinged cranks. |
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You almost have to use traditional forms of advertising, like TV and radio, which can get very expensive. |
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While filming at her old college stomping ground in Arizona, the reality TV couple got a little cray! |
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Nowadays, rampant adaptations of movies and TV series are driving me crazy. |
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The decoders do not need to be topped up with credit every month to view local channels suchs ITV, Channel 10, Star TV, TBC etc. |
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The TV version, made in 1975, still creeps me out from the corners of my memory. |
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Yes, but none of the previous artists were assisted by a suave TV crime-fighter driving a car with a mind of its own. |
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In some cases, TV crews raced police to crime scenes by monitoring police broadcasts. |
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Here he pauses, drops his diplomatic shield and oozes contempt for those he crossed swords with during his lengthy TV career. |
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I was once on a TV programme with an escapologist who freed himself from a sack bound with chains. |
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It looks like your grandma's old rooftop TV antenna, with a single long axis and several shorter crosspieces. |
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She accepts that her BBC persona helped clinch the column, but points out that she was a newspaper freelance long before becoming a TV reporter. |
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People are bored with treadmills and cross-trainers, plugged into their headphones watching a TV screen. |
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National free-to-air television and radio covered the finals live in prime time with cable TV covering all the heats. |
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A huge crowd had gathered at the venue and a TV crew, which had also arrived, found it too noisy to shoot. |
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Two strides take a visitor into the only other room, where a bed, TV, couch and computer table crowd the compact space. |
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If you think about World Cups, you get women and kids crowding round the TV to watch Scotland who wouldn't usually be interested. |
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He's the former freezing worker who became a reality TV star in the United States. |
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These were made for use in rear screen projection TV sets in conjunction with our fresnel lenses. |
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Watching TV or whatever, you hear the shriek of the tyres losing it, followed by the crump of impacting metal. |
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The number one priority in TV comedy today is ' don't frighten the horses ', and it's probably number two and three as well. |
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The TV stations said a pimp was the source of the story about the footballers frolicking with prostitutes. |
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Tyler turned his beautiful face to look over at Jane, who was not paying attention and turning the TV on, cuddling up with a pillow. |
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The media moralist and TV frontman has a long track record of preaching about the evils of child abuse and individual irresponsibility. |
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Their costumes were based on cult Channel 4 programme Trigger Happy TV, in which the frontman does strange stunts dressed as a dog. |
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The Granada TV frontman is the master of ceremonies who will introduce an action-packed programme. |
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Or we turn on the TV and find Maury or Sally busily making over some woman who looks too much like a frump or a tramp. |
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When he was substituted, the TV cameras even witnessed him kicking out at the dug-out in frustration. |
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But without the accompanying TV show, all crashing waves, white sand and gnarly crofters, the book reveals itself as something of a curate's egg. |
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Despite curbs on satellite TV, many get such broadcasts, as well as bootleg videotapes and smuggled publications. |
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As a kid, watching any TV other than news or current affairs style programmes was very difficult when my Dad was in the house. |
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The phone networks now believe that custom-made TV and film clips will be the next mobile-phone money-spinner. |
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This seems to be the point where TV starts disappearing up its own fundament. |
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We have one or two funny men on TV, but the majority are totally uncouth, filthy-mouthed comics, which isn't nice at all. |
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The fork scorched a huge hole in Demi's night dress, destroyed a TV and fused all the electricity outlets in the house. |
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A television industry source says disgruntled local TV producers may have lit the fuse. |
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The accomplice to cynical, self-interested Western governments here are TV networks, who crave conflict to boost ratings. |
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He once heard gaffer tape pulled behind him in a TV studio before doing an interview, and went cold. |
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I have noticed on TV that the same handful of gagmen and women are everywhere. |
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There is a place for irony on TV, and even for snidey non-comics posing as gagsters. |
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The TV power is supplied through the decoder so you can't turn that off either. |
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Watching from the TV tower, I cringe at the way galleries crowd in from the left and in front of the player. |
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They started doing it in reality TV, where writers don't have union protections and are easy marks for getting this kind of material in there. |
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The prank was part of a British TV show that plays practical jokes on celebrities. |
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We find Lauren perched on a chair, her eyes glued to the tiny TV Mom picked up at a garage sale. |
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He brought Italy out of the dark ages when TV advertising had to be camouflaged in coy little sketches to be shown to children before bedtime. |
