The twin evils of terrorism and teenage angst drove her to bulimia, a condition she tackled only a year back. |
|
They're not sure today's bout of investor angst warrants an opening of the monetary spigots. |
|
Would you approach a society you knew to worship angst ridden doctors, corrupt lawyers and various subgenuses of surly private detectives? |
|
The icing on the cake is Sophie Bryde who, in Zoe, plays a great angst ridden teenager doing community service. |
|
A rummage through the BBC archives shows a country suffering a great deal of angst. |
|
The intense angst though felt at odds with the surrounding natural tranquil beauty. |
|
There is always a tension in his music between the expressionist angst of contemporary classical music and the tango tradition. |
|
She had a passion for philosophy and the study of teenage angst and rebellion. |
|
This is manga for anyone who ever watched Airwolf, filled with angst and aerial combat in equal proportions. |
|
I didn't have the screwed-up childhood or soul-wrenching angst or any other useful twisted motivation for soloing. |
|
Primarily a portrait of suburban teenage angst, it feels entirely contemporary, yet it avoids the smarmy self-consciousness of most horror films. |
|
They've matured, shedding the preoccupation with teen angst that might previously have led them to be perceived as melodramatic. |
|
That's why Yu's comments triggered such angst among those who see the makings of a dollar meltdown. |
|
Although their songs might lack the Seattle angst, their music bears a resemblance to the departed scene. |
|
The cause of her current angst came from the collapsing of her younger brother inside their home a mere three days ago. |
|
It becomes impossible to see the springs of the play's action in terms of mere idiosyncratic personal grudges or teenage angst. |
|
As a director, his feature debut Last Night was probably the best film version of millennial angst. |
|
The idealism of transcendentalism gave way to existential angst a long time ago. |
|
There's sheer anger and sheer angst, there's bile and hatred, there is loathing. |
|
Manhattan, and especially the Upper East Side, is a hotbed of analysts and shrinks who will massage the angst of those who can afford their fees. |
|
|
He's able to distil the truth about teenage angst without the usual moralization. |
|
Englebert's own songs seem to emerge from the angst of a man who is unashamed of confessing he feels hopelessly miserable without love. |
|
The unbruised adolescent ego likes its angst to be clear-cut and attributable to the denigrations of an insouciant universe. |
|
It's an attack of poison ivy, teenage angst and the blues all rolled into one unscratchable scourge. |
|
Sophie has a particular contempt for parental angst, for signs of unwarranted doubt or despair among the allegedly mature. |
|
I was considered a moody brainiac back in high school, and I poured a lot of my angst into a journal. |
|
Raised in politics, in my household as common as bread on the table, I was socialized in the angst of elections and the agony of defeat. |
|
Where angst is still present in rap music, it's less socio-political and more psychological. |
|
At the peak of her ambiguous angst, she beats her breast in sappy mourning upon the death of her father. |
|
There's none of that whiny abstract angst that the vast majority of post-Dylan songsmiths succumb to. |
|
The wind strips the veneer off our psyches down to a tender layer of angst. |
|
This was a very vexatious issue in the first place and the way it was constructed caused a lot of angst. |
|
But vitally, it as an unmistakably modern effort, possessed of a distinctive dystopian angst. |
|
Though one realises with a pang, that these smiles contained in themselves a volcano of torment and angst. |
|
Long at the vanguard of twenty-something folk angst, Scottish octet Belle and Sebastian have been keeping it quiet for the last year. |
|
But this writer makes out as if angst in a political office is something out of the ordinary. |
|
Imagine PJ Harvey with double the lung capacity and extra helpings of bile and angst. |
|
Instead, he delivers a laudably subdued performance as an aging Gen X-er whose gloomy angst is sublimated into sketches and journal entries. |
|
His only begotten son sulks in his room listening to angst rock over Easter. |
|
I can only suggest that the paralysis that has gripped this country in recent years is causing us huge angst. |
|
|
The government could save a lot of angst, if they issued all non-citizens a magnetic swipe card with their picture on it. |
|
Now attractively aged and peeling, it has acquired a patina of genuine London urban angst. |
|
