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"coterie" Definitions
  1. a small group of people who have the same interests and do things together but do not like to include others

629 Sentences With "coterie"

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

Coterie Dear Coterie, As crazy-inspiring as your content sounds, I'm going to go with no.
KFC's bizarre coterie of Colonels just gained a new member.
But thankfully, our coterie of beauty pros have better ideas.
But nobody used it except a tiny coterie of hackers.
" She was scapegoated, he argued, by a "coterie of cowards.
This coterie allegedly was dubbed the "Hapsburg" group by Manafort.
Only a coterie of industry experts work on these formations.
Coterie also had access to the F3 community of founders.
When I was young, I had personal and coterie loyalties.
Authorities also hope to nurture a growing coterie of local novelists.
And even Yelawolf and his coterie haven't entirely escaped that scorn.
The coterie is identified in court records as the Hapsburg Group.
The move prompted a strong backlash among Assange's coterie of backers.
Noticeably exempt from the digital torture was Houston's famed coterie of rappers.
It was originally formulated in 1948 by a coterie of theoretical physicists.
Coterie operates in insurtech, a space we've covered extensively in recent months.
They being the Clinton campaign and her coterie of allies throughout town.
Ibibio Sound Machine grew out of London's determined coterie of Africaphile musicians.
He calls grown-up women child, and his coterie of young friends muffin.
A society does not fall because of a small coterie of bad actors.
Critic's Notebook Does it hinder an artist to be adored by a coterie?
ET  Welcome back to The Coterie, just in time for the holiday season.
In fact, Chau, an investor at Canaan Partners who wrote a check to Coterie on behalf of her firm — Coterie has raised $2.75 million altogether, including from Female Founders Fund — says the company more or less pokes fun at social media.
It earned a small coterie of devotees but held little appeal for mainstream consumers.
Instead she fell back on a coterie of familiar counsellors less knowledgeable about Brussels.
Bee and her coterie went to his office in Silicon Valley and started whiteboarding.
More like Nero, with a coterie of sycophants fanning him and peeling his grapes.
Another potential issue is that Apple News mostly helps a small coterie of publishers.
Rosset recognized Beckett's potential at a time when he was barely a coterie author.
His moneyed coterie wants to turn Britain into free-market Singapore on the Thames.
Less favoured Clinton retainers offer more nuanced praise of their boss than the gilded coterie.
Click through to read up on the cast of characters populating The Coterie and beyond.
Navarro had joined the president and a coterie of senior officials at the G-20.
Or will it go its own way, with a coterie of close, like-minded followers?
De Quincey appointed himself a courtier to the Lakeland coterie of Wordsworth, Coleridge and Southey.
The right wing, led by a fantastically wealthy coterie of industrialists, has essentially weaponized policy.
This one consistently sparks interest beyond the usual coterie of diplomats and foreign-policy wonks.
Her mother is also an owner of Coterie Interiors, a design firm in Hewlett Harbor.
But the powerful coterie of anti-apartheid leaders in exile pressed successfully for Thabo Mbeki.
The board, a coterie of prominent New Yorkers, is in a power struggle with Gov.
Is someone in his coterie of corruption outshining him or casting negative light on him?
And if not them, then a coterie of lobbyists from Albany and New York City.
Both are poets of the New York night; both are name-droppers and coterie poets.
Arias belongs to a growing coterie of personal trainers who are building empires on Instagram.
Most of its original coterie departed for Paris, where Dada was enjoying its volatile culmination.
Anecdotal evidence from Pyongyang suggests that the city's coterie of privileged North Koreans is already enthusiastic.
She evicted Ms Le Pen in a dynastic coup, ejecting her coterie of anti-euro advisers.
They live in a communal apartment — a commune, actually — in downtown Los Angeles called the Coterie.
Sadly, neither Michel Sidibé nor his coterie can provide that voice of credible strength and candor.
So you and your coterie were locating strength in two totally different approaches to being vulnerable.
He relies on a small, cohesive ruling coterie, mostly members of his family and security officials.
Today, everything from contemporary poetry to fan fiction to zine culture is likened to coterie writing.
Last year, the president-elect and a coterie of his top advisers were among the guests.
Coterie worked to develop the designs it sells and plans to roll out new kits frequently.
Out popped a dozen or so brown-robed friars, an archbishop and a coterie of police officers.