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Stephen Lewis speaks to the exorcist whose fight against the forces of darkness reaches the nation's TV screens tonight. |
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We know it is done predominantly for TV, but we might have to reflect on that. |
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Last week I did my first screen test ever, for a pilot TV series about post-divorce daters. |
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The show's about a guy who gives up his day job to find work as a movie and TV extra. |
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Will the big new Premiership TV deal have knock-on effects for the Nation wide League? |
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But this isn't a TV drama where the judge bangs down the gavel decisively and victims leap up to the cheers of supporters. |
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We all watch the same TV shows, gawp at the same handful of celebrities, hanker after the same soft furnishings and hardwood floors. |
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An astonishing five billion TV viewers tuned in to see the dazzling display set on a vast artificial lake in Athens' Olympic Stadium. |
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I wonder just how much of the constant stream of inane chat that drives me nuts on TV, or on the radio, is down to the need to avoid dead air? |
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His observation that the more cooking programmes we watch on TV, the more pre-prepared ready meals we eat made me laugh out loud. |
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All three candidates who will debate tonight on Brockton cable TV got their campaigns in gear last month. |
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The event would have appeared no different to TV viewers had it been pre-recorded at Labour headquarters. |
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Do we need to see sweat pouring under TV lights or to be shown that one of the tenor soloists wears a deaf-aid? |
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A Bolton tax specialist is putting his general knowledge to the test by appearing on a TV quiz show. |
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We had a press conference and the room was full of TV and newspaper reporters. |
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One of this week's newspaper TV previews was saying as much, and seemed to agree with your opinion on the first one, Flowers. |
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Home security led the list of technology purchases, followed by prewiring for cable or satellite TV and a built-in home theater. |
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The prime examples of commercial journalism are popular magazines, tabloid newspapers, and news and current affairs on commercial TV and radio. |
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Indeed, for the first time ever, cable surpassed free TV in prime-time viewing share last year. |
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Why am I being got at by these TV people for just doing the stuff that all my mates do day in day out. |
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It's around 1 p.m. and all I've really done is watch TV, and get through a suicidal amount of coffee. |
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On the PS2, at least, you'll need to make sure that your TV can decode other signals, as well. |
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The Government funds two high-profile communications campaigns involving TV, radio, and print media. |
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In a moment, the word was flashing across radio and TV nets to military officials and private citizens. |
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Although he dedicated most of his time to the TV business, Sawhney never neglected his musical dream. |
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The ending really is one where you stare at the TV for about five minutes after it is over and mutter gibberish. |
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It is not one or even two channels ruling the roost when it comes to Hindi TV viewers. |
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The visual, emotional TV culture paved the way for the rise of the charismatic movement and the growth of neo-Pentecostalism. |
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Children will hear conversations and overhear information on radio, TV and from the playground network. |
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Martin is hoping it will chart high enough for the band to reappear on the TV programme. |
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I was actually employed by my father as a radio and TV salesman and hire purchase clerk. |
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Subscribers can also chat through a transparent overlay on their TV screen. |
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When the pranksters revealed their hoax on Tuesday, the TV reporters threw a major hissy fit, outraged at having been sucked in. |
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Line decisions, hit wicket and boundary referrals will continue to be decided by the TV umpire, as per the present system. |
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As a young boy, that meant giving up sitting in front of the TV with my cup of coffee, 2 sugars and a biscuit. |
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These included five TV sets, two luxurious lounge suits, two plush dining room suites, an executive bedroom suite and artworks. |
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The speeches are on TV, and while it's nice to hobnob with your political heroes, what does it really bring to the table. |
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It's not charm, exactly, but a kind of cheerily manic persuasiveness, perfect for the new breed of TV impresario. |
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Far from providing a break from run of the mill TV, Big Brother follows the same pat formulas. |
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Few caravans had televisions but the holiday camp provided a TV room that opened at about 4 o'clock just before each weekdays transmission began. |
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But let me tell you that when His Holiness the Pope was here, he spoke everyday, every afternoon you had him live on TV and radio. |
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There was a billiards table, air hockey, darts, a TV with a DVD player and a Playstation 2, and a hot tub. |
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The home-brew robots battling it out on TV inspired Michael to open a for-profit robot club of his very own. |
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The presentation, appearance and packaging of cricket on TV had been changed radically. |
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Virtually, an industry on its own, it has gone beyond TV to movie screens, home videos, DVDs, and computer games. |
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Apparently, some legal problem has kept it off TV and home video for decades but no longer. |