The songs are irritatingly infectious with enough angst to keep the moodiest teenagers frowning. |
|
Just as long hair, sandals and creative angst have typified the poet, poetry that is dense and inaccessible is considered weighty. |
|
In the end, it's a pity because the situation could have been handled a lot better and without the angst and tears. |
|
Get rid of your confoundedly repetitive harmonies and phony teenaged angst. |
|
Nevertheless, a deadly humourlessness does sometimes accompany teen angst, and when it does, the results can be terrifying. |
|
They have been described as the quintessential English pop group, with a string of hits bemoaning late-teen angst. |
|
I can't remember the last time I lost my rag with anyone without a high degree of provocation or angst being involved. |
|
It has no social or political significance whatsoever, and is certainly not a moment of Weltschmerz or angst. |
|
I think there's a good chunk of wet liberal New Labour angst behind it all. |
|
Her back is strong, so you can go to her to shoulder the angst of whatever ails you. |
|
Bobby, a superstar in the Latin world and a kinglike figure in Venezuela, is handling an international scandal without much angst. |
|
Teenage clubs would be formed in schools to tackle teenage angst and improve leadership qualities. |
|
What makes these songs so potent is the unmistakable angst festering beneath each one. |
|
Each of us have tremendous angst and shame and heartache about our eating disorders on the show. |
|
The summer that is now nearly officially behind us has been all about a kind of existential angst for me. |
|
The sense of angst and melancholy conveyed by Lumley, with the aid of director Hugo Blick, is strangely appealing. |
|
Still, few could have predicted he'd fall this deep into a pit of lyrical self-pity and teen angst. |
|
It involves a lack of motivation, a destruction of self belief, a general feeling of angst. |
|
|
If there is angst, it is a human condition rather than a disorder specific to the urban, displaced elite. |
|
It is a sign of the times, of our tumultuous, dizzying culture of metaphysical angst. |
|
Everything bounces along with a youthful joy, devoid of cynical teenage angst, full of hope and dare we say it slightly soppy. |
|
Through an occasional nocturnal trip to the gym, Matt Murdock finds a way to relieve some of his adolescent angst. |
|
I think there is a human dilemma, human pain and angst, and that it is very universal. |
|
At the root of the crisis is a deep angst over the dire state of domestic and European economic affairs. |
|
Racism first manifests itself among the group as a form of verbal violence, an expression of general angst. |
|
Many of the works that appear in the show depict the angst of the present generation. |
|
Is it just a deeper than normal journey into adolescent angst or a modern fairy tale? |
|
When I was a child I used to cause my mother major fits of angst while trying to keep me still in church. |
|
Judging from the press releases that clog my e-mail, there seems to be an upsurge in financial angst among twenty-somethings. |
|
We wouldn't have minded, but she put all our cutlery and crockery away in the wrong places, causing much angst upon our return. |
|
Often, their answers only lead to more questions, hence my interpretational angst. |
|
Finally, however, after much worry and angst, it was the night of the Debutante Ball. |
|
Curtis captures the angst of first love, the rhapsody of a first kiss and the intricacy of families. |
|
But our current fervid post-boom angst and rage has fueled most of the bad reviews. |
|
Alternating from soft and smooth, lounge-type music to more uptempo and angst filled boppy songs this album is filled with quirky little numbers and surprising twists. |
|
Poppy's nervous, as there's no horror in it, and precious little angst. |
|
Second only to psychological drama and angst, geography is important to Walker, who falls madly in love with places and stores them up for future plots. |
|
There are 75 million boomers, representing a lot of angst, unmet expectations, and fading dreams. |
|
|
The audience is propelled into the existential angst of everyday living. |
|
Yet the idea that teen angst is unavoidable is pervasive in our culture. |
|
In June, he called an Italian high-school student who wrote to him in angst about finding a job after she graduated. |
|
At the most fundamental level, abstract expressionism evokes existential angst for instance, and Pop Art satirizes consumerism. |
|
Who knew that angst had so many faces, or that thick paint had so much to say? |
|
And I admit I look back on my teenage self and think a lot of my angst sounds like an Onion article. |