"I want tariffs," Trump told a coterie of top advisers in the Oval Office during retired Gen.
Mr. Bloomberg, who has a coterie of advisers on retainer, would face less pressure on this front.
Through Jet, Walmart has been building a coterie of online brands, which now includes Modcloth and Bonobos.
With any luck, it'll also involve floral deliveries and celebratory cards from Beckham's coterie of celebrity pals.
It wasn't until around 2007 that a coterie of bloggers began promoting the lifestyle and its possibilities.
"Allez!" yelled a coterie of knights visiting from the Barony of l'Ile du Dragon Dormant in Quebec.
He helped comprise a larger-than-usual coterie of aides who descended on the President's Italianate club.
Now Morgan Stanley, which led Snap's coterie of underwriters, has downgraded the stock, citing competition from Facebook.
Few besides a coterie of listeners knew quite what to make of the album when it was released.
They are equally contemptuous of her "G40" ("Generation 40") faction, a relatively younger coterie of ZANU-PF ministers.
Walmart is adding to its online coterie of brands with its acquisition of plus-sized online retailer, Eloquii.
She shut down the bar where her husband and his powerful coterie of golf-club friends would meet.
But Trump and his immediate coterie are much less adept at bureaucratic infighting than Nixon and Kissinger were.
For the "Trump establishment" — Bannon, Breitbart, and its coterie — Trump was just a vessel to push their agenda.
In the nineties, a coterie of business figures built corporate empires that had little loyalty to the state.
Clicking around the app quickly serves up a full coterie of anime, animation, comedy, gaming content, and more.
I gravitated toward Ryan Blythe, who had a coterie of assistants swirling around him, anticipating his every move.
Myriad disclosures have intensified questions about whether Mr. Trump's coterie colluded with Russia to influence the American election.
Both are closely aligned with the President, with a coterie of former Trump aides helping to develop them.
Many saw the timing of the publication as an attempt by Benedict, or his coterie, to influence Francis.
A coterie of ex-politicos—including a former aide to Tim Kaine—were helping him orchestrate meet-and-greets.
Epstein was known for having a coterie of influential associates, including Bill Clinton, President Donald Trump, and Prince Andrew.
By definition, an above-average team needs a robust coterie of above-average players, and such contributors are rare.
Coterie was founded by Sarah Raffa and Linden Ellis, two early employees of another e-commerce brand, Daily Harvest.
They soon move into a communal living space called The Coterie, and their housemates quickly become a new family.
She surrounded herself with a coterie of very powerful women, which led to countless innuendos about her sexual orientation.
None of my classmates had such a coterie of characters in their hockey-stick-and-mouth-guard-filled lives.
Early on, the film industry morphed into a well-oiled machine that relied on a coterie of skilled trades.
They've signed on at the Coterie, a bargain-rent "intentional community," and the decision looks like a bad call.
And while teenage me would have never believed it, I've now hoarded quite the coterie of hydrating face masks.
There was a revolving cast of aunts and uncles, the occasional cousin and a loyal coterie of longtime friends.
Transparency watchdogs monitor the rise and fall of Mr Orban's coterie by charting who gets the most public contracts.
Parading in coordinated costumes, the queer-led coterie used the volatile nature of performance to instigate conversations about inclusion.
"Coterie is serving a function within an experience, but it's also something people want to show off," she said.
Critics said she was authoritarian and used state power to muzzle critics while shielded by a coterie of advisers.
Straight-faced and stiff-lipped, Ms. Knox dodged flashbulbs as a coterie of bodyguards kept the press at bay.
"All right, love you ladies!" he called out, and braved the coterie of autograph hunters waiting outside the stage door.
A coterie of tycoons with a lock on the property market continue to enrich themselves at the expense of others.
Beyond Bannon, who once described Sessions as a mentor, a coterie of top White House aides emerged from Sessions' world.
As for Ladies' Night, it took me a long time to assemble a coterie of mothers as genial and supportive.
He regularly flies to the Hamptons by helicopter to attend to a coterie of hedge fund managers and investment bankers.
But it has also long been a hallmark of coterie writing, used everywhere from slave narratives to, notably, women's writing.
On one end, there is a cluster of fast flameouts — the Yo-Ello-Peach-Meerkat-Stolen-Clinkle-Secret-Color coterie.
You need an editorial staff and you need a coterie of trusted experts to review papers and advise on publication.