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There's lots of supermodels and glamour out there in TV and in magazine ads. |
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An increasing number of consumers are surfing the Internet and watching TV at the same time. |
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With TV schedules chock-a-block full of irritating property makeover shows, you can't deny we're all obsessed with interiors. |
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Relegated to fighting palookas in tiny towns, he was asked to tape a 10-second promotion for a local TV station in Florida. |
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She left the TV on the sports channel as she reached over to the coffee table, grabbed the half eaten chocolate bar and chomped on it. |
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He also became a star in his own right, thanks to his ability to be amusing off the cuff in TV and radio panel games. |
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If people can't recognise the individual from this information, it means that every male TV presenter in the business is under suspicion. |
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Ten Sports TV station in India has added a new show about horse racing to its weekly lineup. |
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The former MP last night appeared on TV to appeal directly to the hostage takers. |
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The only way I know what TV shows are currently hot is by reading about them in magazines and such. |
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So all the huffing and puffing from Free TV Australia is just special interest hot air. |
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The argument goes that TV schedules are full of pap, with too much concentration on entertainment rather than the worthier fare of education. |
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I thought a bomb had gone off but someone had chucked a TV set out right from the top. |
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The funny thing is that the cable TV company has never realized that the boxing public won't pay a farthing to see Jones do anything. |
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After his being honoured with the Wisden Award for the Indian cricketer of the century, Kapil Dev has suddenly become hot stuff for TV channels. |
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Plus, the holiday season is to retailers what the advertising rate-setting sweeps months are to TV networks. |
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Widdowson's solo writing has prepared him well for his parallel career writing material for other people's TV and radio shows. |
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There seems to be no end of brokers appearing in the press and on TV these days telling us we need to churn our portfolios more often. |
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I'm house-proud anyway but it has been mad rushing around making everything right for the TV cameras. |
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So you think you're going to sit in front of the TV watching Sport and swilling beer on a Saturday after a hard week at the office, do you? |
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And if pubic opinion says otherwise, how about treating us as such and giving us free TV licences and bus passes? |
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We're accustomed to facing a gauntlet of hucksters when we sit in front of a TV set. |
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Thousands of TV commercials go on their merry way, oblivious to dire circumstances outside the calculus of huckstering. |
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It was a TV remote, though part of the casing was gone and extra components bulged from the circuit board. |
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Officers switched the focus of their investigation after receiving information following a Crimewatch TV appeal. |
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I must admit to having had a small chuckle at the TV pics of thousands of Parisiennes booing at the result. |
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He may have made his name by insisting on good value for consumers, but his latest TV schtick is fast emerging as a bit of a swizz. |
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The candidates crisscrossed the map, new polls arrived almost every day, and TV screens hummed with ads this past week. |
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What other phrases from popular TV shows can you think of that have slipped into common parlance? |
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Few days ago I saw something on TV about circumvallate papillae and ever since then I am very interested in that. |
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Despite what its schmaltzy TV ads claim about the company's positive effects on local communities, LA's city fathers have a different view. |
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Brilliant, and the recently finished two parter was as creepy as anything on TV and definitely king of the pile. |
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They anticipate reaching more than 300,000 students nationwide by webcasts and closed-circuit TV coverage of conference symposia and workshops. |
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Amid the hurly-burly of network TV, it's almost unheard of for programmers to plan beyond their next season, let alone five years hence. |
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But reportage has not been limited to the major TV networks and syndicated radio programs. |
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This is the opposite of passively watching corporate-sponsored TV programs with government press releases passing for news. |
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At this point I had already dusted the coffee table, as well as the TV table, and a hutch. |
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Lex is one of three remaining contestants in a reality TV show called Eye Spy, which bears more than a passing resemblance to Big Brother. |
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The passing of time has enshrined Keegan's infamous combustion on live TV as the pivotal moment in the 1995-1996 title race. |
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As they sit passively in front of their TV sets, they are barraged with redundant images. |
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He'd work some kind of paste-up edit, often inserting a freeze-frame in a manner that made other TV directors wince. |
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It's a slight premise, but it's played for laughs throughout, pastiching not only the TV show, but the buddy genre and the Seventies in general. |
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Corduroy were one of those British acid-jazz bands who specialised in covering, and pastiching, theme music, mostly from 70s TV shows. |
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One additional feature of these devices is the ability to pause normal TV shows. |
