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"come of" Definitions
  1. to be the result of something

860 Sentences With "come of"

How to use come of in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "come of" and check conjugation/comparative form for "come of". Mastering all the usages of "come of" from sentence examples published by news publications.

It's not a matter of if Latinos will ever come of political age but when Latinos actually come of political age.
To come of age in San Francisco in the seventies was to regret not having come of age in San Francisco in the sixties.
ALG: One of the reasons it's fascinating to talk to you now is that you've come of age as the Internet has come of age.
"Sanctions, devaluation — what should come of us?" she said.
But certainly something is going to will come of this.
"Did they come of their own free will?" she asked.
Despite these published accounts, nothing seemed to come of it.
Block said it's unclear what will come of those talks.
I'm still in touch, who knows what'll come of that.
And, at that moment, homo interstellaris will come of age.
What's going to come of it, who the hell knows?
"Nothing good can come of a slower storm," said Kossin.
What might come of the Commission's recommendations is anyone's guess.
"I doubt much will come of it," Ms. Scaraffia said.
Zwerg, fortunately, did not come of age in that world.
But then as they come of age, it all collapses.
"Some good has to come of this," Mr. Conzo said.
Hard to see what good could come of this. 216.
I'm not quite sure what's going to come of it.
Nothing has come of that in the past six years.
Never has so little come of so many screaming chyrons.
Hopefully some kind of studio version will come of this.
I think some good is going to come of it.
It's not clear if anything will come of this new demand.
An entire generation has already come of age under Mr Erdogan.
What will come of the scooter companies' similarly laissez-faire approach?
Or perhaps I should say, we come of ages with Mrs.
No good can come of America's efforts to straddle both horses.
But soon he saw that I had just come of age.
Nothing has come of this idea in the intervening seven months.
I've come of age in a time when injustice is ubiquitous.
"Hopefully some good will come of all of this," he said.
So what will come of net neutrality under the new Administration?
And the public would cynically predict nothing to come of it.
If the meeting did occur, nothing seemed to come of it.
Maybe something good (Leslie Mann) will come of his community service.
Could some good yet come of Trump's place in the race?
Nothing good will come of it for religious freedom in general.
There are no guarantees that No. 24 will come, of course.
"I don't know what will come of that complaint," Ai wrote.
But no good will come of personal insults and trash talk.
But what will come of any of this is anybody's guess,
A lot of, a lot of good can come of it.
It was too late to expect anything to come of it.
That fear blinds us to what good can come of it.
But if the topic remains partisan, nothing will come of it.
I didn't really think anything was going to come of it.
But Richards was still skeptical of what would come of this initiative.
But to expect much to come of such outreach efforts is naive.
It remains to be seen precisely what will come of all this.
The problem is that something needs to actually come of their presence.
But what's truly puzzling is what they anticipate will come of this.
Nevertheless, a generation has come of age knowing nothing but the wolf.
Heroes will come of this, and it won't be Mueller and his.
After all of the drama, something substantial had to come of it.
Every single month, one million Indians turn 18 and come of age.
Cyber warfare has come of age, and the Cold War is back.
Separately, it can be difficult to come of age in the borderlands.
They will come, of course, as they do for almost every president.
As many millennials come of age, employers are contending with helicopter parents.
What did she say she hopes will come of her daughter's death?
Maybe it's a pipe dream and perhaps nothing will come of it.
JULIAN ROBERTSON: Well, I think the cruise industry has come of age.
" Rolling Stone writer Jamil Smith tweeted, "Nothing good will come of this.
She deserves all of the privileges and responsibilities that come of that.
Much good has come of the increased willingness to discuss mental disorders.
You never know who you'll meet and what might come of a conversation.
A legacy of love Scully hopes two things come of sharing Nolan's story.
Richard Blumenthal on a piece of legislation, although nothing has come of it.
Regardless, Kirsten – like all American girl dolls – was forced to come of age.
It's uncertain where this came from, and nothing has come of it since.
It's too soon to predict what, if anything, will come of all this.
She said she had "and nothing had come of it," the panel said.
Equity investors are waiting to see if anything will come of Sino-U.
Gutierrez later told him she had, and that nothing had come of it.
It is hard to know what will come of this era's Catholic crisis.
Through it all, we see Mr. Wong and his group come of age.
The Prime Minister says he's innocent and nothing will come of the allegations.
Do this often, and you'll be amazed at what can come of it.
Nothing good can come of this dispute if it is allowed to persist.
It is still too early to say what will come of all this.
"Obviously it's very interesting to see what will come of it," she said.
It is not a battlefield war, though battlefield wars may come of it.
Or maybe it's just that I have, at long last, come of age.
My client is focused on her kids and what's to come of her career.
Still, if these ridiculous laws are real, what consequences can come of breaking them?
In the meantime, we're also wondering what, if anything, will come of Laura, a.k.a.
However, one important question arises: What would come of Señor Assange's precious kitty cat?
That moment will come, of course, and eventually so do other predictable plot points.
When asked what he hoped might come of the doctor trainings, Glassman was vague.
If you can't, you ask yourself what greater good could still come of it.
The instinct behind such measures is understandable, but no good will come of them.
I didn't expect anything to come of it, but she jumped at the idea.
So, it remains to be seen what will come of those negotiations as well.
It would be correct for Europeans to show we have all come of age.
But a full generation has come of age with no memory of that day.
I've been trying to stay outdoors because who knows what may come of this.
This coming-of-age story signifies that eco-fiction has also come of age.
But skeptics expect nothing to come of either this week's or any future negotiations.
Time will tell what will come of the parents charged in this college bribery scandal.
Bobbitt told GMA he's "overwhelmed" by the kindness that has come of his good deed.
However, he's seen so much more positive things to come of this as a result.
Mark my words, no good will come of your dating and living together so quickly.
Nor is it clear what will come of Mr López Obrador's discussions with Mr Trump.
Are you 2100 percent confident that nothing is going to come of this FBI investigation?
As NOAA scientist James Kossin previously emphasized, "Nothing good can come of a slower storm."
I asked the women if any good things had come of Duterte's anti-drug mandate.
Of what it has been like to come of age in the age of terror.
Not until he gets his data back, and sees some real change come of it.
They just happened to come of creative age in a time of liberal cultural consensus.
Many of these players have come of age and I couldn't be prouder of them.
He did not come of age when "neurodiversity" was part of our vocabulary of difference.
He did not come of age when "Asperger's" was part of our vocabulary at all.
I often wonder what would have come of more time to talk with the technician.
BROADLY: Why did you come of age in your late 20s versus your early 20s?
Granted, even if the FTC investigates, there's no guarantee that much will come of it.
Most millennials have come of age in a world of instant messages, emails and texts.
Nothing may come of it, but it would mean a lot to Natives like me.
What good has ever come of talking about state abduction and torture and solitary confinement?
It makes me wonder what will come of this #MeToo moment five years from now.
Adults who come of age and find they are incapable of holding down a job.
He's out there portraying, "I talked to Kim Jong Un." Well, what's come of that?
It is into this whiplash environment of economic inequality that college students have come of age.
"He feels very confident that what will ultimately come of this will vindicate him," Spicer said.
What will actually come of Trump's planned meeting with Kim Jong Un remains largely a mystery.
As these people come of voting age, they'll continue skewing support further and further toward legalization.
The bank's shares were boosted earlier this year, but so far, nothing has come of it.
I was giving it every chance to fix things and see what can come of it.
She was excited about the momentum and energy, but not sure what would come of it.
If and when this is done successfully, human genetic engineering will truly have come of age.
Maybe some good can come of this, but right now it makes my antenna go up.
Dems cannot make a deal with coup plotters and expect anything good to come of it.
I have witnessed the gulf narrow as new generations of Americans and Cubans come of age.
I don't think that we only come of age when we're 13 because I definitely didn't.
Today's college students have come of age in a time of growing diversity and political polarization.
However, as with many stories about impending White House personnel changes, nothing has come of it.
Beginnings are full of gravity—the weight of what is to come, of the journey ahead.
He had come of age during a time of intense racial ferment in his adopted state.
Cable had come of age, bursting open the bandwidth from a handful of channels to dozens.
The trend is touching a new, younger generation that has come of age since the revolution.
They assumed nothing good would come of it, but within a year Wikipedia had 20,000 articles.
Nothing new to see here, nothing new can come of it, and I think that's atrocious.
Seidler had come of age in the militaristic atmosphere of restaurants that aspired to Michelin stars.
You're not supposed to, it's really hard to say exactly what's going to come of that.
Sanguinetti's upcoming monograph will continue the story of Guille and Belinda as they come of age.
"There are positive things that come of social media, as well as negative," she told the magazine.
Thinking everyone is against you should never enter a player's head, nothing good can come of it.
It's an idea that may not have come of age yet, but the seed has been planted.
Netanyahu, 68, denies wrongdoing in both cases and has said nothing will come of the police investigations.
Just to see if something could come of it and people would become more active which…yeah.
Where do you foresee the industry going for new artists and animators who've come of age online?
So when you provide athletes with a safe platform to talk, great things can come of it.
So what's to come of all those buildings once everyone has taken their balls and gone home?
So you have come of age during a time of growing inequality, a fracturing of economic opportunity.
POST-PUNK, in the telling of it, was born before punk itself had even come of age.
Of course this whole design is speculative, and there's no guarantee anything will ever come of it.
It asks the question: What happens when TV teens come of age and officially leave the nest?
It's a harbinger of things to come; of a new era of human interaction, migration and commerce.
They assumed nothing would come of it, but sure enough, a few months later they spoke again.
With "Issues," there's a recognition an entire generation has come of age with N.W.A. as their soundtrack.
An entire generation of Americans has come of age since Simpson seemed an almost inescapable public figure.
The workplaces in which I've come of age professionally look different than the ones my mom knew.
You've come of age, and you're inheriting the whole house, busted pipes and splintered deck and all.
Heroes will come of this, and it won't be Mueller and his... ....terrible Gang of Angry Democrats.
So you have come of age during a time of growing inequality, of fracturing of economic opportunity.
Non-whites also represent a higher proportion of new voters who have come of age since 2900.
That really doesn't bode well for the season to come of a show called American Horror Story.
Small wonder that Ferneyhough has been hugely influential among composers who have come of age since 1989.
That might have you thinking: What bad could come of taking a little taste of Fido's dinner?
It's unclear what, exactly, will come of the SEC re-opening the case of the Winklevoss trust.
Some modicum of good may come of the incident, he notes: It could prompt more thoughtful behavior.
Even still, investors may be worried about what may come of future policy shifts from the Fed.
Nothing good has ever come of a bachelor party, but the one in "Siren" goes particularly awry.
She added, though, that it is too early to determine what will come of all the talk.
What could come of Republican lawmakers' calls for the F.B.I. to crack down on national security leaks?
Who is he: Sébastien Haller is a goal-scoring forward who has come of age in Germany's Bundesliga.
But like all the inquiries you have ordered in the past, nothing will come of this one, too.
A new generation of Westernised Russians born since the end of the Soviet Union has come of age.
Wrong.One woman in London discovered the harm that can come of taking a quick snooze in an Uber.
Pop had come of age as Elvis Presley was ascending the charts, and was moved by Presley's magnetism.
Young and with a limited need for outside capital, many have come of age when growth is scarce.
"We can now say that the secondary market has come of age," Ardian UK head Olivier Decanniere said.
The Puteens have come of age at a time of unprecedented prosperity for Russia, despite a recent slowdown.
No good can come of those who ignore the natural order of things and override them with chaos.
History has absolutely no idea what sort of monster this is, but no good will come of investigating.
The best thing that could possibly come of Scalise's shooting wouldn't be some fleeting moment of political unity.
The magazine helped stoke interest in socialism among a cohort who'd come of age during the Great Recession.
Those doubts come of top of worries about how sharply the US economy might lose steam next year.
Having come of age in the wreckage of the financial crisis, millennials' drift toward socialist politics makes sense.
You may find it tempting to confide in a work buddy, but no good will come of it.
While acknowledging the tragedy of the incident, she highlights all the inspiring things that have come of it.
"Minorities rarely come of age explicitly thinking about what we want and how to get it," she writes.
Hours before Russia and Turkey agreed to the cease-fire, he warned that nothing would come of it.
It also brings peace to her brother, watching his little sister come of age on her own accord.
When deciding what action to take, it is not always enough to ask what might come of it.
If any good has come of all this negative publicity, perhaps I shall now get to know them.
The question is, what — besides a third season of "The Handmaid's Tale" — could possibly come of Offred's bravery?
Top Trump administration officials, and many experts, doubt that anything serious will come of the South Korean initiative.
From that moment, there was nothing left to do but see what might come of their mutual infatuation.
He vowed to continue leading the government, and said "nothing will come" of the charges, the AP reported.
He shared information when he traveled to al-Hol this summer but said nothing had come of it.
Ngalo visited the village elder to try to get her money back, but nothing had come of it.
Kyle found out about the dog situation during the premiere, but nothing else has come of that knowledge — yet.
Others are confirming as well that they expect something to come of these talks, brief though they might be.