The "system" is an Iranian ideological term for the country's political establishment: a coterie of clerics, commanders and revolutionary comrades.
These images testify to the talents of a remarkable coterie of artists whose lives are explored in two new books.
Coterie, a new ecommerce startup, sells party kits and items that turn any event into an ultimate Instagram-worthy spectacle.
He talked on a speaker phone from his desk in the Oval Office, with a coterie of aides drifting by.
For the balance of the funds, Bagley relied on the usual coterie of corporations that regularly support Clinton's favored causes.
Not to be outdone, Thieu's coterie boasted two of the country's four regional commanders and the army chief of staff.
The more secretive or unjust an organization is, the more leaks induce fear and paranoia in its leadership and planning coterie.
"She sucks the life out of a room," groans a member of her husband's separate (and in fact rival) adoring coterie.
This cunning, transcultural, and transgenerational collection of modern and contemporary artworks and fetishist objects presents a coterie of malevolent political atrocities.
As we walked, a coterie of PR flacks furiously made quiet phone calls and texted one another about what was happening.
But of course they're not true, and everyone except Trump and his coterie can look at the evidence and know that.
A coterie of new angels and other institutions joined as well — all of them also bold-faced names in the Valley.
The chattering classes of New Delhi, who despise Mr Modi and his coterie as cynical rabble-rousers, hold that view reluctantly.
However, the next four (and possibly eight) years will be a never-ending journey among an ever-changing coterie of advisors.
Vitter's answer puts her in a small coterie of grossly unfit judicial nominees from the outermost reaches of the ideological spectrum.
Mike Pence of Indiana hunkered down with a small coterie of aides for his first full day of intensive debate preparation.
Mike: Me and my coterie of close friends all wear beards, flannel and listen to "Bleach" on vinyl together every weekend.
Little known outside of the fashion world, this couture coterie can be credited with defining Dior as we know it then.
The party is held at a venue on Ossington Avenue called Coterie, that has an industrial, converted-garage feel to it.
Fraser's work was received by a coterie of intellectual thinkers and artists who recognized the urgency of the questions she posed.
He met there with a coterie of mostly young, like-minded colleagues, planning strategy and plotting against foes, from Lt. Gen.
Along with Duggal and Dong, they zeroed in on the Coterie concept and it became the first company F3 has incubated.
Consumers continue to look to high-protein alternatives to their morning cereal, and there is an expanding coterie of options available.
My mum and the coterie of aunties who still love her and drink tea from their Diana mugs are in that number.
To help drill down on how these mineral, botanical, and ionic waters really affect skin, we consulted a coterie of complexion pros.
He has purged more than 100 generals and installed a coterie of staunch allies in the uppermost echelons of the defense establishment.
Mr. Mahathir's successor, Abdullah Ahmad Badawi, also of UMNO, was more lenient, partly on the advice of a coterie of young advisers.
It is entirely plausible that a coterie of officers believed a polarized and disgruntled society would rise up once given a cue.
Coterie writing was the chosen medium of 16th century English aristocrats, groups of readers and writers associated by friendship and social status.
And, again like Bitcoin, it promptly attracts a coterie of dollar-sign-eyed enthusiasts who are … shall we say … somewhat less awesome.
It's less a full outfit and more a coterie of accessories to add to your work clothing before heading to a party.
A coterie of elected officials from New York City and New York State attended a fund-raiser for Long Island's LGBT Network.
A coterie of white nationalists — Southern secessionists, neo-Nazis, various other strains — were headed to town for a "White Lives Matter" rally.
John Houseman plays the Director, and Andy Griffith plays the Father — one of a coterie of characters seeking to tell their story.
He retains a small coterie of advisers, and they are said to be divided over whether Mr. Biden should run once more.
At the Royal Academy, Van Beirendonck discovered the rigors and ambition of design, as well as a coterie of like-minded friends.
But after a while it's hard to find a venue interesting enough to attract her coterie of well-heeled, socially busy friends.
A coterie of House Republicans debased themselves on national television all year so Trump wouldn't back primary challengers in their gerrymandered districts.
Among a coterie of tiresome single women and their Bechdel Test-failing dialogue, Mabel stood out for her feisty lack of sentimentality.
This coterie of young, vivacious women quickly established themselves as firm favourites of Queen Victoria's eldest son, Bertie, the Prince of Wales.