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You click on the TV, and there's a delicious-looking pizza spinning around, hypnotizing you to pick up the phone and order delivery. |
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As it stands the rules apply to pay TV licencees and not channel providers, such as Premier Media and Fox Sports. |
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Indeed, the premier on BBC1 pulled in more than 10 million viewers, which in the age of multitudes of pay TV channels is a huge number. |
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It's hard to deny that stealing pay TV, like selling a pirated CD, is a form of theft. |
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Stay away from cable and professional financial services, but look favourably on radio, pay TV, directories and professional publishing. |
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It stands to reason there's not much point advertising for pay TV subscribers on your own channel. |
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Businesses which have closed circuit TV in the area have been asked not to wipe their tapes and to contact police. |
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I take a seat as my eyes wander briefly to read the closed caption running across the TV screen. |
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Ultimately, one of their competitors may step up to the plate first and make TV clips with closed-captioning transcripts widely available. |
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Heineken is offering a contest to let participants imitate the Heineken TV commercial by dredging up beer bottles from an ice bucket. |
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But for all the speeches, the acres of coverage and hours of TV footage, marking the anniversary proved a peculiarly difficult task. |
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Paramedics tried to cover him up so onlookers including a TV camera crew couldn't ID him, the Web site claimed. |
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But watching a TV commercial on the big screen for a lot of people is not their idea of going to the movies. |
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As the Gordons, John Davidson and Morgan Fairchild, both TV veterans, are ideally matched. |
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It has become common to find even girls in pubs because of peer pressure and the influence of TV and films. |
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By 5.30, the whole business would be done and dish-washed, leaving the family free to dig the garden, watch TV or play peevers in the street. |
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And this time, instead of taking only his pen and drawing pad, he took the TV cameras too. |
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If I see another show on TV that denotes a pentagram or pentacle as evil, I am going to scream. |
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After all, you can't lay fiber, buy cable modems and pay for cable TV with surplus coax. |
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She gave her employees a pep talk, and the TV cameras, of course, captured it all live. |
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The fisherman stepped up into the nearby boat cockpit and switched on a small TV set. |
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In TV a lot of people who make editorial decisions have never had any cause to come here. |
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It's one thing being fed falsehoods over TV and radio but another kettle of rotten fish altogether when they do it straight to your face. |
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Might TV news tilt in favor of prescription benefits for senior citizens because the producers know many of their viewers are codgers? |
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But she proves with her TV show that there is no humiliation she will not endure to remain in the public eye. |
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Arcand tells his story through a running montage of TV interviews and footage from a factious documentary filmmaker. |
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While watching TV, turn on a few peripheral lights to give your eyes additional focusing cues. |
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I hardly watch any TV, yet in the last week I had the ill luck of seeing this three times. |
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After watching a few hours of TV I went to drink a coffee and met some of my local friends. |
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The discounters then successfully beat the majors at their own game, adding perks such as satellite TV, leather seats and extra legroom. |
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I'm sure you have watched dog shows, horse shows, etc. on TV or at a county fair. |
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Unlike film and TV, he points out, on stage you have to get it right each time. |
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Many of the historical personages I have written about have been the subjects of films or TV drama series. |
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In the US, high definition TV, video-on-demand and personal video recorders are expected to be the weapons of choice. |
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She pet her cat affectionately and turned on the TV while she waited for Brett to come home from work. |
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Larry suspects the TV weatherman is falsely predicting bad weather so he can have the golf course all to himself. |
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His brief ten-minute TV appearance so far hasn't brought him instant fame and fortune. |
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We can't do all the fancy things on the computer that they do on TV, but we can Google-search. |
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She revealed she's just like the rest of us when it comes to meeting celebs we really love, as she fangirled upon meeting the TV star! |
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Here again there is a parallel with colorization, which was touted as the only way to get people to watch certain old movies and TV shows. |
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That's how an acute farceur humanized a sewer rat for audiences of the 50s and every TV generation since. |
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And then imagine some inane TV presenter springs out on you and says that it was all a big practical joke. |
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The winner of the crown can now be seen frequently on TV and the covers of fashion magazines. |
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I just turned off the TV, grabbed my potpie out of the oven, and picked up a phone book. |
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So when you feel hot, you take a shower and when a friend comes by to visit, you wrap a towel around your waist and watch TV with them. |
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I asked how it was for her abandoning a successful career as a TV comedienne for music. |