"He's one of those students in your class that you're expecting great things will come of him," Ross recalled.
Rachel, on the other hand, was someone I had just come of a phenomenal date with the week prior.
Davis threw 46 pitches in a bullpen session Friday and was eligible to come of the disabled list Saturday.
Beyond the usual pomp and circumstance, it's not exactly clear what will come of this two-day visit, though.
She's since filed a ticket with the Internet Crime Complaint Center, but doesn't believe anything will come of it.
So it's assumed that nothing good can come of Amazon getting yet another potential treasure trove of personal data.
"It's certainly a wild card," said Reilly, adding that it is likely that no resolutions will come of it.
Nothing has come of his proposal yet and no mention was made of it in Mr Trump's first budget.
I think the broader question of course is, when will this wrap up and what will come of it?
I've been on a few dates and have an online dating profile, but not much has come of it.
Rather than indulging his outrages in the hope that something good will come of it, they must condemn them.
Most investors felt that nothing would come of President Donald Trump's tax reform effort until last week, he said.
I got to come of age in such a natural way, with no pressure, and it was a pleasure.
The first to come of age in the internet era, millennials may be the most scrutinized generation in history.
Microsoft acquired Yammer, which made workplace collaboration software, back in 2012, but little has apparently come of that acquisition.
"Everyone is kind of asking what's next and what we want to come of all of this," Rapinoe said.
But it's unclear what will come of those talks, intended to head off a tit-for-tat trade skirmish.
In this complex, ferociously moving novel, three young people come of age in a black community in Southern California.
I have a job that I'm passionate about, and I'm fairly certain something good will come of it, eventually.
Here's what's on the docket: It's still not clear what actual changes — if any — will come of these hearings.
So it was like I was planting these little bitty seeds without even knowing what would come of them.
When things seem daunting in this trying time, ask yourself: What is the good that will come of this?
Mr. Trump has often raised antitrust questions about another tech giant, Amazon, but little has come of his threats.
I have resisted predictions about what could come of the investigation because it would be little more than conjecture.
An entire generation of feminists has come of age largely knowing the E.R.A. as their mothers' and grandmothers' fight.
He has been trying to grow his compassion, so that something, anything, positive might come of all this grief.
At the same time, because it was such a political speech, I wondered if anything would come of it.
"I not sure what will come of the future but I am excited for it," Lima said on Wednesday.
I don't yet know what will come of #GreenShirtGuy, and I am sure my 15 minutes are almost up.
If it gets you, our audience, to see how it happens, then some good would have come of it.
But whatever might have come of that line of logic is now likely to be nipped in the bud.
When the US continues to do business with countries holding Americans as hostages, no good can come of it.
While studios wait for summer season to commence, there are no surprise hits to come of this weekend's releases.
If they follow the facts and they follow the law, I am confident that nothing will come of it.
That pattern has been broken by millennials, the coveted talent pool who began to come of age around 2000.
Coons has sat somewhere in the middle, seemingly the most generous with what has come of the final report.
And Sebastian, will this come of anything since I guess these Russians are part of the Intel service over there.
I continued the interview process, not expecting anything to come of the opportunity, but I ended up getting the position.
Good things do not come of incest, a lesson Game of Thrones shouldn't have to teach, but here we are.
To come of age as a gay man in America necessitates identifying with whiteness and constantly measuring yourself against it.
Nothing truly romantic may have come of it, but it did give Jonerys fans plenty of fodder for romantic GIFs.
Little has come of Trump's calls for executing drug dealers, but on other fronts the administration has taken some action.
I contemplate waking up my sister, E.*, to get coffee, but fear the teenage anger that will come of it.
They come of age in a time of shame and silence, and rely on each other to figure it out.
The letter doesn't compel Facebook or Zuckerberg to appear before the committee, so it's possible nothing will come of this.
When Wendy Cruz-Chan's son Killian was stillborn, she wanted to heal by making something good come of the experience.
"I would like to personally apologize to Maty for what has come of this situation," Shear said in the statement.
"We like it when our recordings bug and blip," said Wada, who appreciates the "exotic" sounds that come of it.
I've done jobs where nothing has come of promises, but these guys are just so good at what they do.
Netanyahu denies wrongdoing: "I believe nothing will come of it because there is nothing in it," he said in December.
Decades after the story first circulated, the little girl returned to Cameroon from Paris, where she had come of age.
It's possible nothing will come of the fight, especially since everyone keeps forgetting to actually TAG Cruise in their tweets.
As children, we loved when Santa would come, of course, but we never went overboard buying gifts for each other.
It was a wish because you sent it out of you but you couldn't know what would come of it.
As we come of age, we all realize the world won't always budge for us, unless we force it to.
That pushed Hamas into a much-heralded agreement with the Palestinian Authority in October, but nothing has come of it.
After decades of immigrant exclusion, second-generation Asian-Americans have come of age and grown up steeped in American politics.
"He's a good barometer of a society that has come of age and can now laugh at itself," she said.
Then again, many lawmakers and even civil liberties groups say that more harm than good would come of it. 6.
But I can guarantee that if you don't take any steps at all, nothing much will come of your idea.
And so quantum computing, one of the jazziest and most mysterious concepts in modern science, struggles to come of age.
Maybe something will come of it, or maybe nothing will, but hopefully you'll have some interesting conversations along the way.
"Some people come of age as teenagers, I came of age as a senior citizen," she wrote in her memoir.
What will come of Li's main legacies, which include calls for more freedom of speech and accountability on the mainland?
JUAN WILLIAMS, THE FIVE CO-HOST: Yeah, that&aposs still -- apparently, he&aposs very irritated that nothing has come of that.
One judge reportedly asked what would come of the 20 years Ratelband hopes to delete, and asked about his parents' feelings.
I wouldn't dismiss it, but let's be honest, he's going to deny it and little is going to come of it.
The data is expected to be released next year, giving academics a chance to analyze what has come of the experiment.
Jim Caron, Morgan Stanley Investment Management fixed income portfolio manager, does not expect to see anything material come of the testimony.
That won't be a problem for some time to come, of course — CASE is still very much a work in progress.
We've come of age in this brutally incompetent political system, and we're threatened with having to live with it the longest.
FitzGerald said she shared her story with CNN and other news outlets because she wants to see good come of it.
Ferguson gave Victoria his number and told her they should stop by the set sometime, expecting nothing to come of it.
Netanyahu denies wrongdoing: "I believe nothing will come of it because there is nothing in it," he said earlier this month.
The only good thing to come of this is that it was a Leicester player that scored—albeit an unloveable one.
But as many using the platform know, little has come of it and enforcement of new policies had been terribly inconsistent.
And so the show's ending embodied many of the dismissive clichés about fantasy, rather than representing the genre come of age.
What would come of the UN, based in New York City, if the US threatens to limit funding or withdraw entirely?
A few weeks after Blum met Rees, I called her to see if anything had come of their impromptu pitch meeting.
They must come of age in a country in which they are citizens not because of the color of their skin.
Moore's generation, having come of age when the religious right was triumphant, is more attuned to the corrosive effects of politics.
I also told myself that I was just taking precautions, that most likely nothing would come of what I was doing.
The son of a tailor from a rural village, Mr. Cawley, then 21970, had come of age during a guerrilla conflict.
"It's the year when most of the pent- up demand from the mainlanders (is) going to actually come of age," she said.
She didn't think much would come of it, but she went, and it was there she saw her first sled hockey clinic.
He allegedly received $12 million to start a Miami-based touring company for trolls, though nothing seems to have come of it.
My generation is the last generation to have come of age in the United States without positive mainstream representation of transgender people.
For months, nothing seemed to come of the threat, leaving terrorism a secondary concern after Brazil's ongoing Zika woes and environmental clusterfuck.
THE ATTENTION THIS IS GOING TO BRING, THE LAWSUITS THAT MAY COME OF THIS PROBABLY WON'T BE RESOLVED QUICKLY GIVEN CORPORATE HISTORY.
" R29: As your kids come of age in the next 10 to 15 years — HB: "Oh, I have so many rules already.
But Worth says that if history is any indication of what could come of this bear market, it could be much worse.
Essentially, Sessions' reasons for withholding information from Congress and the public were shaky, but it's unclear if anything will come of it.
She had come of age in Southern California in the 1980s and had been the first in her family to attend college.
"I think it is too early to tell what is going to come of the news that just broke today," he said.
Girls who are wed before they are 18, typically live with their parents after the wedding ceremony until they come of age.
"If he gets consumed by these sorts of things, it's hard to see how anything good can come of it," O'Hanlon said.
The one good thing that may come of such an executive order is that we can finally stop talking about this idea.
Even if we someday get a full-fledged Vine 2, I pray we never see another hellscape like this come of it.
But in a telephone interview, Ms. Williams said her husband had expressed skepticism that anything would come of the efforts in Washington.
Young, educated and organized, Tunisia's protesters have come of age in an era of relative freedom, only to face long-term unemployment.
They had come of age after the taming of AIDS in the developed world, and Mr. Kramer's battles were someone else's history.
Who knows what might come of this, but on balance, given the circumstances, I think there is a basis for allowing it.
"My students have come of age during a decade when public discourse means taking a position and sticking with it," he says.
To find more programmers, scientists and engineers, we don't have to wait for the future generation of workers to come of age.
The House Energy and Commerce Committee is also expected to draft a bill, but little has come of its discussions so far.
Nothing has ever come of that "allegedly" — there has never been any evidence to substantiate Mr. Trump's claim, not then, not now.
The judge's order, which the state is expected to appeal, sparked a refreshed furor in Alabama over what should come of monuments.
" When several SEALs in the group questioned what would come of reporting the chief to their commanders, another wrote: "That's their decision.
A huge pressure has been built up, and we cannot read the future, but I predict nothing good will come of this.
Here's a quick rundown at some of the politicians who are shaping the encryption debate—and the laws that will come of them.
But cloud — everyone talks about the cloud, they think the cloud has come of age, but it's still only 2800 percent of that.
"We've got credible auction houses and a great gallery system and the world is now realizing that we've come of age," he said.
In the short term if gives you a fuzzy feeling but in the long term, nothing good is going to come of it.
While it's still unclear what will come of it, one thing is clear: The president isn't protecting transgender folks; he's doing the opposite.
In the next few years, as the two youngest Fry children come of age, their survivor benefits from the Defense Department will expire.
But despite the bipartisan appeal of criticizing the tech companies in public, it's not clear what, if anything, will come of the critiques.
Moffett said the only real thing that will come of the plan is a continuation of efforts to prohibit equipment from China's Huawei.
It's said that CEO Tim Cook had conversations with BMW and others about manufacturing partnerships, but nothing has apparently come of them yet.
In the short term it gives you a fuzzy feeling but in the long term, nothing good is going to come of it.
His attack will almost certainly trigger more scrutiny of Japan's post-bubble generation, the children who have come of age in leaner times.
Mr Huang was lucky to come of age just as the Chinese avant-garde, known as the '85 New Wave, was taking off.
Not thinking much would come of it, Park, then 17, skipped out of the audition early to grab fast food at Taco Bell.
These girls have come of age at a time when they can go online and look up images of the vulva, doctors say.
As we come of age to make adult decisions, we may refer to statements made by close family and friends along the way.
As a storyteller (Raymond O'Neill) explains, two boys raised as brothers, Entu (Daniel Crispin) and Ralu (Jeremiah Hughes), have recently come of age.
Though, the project seems to make headlines every few months or so, it's entirely possible nothing will come of the self-driving development.
As the first generation to come of age in the world of social media, there's no doubt that millennials are extremely identity conscious.
And the same company promised to build a $85033 million plant in Pennsylvania four years ago, but nothing has come of that pledge.
If one of the President's lawyers or aides released the questions hoping something good will come of it, disappointment is sure to follow.
The bows rattled as they danced in closely knit circles, singing out that the youngest member of their clan had come of age.
In rare interviews, their parents shared the heartbreak and pride of watching their children come of age as leaders of a protest movement.
With a generation of kids who'd come of age at the height of these institutions, the underground music scene was given new energy.
He knows what would come of taking even one sip of alcohol "Eventually, I'll have a needle in my arm," Mr. McGarry said.
Whatever else may come of the Trump administration's strike against Soleimani, the responses from the opposition so far have already been incredibly revealing.
When he joined the service, he wrote on his entrance forms that he was a soccer player, but nothing had come of it.
But for many, those two senators still "make sense on paper," so seemingly smart people are still convinced something might come of them.
But Mr. Bocelli is not the only star who has been floated as a possible performer, only to have nothing come of it.
Throwing an hour and a half of football into the equation only complicates things, and nothing good can come of it, say we.
That remains the fundamental issue, and we don't yet have any firm answer from the administration on what's likely to come of it.
William (Dylan Baker) has been undercover in America for ​decades to gather intel on bioweapons, and nothing has come of it so far.
As my colleague Ben Wallace-Wells points out, we voters under thirty have come of political age during the economic recovery under President Obama.
The latest losses will come of top of A$360 million in one-off charges that will be booked in the year just ended.
Nothing appeared to come of that meeting, however, and Trump told ABC days later that he "understands exactly" the NRA's concerns on the matter.