Of the many, many reasons to watch Freeform's Fosters spin-off Good Trouble, Tommy Martinez's artist/Coterie resident Gael is one of them.
He also rarely meets with agency staff, instead going through a small coterie of political aides, and often operating without a paper trail.
On the way, a member of his coterie suggested he should jump in the fountain that sits in the center of the square.
Dinklage and Coster-Waldau will compete against a coterie of Peak TV men, from Stranger Things' David Harbour to Handmaid's Tale's Joseph Fiennes.
He is surrounded by a chaotic coterie of racists and oligarch-worshipping lobbyists who can't manage their way out of a paper bag.
"Hmmm, that's a haute couture dress," joked one of the press agents permanently affixed to the Valentino coterie, in past and present incarnations.
Its opponents range from the apocalyptic Islamic State to a coterie of tiny insurgent groups led by local warlords reliant on foreign donors.
Instead he reportedly relies on a steady diet of Fox News broadcasts for information and a small coterie of longtime friends for advice.
The governor brought a hulking tractor-trailer with confetti guns, thousands upon thousands of rainbow-printed signs and a coterie of elected officials.
Word of the Day : an exclusive circle of people with a common purpose _________ The word coterie has appeared in 95 articles on nytimes.
The lunacy, many Kenyans say, is the idea of generations being chained to China, long after Mr. Kenyatta and his coterie leave office.
In an exclusive clip, we see the happy couple enjoying a little candlelit picnic, complete with champagne, on the roof of the Coterie.
The results of this investigation revealed a series of previously unknown ties between this coterie of Romanian artists and Scottish gallerist Richard Demarco.
In Harlem, he was among a coterie of young, broad-minded musicians pursuing a marriage of jazz, hip-hop and Spotify-era eclecticism.
What makes Coterie interesting isn't that is a digital take on a previously paper business, but that it's product allows it to insure freelancers (Coterie partners with freelance marketplaces, allowing it access to a potential customer base and helping the marketplace itself provide insured providers) for even small increments of time; that's something that wasn't economically attractive under old models, if even possible.
Also among the crowd packing the Ryman's pews was a coterie of Combs' friends and family members, as well as his girlfriend, Nicole Hocking.
Mr Shaw-Asquith belongs to what the magazines colourfully call the Cursed Coterie, a group of high-born and glamorous young men and ladies.
Marble Hornets features one of the first mentions of the "proxy," the name that would be adopted to describe Slender Man's coterie of servants.
Asa Hutchinson, along with three senators and a coterie of members of the House all endorsed Rubio just two days after former Florida Gov.
They circulated love poems, drama and political polemics (John Wilmot, "libertine" and second Earl of Rochester, was one of the better-known coterie writers).
Mr. Trump poses such an acute risk, the senator said, that a coterie of senior administration officials must protect him from his own instincts.
But while his coterie mentions these issues, Trump seems fixated on the U.S. trade deficit with China, which he keeps saying is $500 billion.
There's also an extremely creepy junkie with scars carved into his face who goes by Skeletor (Rotimi Paul) and a coterie of neighborhood people.
That same night, a coterie of some of the most powerful people in Washington shook hands, shared meals, and danced in the lavish ballrooms.
Astute political observers will also be looking to the coterie of potential and announced 2020 Democratic presidential candidates who will be in the audience.
Nearby, Herrera, the stylist Elin Svahn and a coterie of helpers make adjustments to a violet check-print dress on the model Birgit Kos.
A few years later, a coterie of physicists invented quantum mechanics, a theoretical framework that explained the world of atoms and even smaller objects.
That makes it even more interesting that as the Democratic primary has proceeded, none of the younger coterie has broken into the top tier.
Backed by a small coterie of supporters, Joan of Arc managed to convince her country's leadership to give her a commanding role in the army.
In response, a coterie of open source mapping advocates have built their own tech, an effort to put the embattled region (literally) on the map.
It's like a coterie of celebrities got into a disagreement they turned it into bizarre social media activity like a band of bored seventh graders.
While the president surrounded himself early in his term with a coterie of veterans he referred to as "my generals" — including the retired Marine Gens.
Instead of creating a lean, easily-influenced coterie of senior insiders, Trump's neglect of senior positions has created unprecedented stagnation in major departments and agencies.
Over the decades it has become one of New Mexico's signature events, beloved by a coterie of hot air balloon enthusiasts, locals and visitors alike.