|
The punchy five-track EP, with songs like You and Me Geometry and Haircut, is an unpolished indie rock gem full of post-high-school relationship angst. |
|
Perhaps the existential angst of one man is also meant as a reflection on the moral vacuum at the heart of a country partly known for its kidnapping, crime and corruption. |
|
And there must also be angst in Washington, which has, since 2003, relied on the Chinese to rein in their troublesome ally for us. |
|
The art is made in shaky, unstudied pencil that disarms the sordid imagery, and the juvenile captions each picture faces are too wet with angst to be truly disturbing. |
|
It's not always easy for a player who has accomplished so much to avoid a bit of senioritis, whether it comes from angst about the future or boredom. |
|
What a relief, what a salve for my own anxiety, to have a president again who doesn't suffer from existential angst or malaise, or who doesn't show it if he does. |
|
I love teen angst movies with moody, atmospheric modern rock soundtracks. |
|
The History room was especially atmospheric and of course all that teenaged angst resulted in many rumours of hauntings and other mysterious phenomena. |
|
A miasma of middle class angst simultaneously stings granny and granddaughter into revenge against Annie at the same time it is paralysing their victim. |
|
Modern angst aside, those with those with specialized grooming simply seem to have a better chance of shining and profiting. |
|
Maori people, with great anxiety, a huge amount of consultation, and a great degree of angst, thought very carefully about the process of whangai. |
|
In the grips of existentialist angst, investors decided to sell stocks and start stowing money under their mattresses. |
|
You often describe your house husband days as dreary and full of angst. |
|
Did you have angst last Sunday night deciding whether to watch the Emmys, Breaking Bad, or the Dexter series finale? |
|
|
Why dilly-dally with teenage angst when you can bring on the Giant Robots, that was my motto. |
|
But Ferrick's a resourceful alley cat of a performer, and the angst she suffers seeps alluringly into her croaky, staccato vocals and percussive acoustic guitar strums. |
|
It is conspicuously silly in places, with a chorus of Belfast millies incongruously inserted into the midst of the classical melodramatic and stylised family angst. |
|
The essays are heavily laced with anger, remorse and angst, as Powell examines his life on microscopic and macroscopic levels. |
|
Though you will have to look through the affixed mesh cage designed to keep those pesky angst filled teenagers from making life difficult for the street cleaners. |
|
But the real mischief created in this legislation, and where the angst and anguish will live with us for future generations, is this new regime that it creates. |
|
The grunters and groaners are out in force in Hotlineland and first to feel the angst is national gaffer Craig Levein. |
|
Husemann thought they had the sort of Radioheadish teen angst that would work well in Germany and wanted to see the band play live. |
|
A bit more angst than schmoopiness, but the underlying feelings are very well communicated. |
|
The sense of angst was palpable among the White House press corps. |
|
Tylenol might be able to clear up your existential angst along with your fever, new research says. |
|
This book tells the story of Jant, an immortal with wings, angst and a drug problem. |
|
Every couple of months it expires, much to the angst of everyone involved, only to have Congress re-up it for another couple of months. |
|
It would be an intense disgust. The absolute apex of teen angst. |
|
We see links and parallels between the history of the extinction of the Passenger Pigeon and our current angst over the possible continued existence of the Ivorybill. |
|
Seeking insight from many sources, it is an enlightening look at how humanity has changed over the years, and how angst has played a factor in this evolution. |
|
But unlike these other genres, industrial no longer boasts other bands worth their weight in angst, bludgeoning beats, and badly applied eyeliner. |
|
Today, even the trashiest Ritz Cracker can't compete with the explicit sexual imagery that pervades pop culture, so we channel our angst about advertising into new realms. |
|
All comes together in a realistic, coming of age read reflecting the angst that most first generation Australian teenagers of immigrant parents, I am sure, would endure. |
|
There are moments of profound existential angst, howls of despair at the absurd futilities of war and a sneering disgust at the soul-destroying wastage of human potential. |
|