"You know, honestly, I'm having so much fun," shared Bersten, who said "only time will tell" about what will come of their relationship status.
But it's all been done so many times by the same pack of non-contributing bottom-feeders, and what's come of any of it?
Back at the track site, volunteers were digging excitedly toward the back wall, hoping to learn what would come of the erratically angling sauropod.
A wheel kick knockout, flying knees galore, and a ludicrous reach with a pounding jab on it, surely something good would come of that.
Analysts aren't optimistic that much will come of the initial meeting with the Chinese president, but there is a chance it could affect markets.
" The 50-year-old father-of-two adds, "I didn't realize anything would come of it, and wasn't aware that it had been filmed.
It's that millennials are the first generation to come of age in a time when social media, cell phones, and the like are ubiquitous.
Trump said he would raise the issue of election meddling with Putin, but suggested that he did not think anything would come of it.
Michel Temer, who is serving as Brazil's interim president while Dilma Rousseff undergoes an impeachment trial, thinks something good can come of the crisis.
It's unclear if anything will come of the bedroom eyes that Tormund and Brienne exchange in the most recent episode of Game of Thrones.
The studio acknowledged a desire for "vanilla" World of Warcraft, and said it was discussing options internally, but to date, nothing's come of it.
As the first generation to come of age under Obamacare, millennials are finding the new rules of consumer-driven health care tough to navigate.
The protagonist of "Scaffolding," an Israeli coming-of-age film, isn't really ready to come of age — not that he seems to know it.
She complained to a female physician in the center that Dr. Tyndall was making her very uncomfortable, but nothing seemed to come of it.
The new series will focus on characters who are the first generation of survivors to come of age in a world overrun by zombies.
To manage their despair about the gap between their hopes and what's come of their lives, they've often turned to drugs, alcohol, and suicide.
Though polls show that Palestinians crave a reconciliation by Fatah and Hamas, it remains unclear how much more will come of the Hamas offer.
"If we met face to face, I'm sure good things would come of it," he said during his surprise appearance at the United Nations.
A wave of second-generation Asian-Americans had come of age, sparking hope that they could help break voter turnout records in the fall.
Here we are also starting to see a shift as millennials come of age and women play a larger role in financial decision-making.
The project is part of a growing effort to generate art through a set of A.I. techniques that have only recently come of age.
McConnell wants no witnesses because, you know, witnesses are the ones who saw the crime, so no good can come of hearing from them.
"I just don't want this thing to be about him," she said, referring to the interview and the article that would come of it.
None was eager to re-enter presidential politics, former officials said, especially when agents did not know what would come of the Australian information.
Mr. Amro, 36, is among the most successful community organizers to have come of age in the Hebron of minority rule and sterile zones.
Much like the original novel, the new movie follows the four March sisters as they come of age in Civil War-era New England.
" Caldwell said he knew the league was looking into it, but "from the information that we have, I don't expect much to come of it.
" The Congressman-elect added in his apology that his donation to CPJ comes "in the hope that perhaps some good can come of these events.
I tried to put in a complaint to the university, but I was told that nothing would come of it since he was already expelled.
But after reading iGen, Jean Twenge's exploration of Generation Z (the next group to come of age after my cohort, the Millennials) I'm genuinely perplexed.
When artist Jennifer Meridian signed up as a bidder for Donald Trump's US-Mexico border wall, she didn't think much would come of her plan.
"Podcasts have finally come of age and we are seeing a lot of demand for audio content globally across many different demographics," Strunge tells me.
Adam Castilla, a 32-year-old musician who lives in Orange County, California, said that he wants something positive to come of his sister's death.
While the deal symbolizes a chance for future generations to come of age in peace, the deal also signals a new chapter for the region.
To manage their despair about the gap between their hopes and what's come of their lives, they've often turned to drugs, alcohol, and self-harm.
For now, the US government's investigation is said to be in the early stages, and it's still unclear if anything will actually come of it.
Who knows what's to come of the future Trump saw in his speech, but for now, we stand with those who dress from the heart.
" West explained that he thought a good outcome could come of the exchange: He wrote, "Thank you for the extra promotion #WAVES available February 11th.
He still owes millions to Brown-Goldman families An entire generation of Americans has come of age since Simpson seemed an almost inescapable public figure.
Google opted to strengthen the educational institutions by providing infrastructure and software, then from those institutions build technology communities which have now come of age.
Murray has had the rotten timing to come of age in one of the most talent-rich eras at the top in men's tennis history.
It highlights an amazing juxtaposition that has come out of these protests and, sadly, makes you wonder if anything will every truly come of it.
Yeah, no, it 100 per cent is in terms of the stats, in terms of the results that have come of it, the bookings already.
After digging fruitlessly for the right story, I decided to call my dad — recording without his knowledge — to see what might come of a conversation.
"I had hoped that something would come of it, that the politicians would take some action, but obviously not much has happened," Mr. Copeland said.
She was featured along with six other young women in a collection of essays about what it's like to come of age along the border.
In rare interviews, they shared the heartbreak and pride of watching their children come of age as leaders of a protest movement for free elections.
They have come of age during the post-Taliban struggle by many young Afghans to break free of the harsh contours of a patriarchal society.
It's unclear what will come of a continued investigation in the heat of an election year, but the opposition to Trump's acquittal remains powerfully unwavering.
Thomas A. Saenz, president and general counsel of the Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational Fund, said the same would come of the Texas law.
The demonstrators are representative of a new generation that has come of age in relative freedom, only to face the prospect of long-term unemployment.
I don't know what will come of that complaint, but it is a small matter compared with the issue that I now want to raise.
Some have said getting more money into consumers' hands would be beneficial, while others have been more skeptical about what will come of the process.
"For such a small movie, this is the last thing in the world that you think is going to come of it," Ms. Williams said.
" Of the "Memories" song, Longstreth added, "Kanye didn't wind up using it, but it was good — maybe something will come of it down the line.
For one, seniors, having come of age well before computers were ubiquitous, may lack the digital media literacy required to reliably suss out fake sources.
I must admit that I couldn't wait to see the episode myself, and spent the past few days imagining what would come of this meeting.
That experience gave me the idea that you can put something into the world and you don't necessarily know what's going to come of it.
That's why, I think, she goes to see toddler Lily, even though she knows nothing good will come of it (and, indeed, Christine is right there).
When asked how quickly he will know if something good will come of the summit and if Kim was serious, Trump said he'd know very quickly.
Let the story of Oprah and her mom be a reminder that what may come of a reconciliation might not look familiar under traditional family dynamics.
After his death one of the biggest concerns became what would come of the storied collection of music, and whether or not we'd ever hear it.
A Wikipedia of free higher education, working on the principles of the Open University, must surely be about to come of age as a mass phenomenon.
There remains significant skepticism about whether something can come of the talks among top GOP aides -- or what kind of timeline any deal would work under.
Gen Z, the large demographic starting to come of driving age, simply assumes self-driving cars will be in their future, according to an Autotrader study.
It was just at a time when I didn't expect anything to come of anything that I'd done, so I didn't put much thought into it.
Gardner says as women continue to delay marriage and more young women come of voting age she only expects this bloc of white women to grow.
For his part, Crane is dubious that anything much will come of the investigations in the near future, regardless of which agency is leading the charge.
It is unclear what will come of Monday's hearing, given that Ford's lawyer has said she will not testify until an FBI investigation has been completed.
Last week in London, Trump was pushed to say he will bring up Russian interference in U.S. politics but he predicted little would come of it.
Some positive news has come of these investigations: Blood tests showed no infection in two health care workers who had previously been classified as suspected cases.
"I just think in general the employment opportunities and the other offshoot businesses, there's just a lot of opportunity that will come of that," Deisinger said.
The starving children of Biafra, the Son of Sam murders, the great blackout of 1977, all are the setting against which the girls come of age.
More broadly, it's a first-person meditation on what it means to come of age as a woman in a place that doesn't accept your presence.
We were successful in organizing the first International Women's Strike as a rehearsal of the world to come, of the world we want to live in.
Along with an increasingly visible star quotient, this 10-day event in downtown Toronto has come of age as a new forum for red carpet glamour.
But if it works, as it indeed appears to, who knows what might come of it when we're nine billion humans on a baking, thirsting globe?
Nearly every one of a dozen Afghans interviewed on Sunday about the deal held out at least cautious hope that something good could come of it.
I'll leave it to them to issue their report, but I think he feels very confident that what will ultimately come of this will vindicate him.
"Our conclusion is that it's time for Amazon to come of age and pay its own way," said Daniel Flaming, a co-author of the report.
You know that fintech has come of age when the government comes knocking at the door just like it does with any other bank or broker.
Even better, these players had come of age with smartphones and social media and were eager to broadcast their tastes and opinions to whoever was listening.
After decades of immigrant exclusion, second-generation Asian-Americans have come of age and experts say they are showing increasing interest and engagement in American politics.
"Whoever is doing what they're doing, they think they can kill all these women, and nothing will come of it because they're just 'Indians,'" he said.
But if we're going to make that ask, we should be pretty confident that good things will come of it, because the cost is not trivial.
JAGUARS PLAY DOWN INQUIRY Jacksonville General Manager Dave Caldwell said he does not "expect much" to come of the N.F.L.'s investigation into defensive end Dante Fowler.
At its best, it helps us come of age and experience a broad cross-section of culture and politics, but it can also feel steeped in cliche.
Tommy Drake, the criminal defense attorney who represented Maynor for six months after his arrest in June 2014, says he doubts anything will come of the petition.
In The Country Girls, follow Kate and Baba from rural Ireland to Dublin while they come of age and are alternately terrible and tender toward one another.
When young magic users come of age, they transform into sea creatures and explore the human world for a few days—the magical equivalent of backpacking Europe.
The intrigue: These generational big men have started to come of age, graduating from "he's going to be an MVP candidate one day" to, well, MVP candidates.
Given that no other policy that Washington has pursued towards North Korea in the last 15 years has worked, no harm can come of trying something different.
"The U.S. fertility clinic market has come of age and is ripe for a merger and acquisition cycle," Capstone Partners, an investment banking firm, wrote in 240.
As for the time of processing, the administration had no estimate on the impact of the new measures or what would come of the 90-day review.
If I had known then what would come of that secret stash of skirts and tops in the crawl space, I might have abandoned the idea immediately.
I cannot imagine what would come of today's Republican Congress opening up the Clean Air Act for revision, but I suspect Democrats would not like the result.
Mr. Weiner jotted down his observations in a notebook where he collects ideas and stray bits of dialogue, and wasn't sure if anything would come of it.
Corporations see in them the future of consuming, as generations come of age for whom notions of gender as traditionally constituted seem clunkier than a rotary phone.
At the core of that resistance is the generation of Afghans who have come of age in the past 17 years, enjoying some happier times and possibilities.
What might come of "On a stretch of pavement between Truman's Corner and Boswell's Hotel a man asked a child if she knew where St. Ardo's was"?
They have come of age in an era of hard-won democratic gains, increasingly hopeful and unwilling to relive the tragedies of their parents' war-torn generation.
I.C.C. prosecutors have claimed to also be considering alleged crimes in Georgia, Colombia, Afghanistan, Ukraine and Palestine, but no concrete action has come of those preliminary examinations.
While Alcott's book tells the story of the March sisters as they come of age, Gerwig's film opens halfway through the book, when the sisters are adults.
I can't actually ... I think that there are bad, obviously bad things that come of Twitter, but there's also a lot of good that comes of Twitter.
Their future awaits as they come of age—but unlike their peers, trans teens like Vinnie are seen as collateral in a national debate around gender norms.
Jokes are only as good as the time period they've come of age in, but feeling uncomfortable and out of place is as timeless as it is universal.
The school nurse arrived to find him buttoning his breeches; England's satirical press had come of age in time to make the very most of such a moment.
I want -- I want -- I want people to stop trying to shut down the investigation, and any questions that come of it regardless of what direction it goes.
But its lead negotiator, who has repeatedly accused the regime and its allies of violating the truce, has already said he doubted anything would come of the sessions.
And by the time the second- and third- generation Mexicali transplants come of age, they're fluent in Spanish and English like in most border towns, and fully assimilated.
Books that concluded, rather poignantly, right where they began: In a crowded train station with parents setting their children free to come of age in a magical castle.
They don't think as much about the risks, particularly for children and young people who will encounter these technologies as they come of age in this new world.
In other words, unless you can directly tie the president to Cohen's activities in a way that makes them politically unacceptable, nothing is going to come of this.
Here's a snapshot of the good to come: Of course, progressives must not take any of these outcomes for granted—they will all take concerted effort and resources.
A major cause of the uprising is the resentment among Kashmiri youths who have come of age under an Indian security apparatus that acts against civilians with impunity.
In the time-honored tradition, older Americans have decried the Millennial Generation's bizarre penchant for avocado toast and for "killing" industry after industry as they come of age.
We may surmise that the socialist dragon has come of age and socialism in America, be it democratic or otherwise, no longer looks like an exceedingly lofty ambition.
Jan-Michael Vincent, William Katt, and Gary Busey are Matt Johnson, Jack Barlowe, and Leroy "The Masochist" Smith, three Malibu surfers who come of age in the 1960s.