Meanwhile, Hans Zimmer's lush score, punctuated by a coterie of lively French-ish ditties, as always finds a perfect blend between the film's different worlds.
So we tracked 'em down, plus a coterie of other cool curlies, to find out how they do it and what products they swear by.
Just as Vine created its own coterie of fresh-faced young celebrities, maybe we ought to brace ourselves for a new wave of Snapchat auteurs.
A retread coterie of pollsters, consultants and insiders tried to sell an out-of-touch, elitist candidate to voters who were in full-scale revolt.
Drake, Kevin Hart, and Spike Lee are watching from one sideline; Guy Fieri and a coterie of NBA All-Stars are watching from the other.
The evening's honorees, Michael and Eva Chow, had flown in from Los Angeles and were holding court at the center table with their creative coterie.
The show's decadent streak feels a little effortful, too—the Coterie runs out of toilet paper, but it has an awfully well-maintained rooftop pool.
But Meadows will have a smaller-than-usual coterie within the White House, unlike some of his predecessors who sought to bring allies with them.
She belonged to a coterie of black female performers — Lena Horne, Carmen de Lavallade, Eartha Kitt, Diahann Carroll — whose talents and complexity Hollywood rarely showcased.
In the last 30 years, Ms. Kingdon has been part of a small coterie of volunteers who have helped restore trumpeter swans to Ontario, Canada.
In July, a coterie of able-bodied men lift and carry the ceremonial spire — the giglio — in a classic New York City Catholic street feast.
Protests spread across rural Morocco, where many feel the powerful coterie of those who enjoy royal patronage corruptly profits at the expense of the people.
The theft transformed the manuscript into an object of obsession, a kind of Maltese Falcon, for a coterie of Inquisition scholars and rare-book collectors.
The Good Trouble holiday special, called Christmas at the Coterie, is sure to be full of reunions — but might it also include a big union?
Along with Julian Schnabel and the dealer Barbara Gladstone, he is part of a small coterie of art-world insiders who have championed Vega's work.
The predominant effect is one of creative entropy, a defensive huddling in political or coterie formations that are pointedly indifferent when not hostile to outsiders.
Everywhere it is amplified by a small but growing coterie of investors not just worried about climate change, but looking for the next big thing.
Every president sweeps into office with a coterie of friends and hangers-on who sometimes have minimal experience in the arcana of the federal government.
But a coterie of Washington "experts," recently assembled on behalf of Saudi Arabia, argues otherwise and seem to have the ear of the Trump administration.
At the time, they formed a rap triumvirate with G.O.O.D. Music and Maybach Music, dominating most of the charts with an impregnable coterie of talent.
With a few exceptions, Superstore has always taken place in one location with a coterie of characters, but this seismic shift newly expands the show's universe.
Whenever an artist releases an ambitious, challenging project that defies immediate parsing and denies the listener instant gratification, a select coterie of fans bitch and moan.
But Chapman did not seem to be bothered for long; soon he was lying on the floor, laughing with a small coterie of Spanish-speaking catchers.
Mrs May's instinct is to surround herself with a tiny coterie of advisers (who are completely dependent on her) and to plan everything out in detail.
A coterie of New York's most distinguished athletes, musicians, and media personalities congregated Thursday night at Yankee Stadium for CC and Amber Sabathia's celebrity softball game.
Pence coined the term "Hoekstra's Heroes" to identify and brand the coterie of Republicans willing to stand up to the popular president soon after his election.
That November, US congressman Leo Ryan and a coterie of journalists and family members visited the compound, and some cult members tried to leave with them.
The Commonwealth has also suffered from its newer members' perception that it is run by a coterie of "white" countries, led by Britain, Australia and Canada.
Ashcombe, with its whimsical, somewhat makeshift and theatrical rooms, was designed to provide a colorful frame for Beaton and his coterie of artistic and eccentric friends.
Seated courtside at many home games has been a coterie of big industry names, including the Apple executive Eddy Cue and the venture capitalist Ben Horowitz.
In truth, Love had six assistants, because everyone included Phil Mickelson — who, at 46, qualified for his 217th Ryder Cup — as part of the captain's coterie.
Our growing awareness of Miss Brodie's unsatisfied hunger to live larger than she does parallels the gradual disenchantment of her once enraptured coterie of pet pupils.
Or is it something else, perhaps the elite kinship Trump and his coterie of relatives feel with Mohammed bin Salman in his schemes to consolidate power?