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For someone who was one of the nation's top TV presenters, the chance to appear in the reality show represents a significant comedown. |
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To obtain good colour pictures on a TV screen, you need phosphors that produce rich, pure primaries. |
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You can look forward to some retrospective travel notes, complaints about summer TV and other incisive, analytical gems. |
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Joan comes downstairs barefoot in her pajamas, to tell her aunt, comfily watching TV and reading on the couch, that she can't sleep. |
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They watched TV and chatted inconsequentially before going for a drink at half past nine. |
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Print and broadcasting, broadsheet and tabloid newspapers, photojournalism, TV, and radio are all different. |
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This produced a fatuous contentment, which from the beginning led producers to view TV as a threat. |
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In those days, when we had no tickets for the game and no TV, we'd stand by the stadium and listen to the radio commentary. |
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Sometimes my Dad would get annoyed with the cricket commentary on TV, turn down the sound and listen to the commentary on the radio. |
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He talks about the need to bring indecency laws that now cover broadcast TV to make sure they cover cable TV as well. |
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The company is re-running some of its classic beans TV commercials from next week and will ask the public for their say. |
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To be honest the TV companies don't mind because these people could never afford any of the products advertised in the commercial breaks anyway. |
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He kept up to date by reading the papers and gorging on TV, digesting the indigestible. |
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But when we actually get on TV, we are relatively feckless and ineffective. |
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The TV coverage shows a helper dancing around to hand out the feedbags to his team. |
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And she is doing it all, from endorsing products, appearing on TV shows to walking the ramp at fashion shows. |
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This TV adaptation, scripted by Emma Thompson and directed by Mike Nichols, is compatibly respectful, guttingly plausible, crushingly quiet. |
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Of course, many of the rowers had seen the TV show and were all surprisingly complimentary about our efforts and achievements. |
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We were feral kids who were fed and got to watch TV but then were left completely to our own devices. |
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For one thing, piggybacking on existing dealers and steering clear of pricey TV spots will keep costs low. |
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If there's a story that has any connection with the Super Bowl, it will be ferreted out by 3,000 newspaper, radio and TV people. |
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Then I found the As Seen on TV Aisle and used the vacuum sealer and the food compressor to store as much fresh food as I could. |
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In TV, we've seen the growth of infotainment formats blending entertainment and informational aspects of media consumption. |
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People sometimes look at her and think she sits in front of the TV and eats and eats. |
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Now I can just sit in front of the TV and knit away without too much thinking about it. |
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Maybe it shows that children who are sat in front of a TV for long periods tend to be overweight. |
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Also, the trailers and TV ads are conning us into believing that it's about a talking kangaroo. |
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Egypt is part of the BBC's TV Plus pilots, offering audiences a new way of engaging with BBC TV programmes to enhance their viewing experience. |
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Even if you can't sing, can't dance but have a half decent set of pins and can play football, a new reality TV series wants to hear from you. |
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Later they said that the presence of the live TV cameras inhibited them from taking aggressive measures to end the ordeal. |
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A friend told me yesterday that he had just sold a TV concept on behalf of a famous author he represents. |
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The inimitable Eddie Vee has clocked up more TV appearances than other Elvis impersonators have had burgers. |
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Ike turned off the TV with a clap of his hand and the room was pitched instantly into inky blackness. |
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The reality TV star was spotted wearing a huge sparkler on her pinky finger while filming her show in Miami. |
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One of the highlights of the field day is a team event called It's A Knockout, based on the theme of the TV series of the same name. |
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Perhaps, they had the longest innings on TV screens and the largest fan following. |
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Alias captures the look and feel of the hit ABC TV show, with players battling the forces of insensate evil. |
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For companies like Cott, the ceremony presents the opportunity for an all-day binge of TV, analyst confabs, and shrimp bowls. |
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But the thing that irritates me most is that the regulation should forbid commercials being inserted into TV series at certain time periods. |
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You'll have to fight your way through the male crowd to even get close to a TV set. |
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I play a pit boss in the TV show and I knew nothing about gambling when I started. |
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My stateside imagination ran more cheaply toward TV reality programs and talk-show confessionals. |
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When I pitched the kids' ideas to my TV colleagues they were really impressed. |
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The average American child watches more than 20,000 TV ads a year, to the certain delight of pitchmen. |
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Who needs those guys when you've got the 43rd president of the United States as your TV pitchman? |
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His design will be pitchside at the Saitama stadium in Japan and will be seen by millions of TV viewers across the world. |