And having come of age as a young Times reporter covering economic policy during a period of rampant inflation, I'm particularly skeptical of declaring inflation dead and buried.
Nor did anything come of my attempts to capture that perfect summer morning in a poem, despite that, to my teenage sensibilities, it had all the right ingredients.
Together, Drain's linked tales concern a young, intellectually gifted boy named Tracy, his handsome older brother, Jacob, and their efforts to come of age while mostly raising themselves.
Without this disability, he would not have been exempt from the draft, a spectre hovering over all the Archies as they come of age in the nineteen-sixties.
His father said Mr. Guzman, whom he calls Rafa, had come of age when the neighborhood around the Melrose Houses was wracked with crack dealing and gun violence.
It's like a scourge on humanity," she said, adding, "If it gets you, our audience, to see how it happens, then some good would have come of it.
Our collective past does not reflect the strength that will come of a future political system reinvigorated with people of diverse backgrounds, reflecting the rich tapestry of America.
"Traders are cautiously optimistic, but just because the meeting has been lined up doesn't mean anything will come of it," CMC Markets chief markets analyst David Madden said.
Birthdays filled with dread Unaccompanied migrant minors live in fear of being arrested and taken into custody by US Immigration and Customs Enforcement once they come of age.
Current state law allows victims of abuse as children 12 years to sue after they come of age at 18, meaning they must do so by age 30.
By the time radiocarbon dating had come of age, in the postcolonial ferment of the 503s, archaeology was already primed to relinquish its emphasis on narratives of migration.
The children growing up in Jinwar will be given the choice when they come of age whether they want to remain in the village or move elsewhere, Derya said.
Danish politicians are attributing "simple mathematics" to the reason why they will cut off the Queen's grandchildren's yearly allowance once they come of age, according to a media report.
Before the 1999 trial, the defense claims that Syed asked Gutierrez if she had reached out to Asia McClain, to which Gutierrez responded that nothing had come of it.
"They're all going to come of age over the course of this season in very different ways and they'll all relate to the apocalypse in different ways," Erickson said.
Tzachi Hanegbi a Likud minister was quoted in the Jerusalem Post newspaper as saying he has known Netanyahu for three decades and believes nothing will come of the investigation.
What is clear is that two powerful men with meaningless Ivy League cred and hatred of climate science got to talking today, and nothing good can come of that.
Caldwell, because as any woman in her fifth decade or beyond can attest, most of us come of age in many stages: as daughter, as wife, as mother, as . . .
O.J. Simpson, premiering Tuesday, a new generation will be exposed to the trial that took place over two decades ago, and Jenner hopes something good will come of it.
" Prigent promises more to come of his interview with Slimane, which is set to be revealed on a longer version of his five-minute segment, "52 Minutes de Mode.
DO NOT expect much good to come of Donald Trump's impulsive, off-the-cuff decision to accept an invitation to meet North Korea's dictator, Kim Jong Un, "by May".
Yahoo also scored a celebrated deal to air an overseas NFL game between the Buffalo Bills and Jacksonville Jaguars in October, but little else has come of the partnership.
It's unclear what von Baeyer thought might come of barbituric acid, and the longest academic bio of the chemist I could find makes only a passing reference to it.
"If nothing comes of this election with regard to the Libertarian Party, then nothing is going to ever come of it, I don't think," he told MSNBC in March.
As time goes on, the family clings to hope that something will come of the retesting, anything that can divulge a clue that will lead them to his remains.
While it's too early to know for certain what will come of the report, it may lead to Russia being the first country banned from the Olympics for doping.
"Never in our wildest dreams did we think anything would come of it," said Pnina Shor, the head of the Dead Sea Scrolls Project at the Israel Antiquities Authority.
Amadeu Antonio Foundation spokeswoman Schmidt said the situation hadn't "come of the blue," but was a product of the far-right's incessant agitation over immigration, specifically from Muslim countries.
"For the younger ones now in college and their mid-20s, they're going to come of age at a time when we have Donald Trump as president," he said.
In 227, Detroit sound artist and producer Sterling Toles sat in his basement studio with his father and a digital recorder, having little idea what would come of it.
But as hip-hop continues to age and politicians who grew up absorbing it come of age, we're still in the beginning stages of the culture assisting political gain.
Well, having come of age during Vietnam, I saw by that there's a problem with the war, but that vets coming back from the war shouldn't be treated badly.
They did not come of age during the rise of long-term use — their parents did, and often it was their parents who decided the medications could help them.
Having come of age in the era of desktop and laptop computers, Wikipedia is also struggling to bring itself into the smartphone era (not to mention whatever comes next).
Sheen has denied the allegations, and although LAPD is investigating, Brett -- who once got a restraining order against Sheen -- says her experience tells her nothing will come of it.
He studies Zen Buddhism, keeps the Jewish Sabbath and prays to his Christian God, our writer found, with the hope that something positive might come of the families' grief.
Her brothers had come of age and married by then, so their father had already given them their share of his 42-acre farm, in line with Kipsigis tradition.
West, a younger son, is manager of his family's estate, and soon he begins to mentor Phoebe, who's responsible for her own land until her sons come of age.
"How can we know what will come of the strangers we bring close?" the narrator of "The Pike" asks, contemplating the disastrous affair between Ted Hughes and Assia Wevill.
Every time issues like mine are not enforced, it reinforces the notion that these pieces of legislation are paper tigers and nothing is going to come of it anyway.
Officials of the White House and the Kremlin had sought to downplay expectations ahead of the summit, though Trump had predicted "maybe some good" could come of the talks.
In McCain's absence, it's hard to know what will come of the Senate -- his beloved institution -- or the Republican Party, for whom he was the standard-bearer in 2008.
When your client base is large enough for the taxman to go on a fishing expedition to see who is using your services, you have truly come of age.
It's hard to think of another celebrity who has come of age under such public scrutiny and has struggled so obviously to reconcile himself with the isolation of fame.
Professor Payne also suggested that Modernism may have truly come of age only quite recently, with new technologies and materials that have allowed it to realize its full potential.
There is reason to be skeptical that anything will come of these investigations, as there is reason to be skeptical of whether anything will come from any investigation these days.
If anything good is to come of this, it will be to strengthen the defence secretary, James Mattis, and the secretary of state, Rex Tillerson—the axis of the sensible.
As it is, on July 22nd the Washington Post reported Mr Trump's frustration that little had come of a summit with Mr Kim that he did so much to hype.
The conversation among the students straddled the line between possible benefits of drugs and alcohol — they can be fun and relieve stress — and the harms that can come of them.
In fact, the scariest thing to come of the whole ordeal was my pruned body when I emerged from my 90 minute bath like the old woman in The Shining.
I will do everything in my power going forward to make sure women are protected and respected and that both sexes come of age in a culture that is different.
In a video message posted on his Facebook page about three hours after police left his residence, the prime minister said he was confidant nothing would come of the investigations.
News of Rossum's departure has left fans of the wondering what will come of the Gallagher clan without its most responsible member, and how the show will send Fiona off.
A president attempting to use the power of his office to retaliate against a perceived political enemy is disturbing, although it's unclear what, if anything, will come of his efforts.
As we reported, since the incident occurred in the air, the FBI has jurisdiction, and our law enforcement sources say it's "highly unlikely" anything will come of the agency's probe.
Senators Kamala Harris and Rand Paul introduced a bipartisan bail reform bill earlier this year, which incentivizes states to reform their bail practices, but not much has come of it.
So leap from that cliff top all you like, and get carried off by that beaky bastard that keeps swooping over your head, as nothing bad will come of it.
While it's true that emojis were originally created by Kurita for teens, those teens were the first to have come of age with little memory of a non-internet world.
In one song, "Coal Mining Blues," a worker laments: I can't fall asleep For the dreams that may come Of when the walls cave in And coal fills my lungs.
And we still don't know what will come of the raid in which FBI agents seized computers, phones and records from the President's longtime personal lawyer and "fixer," Michael Cohen.
Because of the lack of meaningful state and federal gun safety legislation, a generation of American schoolchildren has come of age since the massacre at Columbine High School in 1999.
And although both of his lifespans see him come of age at the height of the Cold War, his appeal as a character has always stemmed from an elusive personality.
Do you actually expect anything to come of the probe, and do you think it's plausible some of its contents might be buried by Kavanaugh's boosters in the White House?
We just want to try to give a brief window into what it's like to live through these things and to come of age in a system stacked against you.
He said countries such as his had "come of age" and international companies should no longer expect to be given unusual tax advantages in return for the right to mine.
But to someone who doesn't know Baby In Vain, I would say that it's probably what has come of giving in to urges stuck deep within the three of us.
" O'Rourke said that the shooting shatters "any illusion that we had that progress is inevitable or that the change that we need is going to come of its own accord.
The thought that some good might come of a large number of armed people, panicky and only loosely trained, all blasting away in one area is the real madness here.
Having come of political age during the Cold War, he is a strong supporter of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization and an opponent of Russia's revanchism under President Vladimir Putin.
"I love all the different characters, personalities, story lines," the designer explains of the narrative, in which the four March sisters come of age in New England in the 1860s.
This survey with the generation that has come of age since the 1999 Columbine shooting found that these young people are scared and are looking for solutions, not political scores.
Until the centuries-old bias in higher learning is recognized and reckoned with, the only lesson that will come of Peña's case is one BIPOC faculty know all too well.
Trump withdrew from the multilateral trade pact last year and says he'd reconsider if the U.S. could get a better deal, but analysts were skeptical anything would come of that.
However this will turn out and whatever will come of it, if anything, what's fascinating is that the Pentagon is worried about malicious actors causing a decline in stock prices.
What are the things that could come of a president getting in front of the nation and the world, or even a first lady, and saying something that was incorrect?
But the Kremlin, which controls the media over here, appears to have calculated that no good will come of watching, or listening, or commenting on the machinations of current US politics.
A senior official justifies such practices to McMahon, saying that no good would come of recognizing loan losses as this would cause banks to contract credit, leading to bankruptcies and unemployment.
Cohen explained that when she and her friends thought about improving the world for others, they did so with an ethos befitting the era in which they had come of age.
Nothing's ever come of these though, as I've never had the courage to act on them since I've never been able to tell if the guys are actually gay or not.
"I keep going back in the hope that maybe something might come of it which I know is the wrong thing to do but the apps are strangely addictive," says Leam.
Perhaps the best thing to come of Trump's candidacy is that we will no longer be blind to the coexisting, and mutually reinforcing, perils of the pussy-grab and the pedestal.
Second, as I turn down the volume on his voice, I can replace it with the voices of women — which, in the end, is what should come of all these outings.
Dear Martin by Nic Stone In her YA novel Dear Martin, debut author Nic Stone explores what its like to come of age as a black boy in a white world.
Starring Paul Rudd, Elizabeth Banks, Zooey Deschanel, and Emily Mortimer, Our Idiot Brother shows us that good can come of chaos—even if it takes us a while to recognize it.
An air of mystery still surrounds what is to come of the '80s-inspired sci-fi series, at least until its return, since it's yet to be given a release date.
The only good that could come of this in 2017 is everyone "realizing" the enormity of their errors in judgement, whether it be voting for Brexit or positively reviewing The Chainsmokers.
And this is where the album intersects with the broad notion of what suburban life means, what growing up feels like, and how you can "come of age" at any point.
Speaking by phone on Tuesday, Assange said he sees the move as a direct response to the WGAD ruling, though he remains skeptical as to whether anything will come of it.
I now wear it every day as a reminder — as a sign that even when we make mistakes, we should still be gentle with ourselves; that good can come of loss.
" RJ: "With that being said — you know I think about this all the time — had I come of age during social media, I can't…" NR: "I would have been a monster!
The generation reaching what might be seen as the peak-protesting years of the late teens and early 20s have come of age since the global financial crisis of 2007-08.
"You have time on your hands to explore and create, you're able to find yourself and be sure of, and proud of yourself" — to come of age, as Olderbrother certainly has.
He had come of age with them at Goldman, then plucked them off to form a team at Joey Goldblatt's Icarus Capital, years before he spun off This Side of Capital.
Now VR is finally beginning to come of age, having survived the troublesome stages of the famous "hype cycle"—the Peak of Inflated Expectation, even the so-called Trough of Disillusionment.
The country's monasteries are increasingly run by millennial monks, the first generation to come of age after decades of religious repression under the Soviet system wiped out almost all Buddhist clergy.
"They create complications for parties," said Pannika Wanich, spokeswoman for the new Future Forward Party, which has attracted support among young urban folk who have come of age on social media.
The Aggies found a quarterback in Oklahoma graduate transfer Trevor Knight, and the young former five-star recruits that Sumlin landed after his big inaugural season started to come of age.
I figured nothing would come of it beyond a handful of laughs — but maybe, just maybe Kevin would finally be conscious that there was someone else hiding in between his playlists.
The recent history of far-right political violence in Germany had shown that "it's not as if this is something harmless and nothing will come of this," she told VICE News.
Teachers, judges and civil servants were shipped in from western states to replace a generation of easterners who had come of age in Communism and were considered unfit, Mr. Krüger said.
Nothing good can come of that, given Mr. Trump's threat to rain "fire and fury" on North Korea, and Mr. Kim's threat to strike the United States with a nuclear weapon.
In an interview with The Hollywood Reporter, Phillips said that the film's release feels like a "slap in the face," and that she is terrified of what could come of it.
Synopsis: A group of four teenage girls come of age in the asphalt desert of Los Angeles' San Fernando Valley arranged with a blazing soundtrack and endless drinking, drugs and sex.
Since the Senate's bipartisan rejection of Robert Bork in 1987, a generation of conservatives has come of age fuming about what might have been, about the "loss" of the Supreme Court.
JFK is a legend for Democrats -- but also a figure from the mists of time for young activists who unlike Biden did not come of age in the era of Camelot.
Having come of age as a gay man in a world where that was taboo, he has spent a lifetime trying to find love with men taught not to express it.
Members of the BRICS countries have themselves been victims of terrorism, and I would say that what has come of today acknowledges the fact that we must work collectively in handling this.
Is it important still now to remember those two victims in this case, with all of the other sideshow distractions that come of it, and still preoccupy us to this very day?
" When asked what the "goal" of the YouTube project is, and what's to come of the exploration of the antisocial personality disorder, she said, "I think you'll have to wait and see.
So, there's a lot of positive things that can come of it, but it's just like everyone is in the process of upgrading and it's going to take a very long time.
Though Annie, Erik nor I don't have kids yet, I wanted to have a third generation in there to represent the future to come of passing down traditions with pride and joy.
"Any time there is alcohol involved and guns, that is a bad mix and almost nothing good is ever going to come of it," Saginaw County Sheriff's Lt. Mike Gomez told WJRT.
He didn't think anything would come of it until this month, when he got another call confirming that his team would almost certainly be among those to receive funding from the network.
Carrie's brother, Todd Fisher, 60, recently spoke to ABC News about his sister's inclusion in the film and what fans can expect will come of her legacy within the next few years.
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Who knows what will come of the Pitt-Jolie breakup, but if that second part of the quote comes true, you can bet we'll start listening closer to the advice Pitt's spitting.
Furthermore, three-quarters of the alleged victims did not file formal reports, frequently because they said they did not think any good would come of it or they didn't trust the process.
It's encouraging that so many articles about this have been written in the wake of the Weinstein allegations, but we should be skeptical as to what will come of this public conversation.
One of the best things to come of this election is the fact that the G.O.P. has been forced to examine the monster which has been allowed to grow in its midst.
The country was full of women who had come of age with the women's revolution, who had tried to have it all, raising children while having good — but maybe not spectacular — careers.
And there are likely more to come of all kinds, as CEO Jack Dorsey tries to take control of the company he founded and get it on a solid path of growth.
Why it matters: Rumors have circulated for weeks that Spicer will be replaced, and nothing has come of them so far, but this signals a move may still be in the works.
Companies that seize on this outbound and experience-based-shopping trend — whether they be Airbnb or other international lifestyle companies — stand to cash in as millennials come of age around the globe.
Salvadorans who had come of age in low-income, violence-riddled communities in the United States took that violence back to El Salvador in the form of gangs modeled after American gangs.
The saxophonist, 85, is also one of the genre's last remaining figures to have come of age in the 1950s, when jazz was a popular music as well as an intellectual one.
I want to make sure, if in fact he's playing it, again that he's playing with full confidence that he's healthy to play and that nothing severe would come of him playing.
Born in a rapidly changing St. Petersburg, which was called Petrograd from 153 to 215, Ustvolskaya was part of the earliest generation of Russians to come of age after the 21994 revolution.
Political uncertainty in countries like Mexico and Brazil, tighter monetary policy from the U.S. Federal Reserve and, most recently, a sharp drop in the Turkish lira are just come of these challenges.
Officials of the White House and the Kremlin have both sought to downplay expectations ahead of the summit, though Trump has said recently that "maybe some good" could come of the meeting.
The electoral commission estimated 1.6 million people needed to register - either because they had come of age or had been missed before – and barely a quarter have done so ahead of a Nov.
His stories of growing up, raising chickens, and running through fields are special to me because I've come of age in big cities, where people who look like me don't usually own much.
Key reasons for the region's appeal: The rapid rate of urbanization, as well as the large youth populations, which are expected to translate into a larger consumer base when they come of age.
Millennials are the first generation to come of age in a post-almost-apocalyptic housing market, where lenders, eight years later, are still paying billions in reparations for mortgage misconduct and outright fraud.
Part of the challenge to fund-raising is that not all graduates of public housing are necessarily proud to have come of age in the projects or consider it crucial to their success.
In the meantime—before those no longer allowed to smoke come of the age where they definitely can't legally smoke—the proposal also includes adding laws restricting the locations where people can smoke.
If the turmoil in Italy and the markets' fright have served as a reminder of such dangers, and spur reform both in Rome and Brussels, then some good may come of the mess.
It's fun to watch her clash with Stick or Madame Gao, and she brings an unnerving edge to her scenes as Elektra, and I kept waiting for something more to come of her.
She'd had a positive perception of law enforcement her whole life, and when she didn't hear back about the kit, she assumed it had been tested and that nothing had come of it.
The phenomenon might have less to do with the pressures created by Hollywood, and more to do with the spotlight that focuses on the actions of young stars as they come of age.
While 19 tons is off the market, it is critical to ask what will come of the other 996 tons of pure cocaine still pointed at the United States and the global markets.
If there is anything good to come of the Fed's recent blunders, it is to the painful reminder that the central bank is not infallible and that monetary mistakes can cause economic mayhem.
There is little that the president could lose with such an act but much could be gained for generations to come of Israelis and Palestinians, and for the stability of the Middle East.
Some Schwab employees we talked to were uneasy about what might come of the merger since the two firms overlap in areas like technology systems, registered investment adviser offerings, and retail brokerage tools.
She resembles what Colette, the experience-hungry French writer, might have sounded like if she'd come of age in Los Angeles when the Mamas and the Papas were breaking out on the radio.
Speaking with The Daily, Carroll said she didn't expect much of anything to come from her story — she's learned at her age, she said, that little much seems to come of these accounts.
Self-branders found a receptive audience among Generation X members who had come of age in the early-'90s recession, and were thus motivated by fear to set themselves apart from the pack.
The question now is have the Taliban changed enough to accept the aspirations of a new generation who have come of age during a period of liberal rule ensured by the international community.
A Syrian man who did four stints of detention and torture for taking humanitarian aid to wounded protesters and rebels recounted his experiences, but then expressed despair that anything would come of it.
In Tucson, where Dr. Walser excitedly sketched organic structures on his patio on a recent morning, the retired chemist has been left to grapple, uncomfortably, with what has come of his team's innovation.
Mr. Tao, who had gone into the studio to record three Mozart sonatas, also laid down the tracks that became "American Rage"; he doesn't know what will come of that planned Mozart album.
Investors fretted on Monday about what would come of President Donald Trump's insistence on placing tariffs on another $200 billion worth of Chinese goods, but CNBC's felt they were missing the big picture.
I even connected the "J"s on the grid in the theme entries to see what would come of it and got a rough sketch of a tricorn hat, or maybe an anvil.
The Times critic Mike Hale had a mixed response to this Hulu show, based on a comic book series of the same name in which a group of teenage superheroes come of age.
Charles M. Blow Durham, N.H. — One of the most striking statistics to come of the Iowa caucus entry polling was the enormous skew of young voters away from Hillary Clinton and to Bernie Sanders.
Their "generational imprinting" process is still being formed, but so far young millennials have generally come of age to see a Washington, DC, riven by gridlock neither party seems equipped to solve, he says.
The Flora-Bama is the go-to place summer spot where, for decades, young folks have come of age in more ways than just ordering their first alcoholic beverage, if you get my drift.
"There is a saying that I was taught by my parents, De todo lo malo, siempre sale algo bueno, which in English means, 'From everything bad, something good will come of it,'" Cárdenas said.
Accel has been behind some of the biggest startups to have come of age in Europe in recent years, including Avito, BlaBlaCar, Celonis, Check24, Deliveroo, Doctolib, DocuSign, Funding Circle, Spotify and Supercell, alongside UiPath.
Virtually nothing has come of negotiations between both sides, because the passports are still in use, and border officials in Vietnam escalated their show of dissatisfaction recently by refusing to stamp the passports altogether.
At 36, Ms Baker has come of age at a time when words themselves are often mistrusted, when the gap between what we say and what we feel seems to yawn, at times unbearably.
And when you think of all the platforms that come of age, messaging seemed to be at that time, according and through Mark's lens, a really big and important platform for the next decade.
"I wanted the world to see how much I'd grown and I also thought by showing what happened, maybe it wouldn't happen to someone else and something good could come of it," he said.
The "jewel constellation" headlights, for example, which look like they could have come of the alien ship in Independence Day, have been constructed with organically arranged elements that don't at all look man-made.
The GOP isn't inherently unhip; it's just refused to modify its positions as the younger generation—which tends to be racially diverse, tolerant of homosexuality, down to smoke some weed—has come of age.
For other veterans, Mr. Obama's trip will serve as a welcome reminder to two generations of Americans who have come of age since the war's end, illustrating that conflict's importance to the United States.
Like others in Mr. Trump's orbit, this adviser could not predict what would come of the candidate's lackadaisical preparation for what may prove to be the most important 90 minutes in his public life.
SAN FRANCISCO — The newest generation of technology darlings has signaled that it is about to come of age: Snapchat, the messaging service beloved by teenagers, is preparing to step out into the public markets.
Through no fault of their own, young people have come of age in a sort of political vacuum, and in a society that extends precious few opportunities for democratic engagement beyond the ballot box.
But that figure is misleading for one key reason: The boost in the number of employed Americans largely tracks with the nation's population growth, as more Americans come of age and enter the workforce.
Here adults impose their will on children in every way except the physical; when they come of age, children choose a gender identity and are then given medicines that shape their bodies to suit.
Car companies are also watching to see if anything will come of a European Union proposal to eliminate tariffs on vehicles and other industrial goods if the United States agrees to do the same.
In addition to Mamiashvili's confirmed actions and allegations, it's unclear whether anything will actually come of Trazhukova's accusations and subsequent filed charges—he's a big deal in both Russia and in the wrestling landscape.
"I definitely want to make some good come of it, but I don't want this to be something that defines me," Pillar said of the slur, which he said was blurted out in frustration.
To come of age in the middle part of what may have been the bloodiest century in history requires you to remember that one should never let yesterday use up too much of today.
When I was feeling like simply no good would come of going back to school, I ended a melodramatic diary entry with a list of things I was excited about in the coming year.
THOMAS PEYSER, RICHMOND, VA. To the Editor: The revelations about Donald Trump's corruption are coming fast and furious, but nothing will come of it unless the Republican Party decides to put country above party.
The majority leader has not said, however, what will come of the remaining three measures, which fund the departments of State, Homeland Security, Justice and Commerce, as well as foreign operations and science programs.
" Comey had come around to the idea of writing a book because he wanted, he said, "to be useful in the wake of something bad happening and to make something good come of it.
It remains to be seen what, if any, legislative impact will come of this movement – but this does feel like the best chance we've had in a long time to enact sensible gun control legislation.
RUDY GIULIANI DOESN&aposT &aposSPEAK FOR THE ADMINISTRATION&apos ON NORTH KOREA, POMPEO SAYS But there has been a flurry of speculation in recent weeks as to what, exactly, may come of the historic meeting.
He seems sincere and even though I know nothing will come of this since he lives on the other side of the country, I'll admit, it's a nice boost to the old self-confidence anyway.
By sitting by and waiting for a new generation to come of age, we won't realize the utopia we dreamed of in headier moments of the Bill Clinton or Ralph Nader or Barack Obama campaigns.
In the past decade, a large number of the friends I had come of age with in Manhattan left the city, displaced by rising costs to Berlin or Los Angeles or the mid-Hudson Valley.
Trump had already imposed the 2202 percent steel tariffs and 2628 percent aluminum tariffs on U.S. allies ahead of the summit, and traders may have already assumed that nothing constructive would come of the summit.
Morris warns him repeatedly that no good can come of it, but Garrett is hellbent on opening the loan market to deserving black folks and won't be dissuaded by his wife (Nia Long) or partner.
It initially looks like the story of four college friends — Jude, Malcolm, Willem and J.B. — who maintain a close bond as they come of age in New York and become successful in their chosen fields.
Crucially, too, these are young(ish) men who have come of age in an era when public rhetoric here pits England against everyone else — the Scots, the Irish, the European Union — and Englishness against Otherness.
Finally, Trump was ill-served by his inept son, Don Jr., whose bungled efforts to solicit damaging information on Hillary Clinton from a Russian lawyer would have constituted collusion, if anything had come of it.
While Esperion and Amarin bank on the industry's history of successfully selling pills for chronic disease, new technologies like RNA interference are beginning to come of age and could soon yield new heart-disease treatments.
While rebellious as a point of pride, the young people on the scene had coolly shrugged off the political passions of their elders in the generation that had come of age in the nineteen-sixties.