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The style is inspired by a futuristic vision of the world as depicted by the TV shows and films of the swinging sixties. |
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No instant foods, no TV dinners, no cake mixes ever trespassed into my mother's kitchen. |
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Find the central pivot point and bring it front and center on the phone, on TV on the stump, and at the door. |
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And 30-second skip and 7-second instant replay features make it even easier to move around your favorite TV shows. |
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Spar convenience stores have also had a mixed experience of in-store TV advertising. |
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The big difference between film directors and TV writers comes down to the work itself. |
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In its latest reality TV programme Channel 4 is hoping to chart the progress of the prisoners as they are integrated into society. |
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If successful, she could be showing her teeth on TV this September in a fight to the finish. |
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Once on the storage server, a photograph can be displayed on any TV screen or monitor in the house via a simple video client. |
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The standard stone could be graced with a small LCD TV while a more extravagant mausoleum might be equipped with a high-definition plasma screen. |
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The standard of bedrooms is particularly high in Brooks, and some of the new rooms even have plasma TV in bedroom and bathroom. |
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Talking of nightmares, this shelf unit for my new 42-in plasma TV has got me at my wits' end. |
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Italian TV rattling with the volume low while the sun changes the shadows on the warm plastered walls outside in the courtyard. |
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Downstairs the living room was equipped with the latest electronic equipment including satellite TV, two DVD players and games consoles. |
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I tried switching between progressive and interlaced modes, and saw the TV do its reconfiguration flash, but the text jittered in both modes. |
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It will still be worth going for a little constitutional afterwards, though, instead of slumping in front of the TV set. |
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And a third of adults use digital, satellite and cable TV to play the new radio stations. |
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There's a pause in the game, and the TV begins showing cute little kittens at play. |
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Supplemented with archive material that showed how the drama was played out on local TV, it makes compelling viewing. |
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Radio playlists have been shrinking and TV stations are playing fewer videos. |
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As the oldest Wilson child is just five, the basement playroom and TV room were always going to be important. |
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With both a Playstation 2 and a Gamecube in the house, TV games are as much a part of his everyday playtime as his toy trains, cars, and books. |
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When you turn on your TV, you may see a wizened old man making plebs laugh with his bad wigs and big chin, but we see someone else entirely. |
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I never saw him in the flesh, but I saw him on the TV on countless occasions. |
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We've decided to keep the TV in the bedroom on low so that we hear the sirens, so sleep will not be plentiful I fear. |
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Including the map of his missile locations on his TV broadcast was intolerably stupid, as was building and then blowing up a fake city. |
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Had we stayed at home I'd have plonked myself in front of the TV and watched the ceremonies and the pageantry being played out in London. |
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In most TV shows, a story arc is a plot line that runs over several episodes, sometimes spanning seasons. |
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The son runs to the TV, plugs it in, and soon the whole family is tuned in. |
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Portland's TV stations regularly employ plugola in news programming as a way of promoting parent network programming. |
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Granada TV frontman Anthony Wilson is the master of ceremonies who will introduce an action-packed programme. |
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We see that difficulty in the changes in what is now available on free-to-air TV programmes. |
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It might be said that investigative journalism in the British press is alive and well and based on TV programme research. |
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One of the pleasures of the TV show, The Simpsons is Homer's inveterate stupidity. |
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And then the Vietnam War heated up after that, along with civil rights, etc., and TV became the real conveyor of the narrative here. |
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It's tricky to tell a story on TV about an invisible gas that might be injected deep underground sometime in the distant future. |
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Heck, it can't even kill off a character in a TV serial without getting serious flack. |
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One TV campaign features a glamorous woman flaunting flamboyant designer clothes in a subway car. |
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Known for his love of good wine as well as good food, he has written many books and presented more than a dozen TV cookery programmes. |
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No electricity means no heating, no cooking, no light, no TV and no computer. |
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I was primed to sit on my couch with a finger pointing at the TV, a hand over my mouth, and a look of both horror and euphoria on my face. |
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In the TV show, Bruno pointed out to his irascible music teacher, Mr Sharofsky, that modern technology made traditional instruments redundant. |
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Much more common are cooperative agreements between local TV stations and the newspapers in those communities, says Northwestern's Gordon. |
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It poked fun at all the seriousness that reality TV has become, and it made stereotypical reality TV scenes into comedic segments. |
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