By then, it was clear that, as a practical matter, no good would come of judicial wrangling over whiteness, and also that attempting to maintain a white population through naturalization policy was a losing battle.
Set to debut in spring 2020, the show will "feature two young female protagonists and focus on the first generation to come of age in the apocalypse as we know it," the network previously said.
Chris Coons (D-DE), who played a role in convincing Flake to pressure Republican leadership into an FBI investigation last week, seemed to be the most generous with what had come of the final report.
When she was a girl, the despotic King Saran wiped out magic from the land by killing all the people who possessed magic, known as majis, who had come of age and awakened to their abilities.
The shift in perspective picks up speed as Northern Ireland's peacetime generation come of voting age, forcing new accountability from parties whose electoral monopoly previously relied on the tribal ethno-nationalistic politics of the old conflict.
We worship summer because we want to live forever in our childhood memories of being set free from the confines of our oppressive educational institutions to come of age in the woods and in the streets.
While it is still too early to tell what may come of a possible trade war, Mitenbuler noted, American whiskey is battle-tested and will rally with help from its loyal market of connoisseurs and craftsmen.
Layla (the girl) and Majnun (the boy) fall in love as children, but when they come of age their parents will not allow them to marry, because Majnun's love seems to them so extreme, so crazy.
"Nothing good will come of a system in which the chief executive may direct the full force of the state against those he believes have wronged him," Lawfare's Quinta Jurecic wrote last week on this quandary.
It was founded by alumni of protest movements like United We Dream, Occupy Wall Street, Black Lives Matter, and the fossil fuel divestment campaigns—young people who've come of age in a time of political crisis.
The only additional "choice" that will come of this devastating policy for America's families, is that her billionaire colleagues will have yet another money-making stream generated on the backs of America's low-income school children.
His removal was the best thing to come of this misguided investigation, and even now, we'll still have to listen to him, still have to see him, because he will probably talk on TV for money.
Two of the leading jazz musicians to come of age downtown in the 1990s, they've played together for well over a decade in the band of Billy Hart, an esteemed drummer a generation ahead of them.
Badu had come of age in the late nineteen-eighties, in Dallas's embryonic hip-hop scene; two decades later, as Witness nursed his own obsession with hip-hop, he tried to live up to her example.
That means the new coronavirus might have already skirted containment efforts and might be worse than reported in Hubei province, where some news reports have come of elderly people dying without ever being tested by hospitals.
The down-is-up logic of satirical news found a home with the ever-alienated members of Generation X, who had come of age watching Weekend Update on "Saturday Night Live" and National Lampoon's news parodies.
In 2011, just two years after the Tijuana section of an 18-foot steel and concrete "triple fence" was completed, I traveled to a Mexican neighborhood called Colonia Libertad to see what had come of it.
As tonight's overtly politicized telecast proved, artists behind and in front of the camera are prepared to respond to the changes on the horizon — what kind of art will come of the response remains to be seen.
Over the course of It's sprawling 1,500 pages, the group of children at the book's center come of age by uniting to defeat It, but evolve into messed-up adults still haunted decades later by their memories.
Oil companies are putting pressure on governments to impose carbon taxes, believing them to be the best way to kill off coal and boost natural gas, at least until renewable energy and batteries have come of age.
" Intrigued, Hedvig sent him a direct message, expecting nothing to come of it, since she lived in Stockholm, and he was 5,000 miles away in Los Angeles: "This is probably inconsequential, but your ad made me swoon.
You've come of age in a smaller, more connected world where demographic shifts and the wind of change have scrambled not only traditional economic arrangements but our social arrangements and our religious commitments and our civic institutions.
The loyalists who have come of age under Mr Putin, and benefited from his patronage—the cadre from which he draws the technocrats whom he hopes will shore up the system—credit him with rebuilding the state.
Clinton steps to the left with the Democratic platform Platforms, however, are not policies, and what may actually come of Democrats' and Republicans' grand plans in 2016 will depend on everything from presidential will to Congressional cooperation.
You've come of age in a smaller, more connected world, where demographic shifts and the winds of change have scrambled not only traditional economic arrangements, but our social arrangements and our religious commitments and our civic institutions.
Tripp, who is speaking at a 9/20 event called "Value Mushrooms for Mushroom Values" in Los Angeles this week, welcomes the new momentum around psychedelics, even if he's not sure exactly what will come of it.
In the decades since millions of Americans gathered for community screenings of The Day After, the widely seen apocalypse film, two generations have come of age whose knowledge of nuclear weapons is derived mostly from video games.
He has already testified in two secret grand jury proceedings, he said, and was exasperated that nothing had come of what appeared to him to be a misuse of power that anyone could see on the video.
It's also not clear what will come of this renewed effort to court publishers back to Facebook, but it's clear the company sees its massive cash reserves as the key to winning journalists back to the table.
"If anything can come of this process now, what it will be is a cobbled together, least bad option rather than the best option for the country," Sturgeon told BBC television, ahead of a meeting with May.
A member of Germany's Bundestag since 1972, Mr. Schäuble, now 75, is among the last German politicians to come of age during his country's painful recovery from World War II and the tensions of the Cold War.
This spring, a new group of young designers, mostly from the British Isles, who have come of age in destabilizing times, have built their collections around declarative, visionary shapes that jettison old ideas about symmetry and balance.
A whole generation of Americans has come of age since most Republicans abided by true fiscal conservatism — that is, prizing small government and low taxes but being willing to raise taxes to keep a healthy balance sheet.
Military and monarchy While former army general Prayut may find support in the old royalist establishment, he is not such a favorite among many young people who have come of age during his takeover and subsequent rule.
A new generation of independently minded directors has come of age, liberated by access to affordable digital cameras and equipment as well as crews of friends, and unbound by pre-established notions of their national cinema's identity.
We had Halo, we had Munch's Oddysee and this game called Azurik that (former Microsoft chief technology officer) Jay Allard had started which was a piece of shit, so we knew nothing was going to come of that.
Variety reports that the Italian production company Wildside is developing an adaptation of the pseuodnymous author's popular quartet of novels, which follow the friendship of two young women, Elena and Lila, as they come of age in Naples.
But there's no doubt that an entirely new economy has spawned from mobile software, while a generation of iPhone users has come of age looking up to the app developers who keep them staring down at their phones.
LONDON, July 29 (Reuters) - Britain on Monday warned Iran that if it wants to "come of the dark" then it must follow international rules and release a British-flagged vessel seized by the Islamic Republic in the Gulf.
These were people who had come of age when Skins—and Skins Parties—was an actual thing as opposed to a quaint point of reference like new rave or property ownership for people under the age of 45.
The problem of Haryana, like that of the rest of the country, is that corporate India has enriched itself without creating meaningful, well-paid employment for the 10 million young Indians who come of working age each year.
For people who have come of age in the last 30 years, it was easy to just focus on our shortcomings, because there was no viable alternative out there in the world to which we were comparing ourselves.
Chicago, despite their so-called "Curse of the Billy Goat", began the season as favorites to win baseball's top prize and the young Cubs proved they have come of age by winning a major league-leading 211 games.
" Citing Russell's "deep emotional commitment" to preserving the Jim Crow South into which he had come of age, "No sacrifice was too great for him to make if it would prevent the extension of full equality to blacks.
"'I think 'your generation is the first generation to come of age when we can say that white supremacy is dying' and similar statements left the greatest impression on me,"  said Alex Anderson, who just received his MFA.
The former Los Angeles Lakers guard, who regularly attends Dodgers games, said nothing good can come of wondering what might have been if the Astros hadn't relied on stealing pitching signs to give their batters an unfair advantage.
He thanked us and he talked about how we have persevered even in this tragedy and have continued to move forward, to have something good come of this horrible situation," Schachter said, calling Trump "deeply involved and committed.
Venture capital firm Atomico said last week it had closed its fifth fund with $820 million to invest in early-stage technology companies in Europe, saying the region had come of age in terms of innovation and opportunity.
Authorities at first told them that they would be reunited with their relatives or at least be allowed to speak to them, but little has come of that promise, partly because contact is seen as a security risk.
I had come of age poring over the Patagonia catalogue, with its action shots and exotic locales, and I already had Yvon Chouinard right up there with Jack Kerouac and Jimi Hendrix on my list of great Americans.
This cohort has come of political age with the reality of being the first generation that possibly will not out-earn their parents and a wealth gap the likes of which our country hasn't seen since the 1920s.
There's a superhero aspect to the early episodes, as Sabrina tries to juggle her unsuspecting friends with an opportunity to attend the Academy of Unseen Arts and, having come of age, sign herself over to the Dark Lord.
In South Korea, our allies are probably asking themselves what will come of the American troop presence and security guarantees when North Korean President Kim Jong Un follows through with his threats to renew nuclear weapons testing and development.
Now it's back with a new design and a photographic gallery — plus short video teaser, with more to comeof 15 CG reproductions of the apparatus used in some of the most important chemistry breakthroughs from 1660 to 1860.
In my teenage years, there was something comforting about the act, but now I recognize, even in the moment, that I don't want to be doing it, that no good will come of it — yet I'm helpless to stop.
The father of the girl -- one of two 7-year-olds who underwent the procedure on the same day -- told investigators, "that if they knew what would come of it, this would never have happened," according to the documents.
As the people sharing their stories under the #WhyIDidntReport hashtag exemplify, assault among teens—while horrific—occurs regularly, including at elite institutions like the ones where Kavanaugh received his most polished credentials, and where America's leaders come of age.
World Premiere Landline / U.S.A. (Director: Gillian Robespierre, Screenwriters: Elisabeth Holm, Gillian Robespierre) — Two sisters come of age in '213s New York when they discover their dad's affair—and it turns out he's not the only cheater in the family.
The only product to come of this project was Medida Universal (Universal Measurement) (1999), an album that had a limited release but which, thanks to the Internet, we have the pleasure of being able to hear in its entirety.
"If the Iranians want to come of the dark and be accepted as a responsible member of the intentional community they need to adhere to rules-based system of the international community," Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab told Sky News.
"There seems to be this sentiment here that nothing will come of this, that leadership will not deal with the issues being raised and will just sweep this under the rug," the official said, earlier Tuesday, before Mulvaney's remarks.
It's in the shadow of this interminable occupation, rather than the military victory that gave rise to it, that millennial Jews have come of age—in the shadow of a Jewish state that brings them not pride but shame.
" It was his conviction that "the only potential gain" that could come of the war in Vietnam was "the humility and wisdom that may guide us toward a more rational view of our future role in the international community.
If there is any good to come of this, the French people will become reacquainted with this early act of their civilization and discover that they have all that is required to put it back together and much more.
"We knew something bad was going to come of it, but we didn&apost know what," said one former program director who spoke to Business Insider on the condition of anonymity because his severance package had not been finalized.
"No one expects anything concrete to come of the meeting ... but if the tone is positive afterwards, it won't be a headwind for stocks," said Ken Polcari, director of the NYSE floor division at O'Neil Securities in New York.
Adapted by April De Angelis and directed by Melly Still, this production compresses the acclaimed four-volume portrait of two women who come of age in mid-20th-century Naples into less than five hours of galloping onstage synopsis.
LONDON, Feb 18 (Reuters) - Venture capital firm Atomico has closed its fifth fund with $820 million to invest in early-stage technology companies in Europe, a region it said had come of age in terms of innovation and opportunity.
Many young, first time voters, and new citizens have come of age during Trump's first term, with their politics shaped by a period of intense anti-immigrant rhetoric and, at times, increasing isolation and discrimination in largely white communities.
"Older boys would be asked by the families to look for jobs, while older girls would be asked by the parents to help the families at home, and to be married off when they come of age," Kamarulzaman says.
Young women who have come of age in the last decade of politics have grown up with eight years of Barack Obama as the president, his major opponent in 2008 was Hillary Clinton and she was secretary of state.
What does Joe Lieberman make of what the good reverend just said, of what Ron Paul has been saying, and what everyone seems to be saying in between, about a royal battle to come, of course, from Rand Paul and others?
Such projects ran the risk of seeming bloated and self-conscious in the hands of lesser talent, but Townshend bested himself with Quadrophenia, an unflinching look back at the mid-'60s Mod scene in which the band had come of age.
Khan's sons had initially told him not to make the speech, that nothing good would come of it, but he did it anyway in the hope that it would help combat some of the ugliness that came from the 2016 campaign.
Sleeveless resonates with recent books by Sally Rooney, Halle Butler, and Ottessa Moshfegh, in which young women come of age but never quite feel a loss of innocence, often because they started out already familiar with the world's limits and hypocrisies.
I think, and that's kind of in the greater scheme of the world at large, but I do think, personally, when you deal with someone's passing, especially someone close to you, I think that good things can come of that.
The company, including its top-rated Spanish-language network and many subsidiaries, is making an ambitious nationwide effort aimed at registering about three million new Latino voters this year, roughly the same number who have come of voting age since 19903.
Now 24, she had come of age navigating the obstacles facing young people like herself, and in recent years had been able to get a work permit and to avoid deportation because of a federal policy put into effect in 2012.
Thus far, none of the users who have noticed the hissing (the issue isn't affecting all new iPhone 7 and 7 Plus models) say that anything bad has come of the sound, so there's no major reason to panic about #HissGate.
The flavors that come of of these coffee bean particulates depend on a number of factors, including water chemistry, the accessible surface area of the coffee, and as the new study shows, the temperature of the bean when it was ground.
Edwine is planning to spend his share on a mixture of school fees, when his kids come of age, a mattress, chairs, and maybe, in the future, on building his own house, so he can move away from the family compound.
"Macron doesn't come, of course, as the 'president of Europe,' but if you look around in the EU and ask people in different countries -- and I travel in Europe quite a bit -- people don't see anybody else," Le Corre said.
Some critics have pointed to the rising divorce rate in the 1970s as the catalyst for the slasher film's rise, reading them as tributes to disenfranchised adolescents' terror as they come of age without the nuclear family as a protective shield.
Rooney, who is Irish, has an uncanny sense of how people under 35 talk and text, how they use the internet, how they voice their passionate yet casual Marxism, how it feels to come of age after the 2008 crash.
Here he is, God-like in his knowledge of past, present, and future, and yet he's also explaining his very particular needs, desires, urges, trying on an imagined embodiment, what would come of being a man rather than a god.
It assumes that liberal modernity represents a permanent change in human affairs, a kind of "coming of age" in which religion must come of age as well — putting away exclusivist ideas in order to flourish in community with all mankind.
If any good can come of the evil that took place in Orlando, it's that it will serve as a brutal reminder that the fight for tolerance of all people — gay, straight, Latino, Muslim — is a battle far from won.
One of those suspects, Jeremy Corbyn, may be Britain's next prime minister, in part because a generation of Britons has come of age not knowing that the line running from "progressive social commitments" to catastrophic economic results is short and straight.
He is perhaps the last of the great generation of European composers to have come of age in the wake of World War II: Gyorgy Ligeti, a friend, died in 2006; Boulez, the dean of the postwar avant-garde, in 2016.
And we don't want technology companies to compete for our children's attention just so that they can claim their loyalties when they come of age to join a social media network, choose an email provider or purchase their first cellphones.
I know only very bad bad uncomfortable things would come of reporting the guy, because the rest of the team would not support me, and it could jeopardize my ability to get a reference from my boss in the future.
Edgar's diagnosis didn't come of nowhere—his PTSD has always lingered in the background of the show, sometimes brought up in the form of a twisted joke or a vague reference to combat—but it's never been an explicit storyline.
Almost immediately, I knew something good would come of my visit, if only because Suman Shrestha Kasajoo made me feel like an honored guest the moment the general manager and co-owner ushered me to a booth near a window.
When asked why they identified as Republican, 68 percent of respondents told Pew that a major factor was the harm that Democratic policies posed, just surpassing the 20103 percent who cited the good that could come of their own party's policies.
"To know that women are able to express themselves wholly and separately and be inspired is absolutely bigger than me, and bigger than any expectation I would have thought could come of this kind of career and work," she says.
That was the period of my childhood and that was my home: In my mind, the years in which you come of age are your native land, in which you feel most comfortable and will always, in a sense, live.
The debate over the role of public companies, the wealthy, and policy in America has been waged for decades, but it's begun a new phase as the generation that entered the workforce during the financial crisis has come of age.
So the question is, what are you they going to do next and that is where the rumors come of like, will Google ... and you know better than I, there is a lot of fingerprints in there to think about enterprise.
By now, a couple of generations of artists have come of age in a thoroughly postmodern world, and so the heresy embodied in A New Spirit in Painting, curated by Rosenthal along with Christos M. Joachimides and Nicholas Serota, hardly registers.
Green couldn't have predicted what would come of his cartoon — or the way some would ultimately use it against his wishes and beliefs — but he recognizes its power to express a feeling that's hard to express in words (see above).
My older son, Nick, was born in 1987, the year after that World Series title, and he still bears the scars of having come of baseball age in a city dominated by the fabulously powerful Yankees of the late 1990s and early 2000s.
"Trade talks between the U.S. and China are to be resumed this month, and traders are cautiously optimistic, but just because the meeting has been lined up doesn't mean anything will come of it," CMC Markets chief markets analyst David Madden said.
Then, Gypsy finds her Prince Charming, who is shocked because he seems to be an older guy enjoyed the idea of talking to a possibly underage girl (um, not great, dude) but didn't actually think anything would come of it in reality.
The ravages of the sanction years, and the violence and upheaval that followed the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq did indeed deeply scar a generation of Iraqis, the generation that has now come of age and has provided many willing recruits for ISIS.
What to watch: We don't know what will come of Bolton's seemingly empty threats about the troika tyrants having "met their match" and more sanctions, which he likely made to drive Florida's Cuban-, Venezuelan- and Nicaraguan-American voters to the polls on Tuesday.
Lee Do-hoon, a sociologist also at Yonsei University, thinks that those who have come of age in the past two decades have a sense of precariousness because of the Asian financial crisis of 1997-98 and the global one a decade later.
Separatist sentiment, which lay largely dormant since then, has started to simmer again, as people with no memory of the war have come of age and been seduced by the idea that the region is not getting its fair share of spending.
Though he checked a box indicating he was open to being contacted once any children he helped conceive turned 18 — and even wrote a letter to them to be added to his file — he never really thought much would come of it.
" She had to make her mark in the next scene, an argument between the couple: "In my head I was like, 'You have literally 30 seconds left in this room and if you don't do something impressive nothing will ever come of it.
President Donald Trump signed an executive order in May entitled, "Promoting Free Speech and Religious Liberty," which directed Sessions to "issue guidance interpreting religious liberty protections in federal law," but nothing -- at least publicly -- has come of the executive order to date.
When he understands that nothing will come of the cease-fires, and that the city's defensive forces are ineffectual, then legends rise up about the appearance of some great foreign power that will bypass the logic of the siege and bring justice.
"In Other Words" ends at a crossroads, with Lahiri set to leave Rome and return to America, not knowing what will come of her affair with Italian or her marriage with English, unsure of which language she will continue to write in.
Like "The Swimming-Pool Library," the new novel trains its sights on the divergent fortunes of two men who come of age on either side of the 1967 Sexual Offenses Act, though in this case the two men are father and son.
Mr. Sarec cast himself as an anti-establishment candidate and a leader for a new generation of Slovenians who have come of age in a democratic society and whose top concerns are the economy, jobs and social security, including a robust pension system.
The ruling, by Judge Paul V. Malloy of the Ozaukee County Circuit Court, grew out of a legal fight over what should come of thousands of voters who were sent letters by state election officials because they were believed to have moved.
There's a decent argument that everything you do on the internet before age 18 — photos of bad hairstyles, cryptic song lyric posts about your crush, dumb tweets — should instantly disappear as soon as you come of age, like a sealed juvenile criminal history.
This new story, from Scott M. Gimple and Matt Negrete, who will serve as showrunner, will feature two young female protagonists and "focus on the first generation to come-of-age in the apocalypse as we know it," according to a release.
"The differences we see across age groups have more to do with the unique historical circumstances in which they come of age," she said, noting that demographers have not seen a generational pattern of growing more conservative or more Republican over time.
Then after further leaks revealed he had been told, in advance, that the meeting was part of an official Russian government effort to help his father win the election, he admitted that was true but said nothing had actually come of it.
It remains unclear what is to come of the companies' international alliance with Didi, largely because Didi is still working to integrate Uber China into their business and app in the aftermath of the acquisition while continuing to navigate increasingly limiting Chinese regulations.
The boomers were the last generation to come of age with some traditional edifices still standing, the old bourgeois norms and Christian(ish) religion and patriotic history, which gave them something powerful to wrestle with, to rework and react against and attempt to overthrow.
Now a $22015 billion financial technology powerhouse, the Nubank deal was yet another proof point that the Latin American market had come of age — and another branch on a tree that has its roots in Stanford's business school and the Silicon Valley venture community.
This street-level strategy using mostly non-professional actors produced a documentary-style depiction of the tough choices faced by Chicano youth as they come of age and try to escape or navigate gang life ("Two brothers…the street was their playground and their battleground").
"Trade talks between the US and China are to be resumed this month, and traders are cautiously optimistic, but just because the meeting has been lined up doesn't mean anything will come of it," said David Madden, chief markets analyst at CMC Markets in London.
There have been a number of Kickstarters that have tried and failed to get a consumer version of the tech we've seen in sci-fi movies like Minority Report — and shown off by some intrepid engineers — and nothing has come of it so far.
The unfortunate truth is that even though congressional Democrats have promised to resume their action on July 7, when the House of Representatives reconvenes, nothing will come of it unless concerned citizens shake off their passivity and mass in front of the Capitol building.
Today's conservative leaders—the voices who now make up the strongman caucus—have come of age under the conviction that U.S. policies supporting democracy, human rights, and a free press abroad are all essentially equivalent to their domestic enemy—liberalism—and therefore must be destroyed.
We did not come of age while submerged in digital waters, and what we accomplished as high school students pales in comparison to what many young people now achieve, such as the demanding course loads that many of today's high school students take on.
Richeson believes it would be wise for demographers to stop using terms like "majority-minority America" — after all, whites will still be a plurality, and what good can come of framing America's trajectory in a way that leaves the single largest group feeling maximally threatened?
"He obviously was a very politically charged individual, sick and tired of seeing protests and demonstrations and nothing to come of it, sick and tired of seeing his people shot down like dogs in these United States of America and specifically in Dallas," Balogun said.
NEW YORK, Aug 249 (LPC) - Private credit funds and business development companies (BDCs) are positioning their portfolios to deal with a potential economic downturn, which will be the first real test for a market that has come of age since 2008's financial crisis.
"Even if something is potentially actionable, you may make things worse rather than better, because some of these may end up being publicized if you attack a patient – people read newspapers, there's almost no good possible outcome that can come of it," Hillowe says.
Disco was dead, Studio 54 had gone cold and Paul Schrader's "American Gigolo" was the first great film of the decade, starring a young actor, Richard Gere, who had come of age doing Martin Sherman's "Bent," a 1979 play about gays killed by Nazis.
This is meant to suggest that Jacobs was right about the ruinous impact of bad design, that nothing good can come of living in isolated towers divorced from the organic safety and social structure that she believed could derive only from a vibrant street culture.
For clarity about what the FBI will do during this planned one-week investigation -- and what we should expect to come of it -- I reached out to Josh Campbell, a former FBI agent who now works for CNN as part of our justice team.
Other news to come out of the SDCC panel included some casting for the third unnamed spinoff series — which will "focus on the first generation to come-of-age in the apocalypse," according to the network, and is set to begin production next week in Richmond, Virginia.
"Rather than spending time, money, and resources to engage in a potentially adversarial process, Rashon Nelson and Donte Robinson approached the City and invited us to partner with them in an attempt to make something positive come of this," Philadelphia mayor Jim Kenney said in a statement.
However, due to lack of evidence, the different crime procedures in the Dominican Republic, and the fact she may have to return to the Carribean country to testify — something she does not want to do — Lawrence-Daley has been told nothing will likely come of it.
As part of this agreement, the model also agreed that should nothing ever come of their sportswear collection and no company be formed, she would pay Byrne her full original rate and would also assume all costs for the project from inception to the prototype phase.
Two conservative media figures that were present at the gathering said reporters grilled Trump on a handful of sticky political issues important to his conservative base but that no stories will come of it because there is no recording or transcript of the on-the-record meeting.
More spe­cifically, what does it mean to come of age in an era when images of childhood and adolescence, and even the social networks formed during this fleeting period of life, are so easily preserved and may stubbornly persist with or without one's intention or desire?
And despite the fact that US Senators Claire McCaskill and Susan Collins used Shkreli as a springboard to launch an investigation of how drugs are priced in America, little besides a report has come of that very worthwhile inquiry more than a year-and-a-half later.
The now young adult children of immigrant parents who have come of age over the past two decades have learned lessons in democracy not only in their Civics classes, but also by observing how their parents have been treated by government policies and in the press.
"A boldly populist, people-oriented type of platform is massively appealing to those who have come of age during the financial meltdown and the period afterward," said Kurt Walters, the campaign director at Rootstrikers, a group that favors limiting the influence of big donors in politics.
But it sure beats not having them, and Milwaukee's crew has a good a chance to make good on its potential and come of age as a group just as the Cubs' own young crew is getting expensive in arbitration and starting to leave in free agency.
Today's youth have come of age in an atmosphere where encroaching problems of climate change, global terrorism, economic crises, and mass shootings — to name a few — have opened our eyes to the reality we're living in, the weight of fixing it all resting on our shoulders.
Today's youth have come of age in an atmosphere where encroaching problems of climate change, global terrorism, economic crises and mass shootings — to name a few — have opened our eyes to the reality we're living in, the weight of fixing it all resting on our shoulders.
That's a good thing, all the more so as the present generation, which was born in an era of mass incarceration of black men and which has come of age at marches and rallies protesting police killings, tries to figure out where we should go from here.
The family had decided not to tell the matriarch of the diagnosis, believing that no good could come of it, and devised an elaborate ruse — a wedding banquet, in her hometown Changchun — as an excuse for everyone to go to China to see her one last time.
In the meantime, President Trump and congressional Democrats should be commended for starting this debate, but little may come of it if congressional Republicans are unwilling to see the debt limit for what it is: a relic of the past that has long outlived its usefulness.
Ma, who has a net worth of $21.8 billion according to the 2015 Forbes Rich List, said Chinese culture warns that nothing good will come of having a high profile, adding that his dad sent him a message on Friday advising him to keep his low.
It started, very likely, before he was born, with two peasants in Eastern Europe getting horny at the exact right moment so that generations later, their great-great-great-great-grandson would come of age as America was yearning for a soft-edged Gen X slacker.
"The fact that we are being heard is an indicator that our democracy has come of age," said Eric Gitari, a Harvard-educated lawyer and founder of the National Gay and Lesbian Human Rights Commission, one of the organizations which brought forward the case in 2016.
But they are also the first two leaders to have come of age in the two institutions that Balanchine helped create: They both trained at the School of American Ballet and both made their dance careers at City Ballet, learning from dancers who learned from Balanchine.
Doyle, 74, who lost his job as a canon lawyer in the Vatican Embassy soon after the report was made public and eventually decided he could not continue working as an active priest, is deeply skeptical that anything of substance will come of this week's meeting.
Instead, I was floored by how, through Yorkey's careful vision, the source material bloomed into a smart, thoughtful, and incredibly painful examination of not just the complications of being a teen, but of the systematic sexism that often first rears its ugly head when teenagers come of age.
Their research, published last month in the European Journal of Wildlife, begs questions about whether the wolves of Chernobyl might be mating with and passing along any mutated genes to other gray wolf populations, leading to wolves with marred genomes, reproductive problems, or whatever else might come of mutation.
Bowie gave McCaslin free rein—"Donny, I don't know what's going to come of this, but let's have some fun," he was told—and Blackstar, a poignant and clear-eyed final statement, was a unique success, an album that presented an icon in a new light at the end.
"Like many of us, the Fed is probably waiting to see what is going to come of all the new policies and changes that can be expected out of the new administration," said Tim Dreiling, senior portfolio manager at the Private Client Reserve at U.S. Bank in Kansas City.
Although she used force in that instance, it was to defeat the slavers, in order to protect free people: Perhaps the most powerful testament to Daenerys's character happened in season seven when Missandei, Davos, and Jon Snow talked about her rule and what they expected to come of it.
The come-of-age church is, in the West, literally a dying church: As the French philosopher Pierre Manent noted, the scene of Father Hamel's murder — "an almost empty church, two parishioners, three nuns, a very old priest" — vividly illustrates the condition of the faith in Western Europe.
We have come of age and to activism in the years since 1960 — so we only know Kennedy and Johnson as presidents, we have only experienced a liberal domination of national politics, and, more often than not, the policies we are protesting are the policies of liberal Democrats.
"They've come of age at a time when death by guns, whether in schools or churches or on the street or at the hand of domestic partners or by suicide, is commonplace, and yet they are the ones who know that it doesn't have to be this way."
JERUSALEM — The only immediate consequence of the Trump peace plan — and possibly all that will ever come of it — was the green light President Trump gave to Israel Tuesday to expand its territory by effectively annexing vast stretches of land it has long coveted on the West Bank.
This coming-of-age story signals that eco-fiction has come of age as well: wilder, more reckless and more breathtaking than previously thought, a wager and a promise that what emerges from the 21st century will be as good as any from the 20th, or the 19th.
"These guys — the third generation, in a way — are brilliant," said Tomás Peña, an editor of the Latin Jazz Network website, referring to musicians who've come of age in the 21st century, two generations down the line from the first marriages of Afro-Cuban music and American jazz.
As well as the additions of Colman and Menzies this season, Helena Bonham-Carter takes over as the wickedly mischievous Princess Margaret, and the queen's children come of age (with Josh O'Connor as Charles, and Erin Doherty as the twentysomething Princess Anne, complete with 1960s bouffant and plaid miniskirts).
"When the secular growth winners pull back like they did today, you want to be a buyer, not a seller." on Monday about what would come of President insistence on placing tariffs on another $200 billion worth of Chinese goods, but Cramer felt they were missing the big picture.
Khloé's relationship problems and Kylie and Jordyn's rift — like every other chapter in the life of this family that has come of age in public — promise to be drawn out in excruciating detail on the 16th season of "Keeping Up With the Kardashians," which premieres on Sunday on E!
Mr. English, born in 1963, had the good fortune to come of age at a time when analytical, oddball, extroverted introverts like himself had a lucrative, socially acceptable outlet for their talents, and his euphoric episodes oddly matched the country's, which for a while went gaga over all things tech.
Gail: Maybe it's because I'm now on the other side of the generation gap, but despite the terrible moments in 1968, the situation in 1968 seemed more hopeful — the country was turning against the war in Vietnam, the civil rights movement had come of age and the women's movement was blooming.
To have come of age during and after the global financial crisis of 2008 is to belong to a generation often unable to do what an American could once expect, and to do what was once expected: Get a job, pay off student loans and find a place of your own.
But two administration officials argued that this claim misunderstands how the conservative legal movement has matured as the generation of Republican lawyers shaped by reading the originalist dissents of Justice Scalia and by the bitter 1987 fight over Judge Robert H. Bork's failed Supreme Court nomination has come of age.
If any good is to come of this, we must teach our children the value of helping others, the nobility of public service, what our teachers, doctors, nurses, and many other workers are doing for us, and the need to do all we can to help our local businesses remain viable.
In the early decades of this century, Americans have sometimes traced our greatest errors to a failure of imagination: the inability to picture a terrorist, in a cave, who is able to strike; the hubris to ignore extensive State Department predictions of what would come of the invasion of Iraq.
"I hope people will continue to recognize the areas where Nintendo has taken that first step," Miyamoto says, before adding with a laugh "And hopefully someday people will look back on the Wii U and think 'Oh wow, I remember when Nintendo did that, and now look at what's come of that.'"
Some progress is being made at the high school level, as more than a dozen states have established graduation requirements that include assessment of civic literacy, but higher education bears unique responsibility for ensuring that newly-minted citizens have the factual grounding and critical thinking skills they need as they come of age.
Of course, Abstract isn't the first person to use art as a means to capture how it feels to come of age; 90210, the entire pop-punk canon, the iconic documentary High School Revisited, and every teen film released in the mid 2000s have all presented teenage memories in their own varied shades.
So it is certain that my kids are going to come of age in a world that is rapidly warming and rapidly changing—that is literally more on fire—but also in a country that in a given year may or may not be governed by politicians in stark denial of those changes.
In brief spurts, it worked, as with Samoa Joe and Kurt Angle's feuds, but mostly the old-timers would strut around, disparaging WWE (though only rarely by name), and nothing would come of it except for 200 people in a stadium oohing and ahhing at the imagined transgressions of pro-wrestling etiquette.
You can't book 97 percent male bands for your festival and escape criticism anymore, you can't tweet transphobic bullshit and expect nothing to come of it, and, recently, the increased willingness of people to speak out against sexual assault has created a culture in which abusers are finally being held accountable too.
And the absence of babies, the decline of the natural family, the fear of the empty hospital ward (to pluck a particularly arresting image from the Hulu show) is a subtle undercurrent in both left-wing and right-wing politics — but only an undercurrent, feeding illiberalisms that have not yet come of age.
In an excerpt that was published by Politico, Flake describes the strange specter of an American president's seeming affection for strongmen and authoritarians created such a cognitive dissonance among my generation of conservatives — who had come of age under existential threat from the Soviet Union — that it was almost impossible to believe.
As the youngest MCU title hero by at least a decade, Peter is uniquely qualified to demonstrate what it means to come of age in an era of superheroes and supervillains, and how that might shape the morality or self-image or general outlook of an impressionable mind still working all that stuff out.
Several Republicans came out in opposition, expressing distrust of ZTE and concern that it could pose national security threats, since its telecommunications equipment is being used across the US. The Senate even passed an amendment to a bill that would kill the deal, but the House didn't, and nothing has come of the vote since.
NEW YORK, March 6 (Reuters) - A U.S. threat to apply punitive tariffs on steel and aluminum imports and global worries over an emerging "trade war" pose an uncertainty for the Federal Reserve, one of its governors said on Tuesday, though she added it is too early to determine what will come of all the talk.
"It definitely was a late night drunken thing where we'd yell at each other, 'let's make music' so I didn't think anything was going to come of it until he hit me up next day and came over with his guitar," remembers Bailoni while sipping an Old Style at Chicago's iconic dive Rainbo Club.
Miles, despite having a child by the girlfriend with whom he lives, seems more devoted to being "street" than Collin is — he even wears a grill in his mouth — and when Miles illegally purchases a gun from a mutual friend for "house protection," you just know that nothing good is going to come of it.
The first stage, in 21969 and 21971, was led by two groups: left-wing activists organized into peace groups opposed to the Cold War and American intervention abroad, and college students who had come of age during the Southern civil rights movement and had seen how readily the government could divert its gaze from injustice.
For generations who have come of age long after Warhol's death in 1987, grids of these portraits are often viewed as his signature work — their eye-popping colors and scattershot brushwork atop a repeating washed-out image serving as shorthand for not only the artist's overall style, but the very aura of fame itself.
But, for me—and, I suspect, for others who have come of age alongside the Internet and have coped with the pace and the precariousness of contemporary living with a mixture of ambient fatalism and flares of impetuous tenderness—she struck a hopeful nerve of possibility that I hadn't felt in a long time.
It's a phenomenally referential film, and you can expect months to come of "Endgame Easter eggs you missed" posts and videos and listicles, mostly created by people who really underestimate your intelligence and your attention to detail, and hope you'll click on yet another roundup of obvious references, out of a fear that maybe you did miss something.
While they named different things that you might want to cut from a genome—like genes that lead to higher risks of cancer or those that cause muscular dystrophy—Powel asked the students if there were any potential issues with CRISPR that scientists might want to consider alongside all of the good that might come of it.
Maybe it's a sign of the times: Millennials have come of age in a era so economically tumultuous that having your television shows tell you you suck too no longer feels like a funny spectacle, but a reminder of the slog of late-stage capitalism—the relentless side-hustle gig economy, the long workweek, the impossibilities of retirement.
And while it's still possible not much will come of any of this — Facebook has successfully fended off investigations and angry shareholders in the past — the fact that Zuckerberg is being called out so publicly suggests the CEO's reputation could ultimately take a significant hit that even Facebook's massive PR machine won't be able to repair. 
She says they ended up having a good conversation about the business aspects of the porn industry, and even though she didn't believe he would follow through, he promised to put her on The Apprentice, and she hoped something would come of that, which is why she continued to correspond with him for years after their first meeting.
In the book "Kids These Days: Human Capital and the Making of Millennials," Malcolm Harris laid out how millennials have come of age in an economy that requires a large accumulation of debt to earn a higher-education credential, to enter a job market concentrated in cities with high rent that is characterized by insecurity and low wages.
Those who have gone to see Greta Gerwig's adaptation of Louisa May Alcott's "Little Women" in theaters and want to experience another take on the material can turn to this 1994 version, which casts Winona Ryder, Claire Danes, Trini Alvarado and Kirsten Dunst as the four March sisters, and follows them as they come of age.
"Whether the appeal of socialism to young adults is a standard function of idealism at that age that dissipates as one grows older, or will turn out to be a more permanent part of the political beliefs held by the cohort of millennials who have come of age over the past decade, remains to be seen."
"If anything good is to come of a formal meeting between these two, Trump will have to reinforce the notion — eroded under his presidency — that the United States will not turn a blind eye to Moscow's malign influence around the globe," said Edward Price, who served as Senior Director of the National Security Council under President Barack Obama.
Aside from illustrations, each essay is punctuated by pages with two-sentence truths about the reality of life as a non-binary person: The essays narrate Ivan's experiences in bathrooms; relationships with their family as they come of age in Canada's Yukon and come out; and the ways they help their family come to terms with their non-binary gender identity.
There is a third possibility: that an infusion of cash into struggling households would lift up the youth in those households in all the subtle but still meaningful ways Costello has observed over the years, until finally, when they come of age, they are better prepared for the brave new world of work, whether the robots are coming or not.
As I've written about in my book on the series and elsewhere, Game of Thrones has derived an astonishing amount of power from being both a traditional fantasy story — one where kids come of age, embark on magical quests, and discover that they're the true heirs to the throne — at the same time as it subverts traditional fantasy story tropes.
Whether it's because she fears her daughter being replaced or, by womanly intuition, simply knows that no good can come of Father Fodgen fixating on Claire, she makes herself into an ally even when disguising herself as an enemy, utilizing the power she knows she has over the grieving priest to create the only escape route available to Claire in that moment.
My grandmother's admirable grit, which she displayed in just about every aspect of her long life (she variously credited these qualities to having been born breach and not breathing or to having come of age during the Great Depression), not only helped see me through my troubled teens and early adulthood, it has become the subject of my life's work.

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