"If the meat is good, it's because I slept with the butcher!" he joked, as a coterie of men wearing lipstick and mascara flocked around him.
Emerging menswear designer Harikrishnan dropped his graduate collection at the London College of Fashion, sending an international coterie of models down the runway in inflatable trousers.
Critics faulted James Baker for relying too heavily on a small coterie of aides when he served as President George H. W. Bush's secretary of state.
A small coterie of multinationals is now under investigation by South African authorities, including local units of three companies, McKinsey, KPMG and the software giant SAP.
Years later, at the tax agency, he led enforcement operations, hiring a coterie of former spies, police agents and investigators to go after tax cheats aggressively.
Mr. Yankelovich (pronounced yank-el-OH-vich), an ebullient man with a passion for research, was part of a coterie of pollsters who changed all that.
United's manager, José Mourinho, has gone further, suggesting that the wages Pogba earns has made the coterie of former players charged with analyzing his performances envious.
As Gregorian chants played in the background, he and a small coterie of staff members presented piece after piece, each in its own custom-made box.
The former three-star general, whom Trump tapped to be his national security adviser, also has more foreign policy experience than anyone else in Trump's coterie.
Trump and a coterie of aides were stunned by a swift progression of events that upended their longtime thinking about how an impeachment scenario would proceed.
While the new Democratic majority is sprawling and diverse, a coterie of outspoken, progressive women has seized center stage — and not always in a good way.
Swaying at the center of a mesmerizing orbit of 200 brightly colored rings, she and her badass coterie of female athletes couldn't be more compelling to watch.
He presides over a loose coterie of professional and self-taught scientists who believe that ground-breaking science does not require either a fancy lab or degree.
And Ms. White's presence in the top tier of Mr. Trump's coterie of informal religious advisers has long been a source of contention with many evangelical Christians.
Still, many of Coterie's products can be recycled and, more to the point for Coterie, the sum of their parts can make a party sparkle in photos.
Once in Winterfell, Robert's coterie is greeted by the full Stark family – the first and last time we see the entire nuclear Stark unit on-screen together.
" The civil servant told me of May, "You can do that in the Home Office and operate like that, with a small coterie of people around you.
She was surrounded in the early days by a coterie of American artists, including Sam Francis, Joan Mitchell and Al Held, and the Canadian Jean-Paul Riopelle.
On Wednesday, Kings County District Attorney Ken Thompson was explaining how local gangs communicate over Facebook to a coterie of reporters at his office in Downtown Brooklyn.
Chareau's most fervent supporters were a small coterie of cultivated, upper-middle-class professionals, many of whom were related, notably the Bernheims, the Flegs and the Dalsaces.
And back in Manhattan, the much-anticipated Legacy Records will give some of its space over to a cafe called Coterie when it opens later this month.
He has grown frustrated over what he views as Republican impotence on Capitol Hill, Mueller's sprawling investigation and a coterie of aides at times riven by infighting.
Some ended up water damaged because of roof leaks; Mr. Johansen and his coterie had not yet mastered the art of girding modernism for New England winters.
Protests have since spread across rural Morocco, where many feel the powerful coterie of those who enjoy royal patronage corruptly profits at the expense of the people.
Kennedy's was one of the most public murders in history, a victim shot in front of hundreds of spectators, with a coterie of news reporters in tow.
In an uncertain market, Coterie is better capitalized than it ever has been, thanks to Intercept, and The Hartford, and RPM Ventures , which led its latest round.
Recently, he has been working with a coterie of younger musicians, such as Flying Lotus and Robert Glasper, whose work rides the wake of his own innovations.
When President Mohammad Khatami and his idealistic coterie failed to materialize such change during their years in office, from 1997 to 2005, the public turned on them.
He confides in only a small coterie of people around him, and it came as a total surprise for many in the Kremlin and the defense ministry.
Much of Trump's legal team -- including Flood and White House counsel Pat Cipollone -- traveled with the President to Florida, as did a large coterie of senior aides.
Grief aside, Barack Obama and his coterie of top aides did not think the vice president was the right person to protect and extend the Obama legacy.
Even before the election she was being criticised for not listening to business or to her own colleagues, and for relying on too small a coterie of advisers.
Kwame: Polygon's Susana Polo and I had a brief conversation about Spider-Man's place in the larger MCU, and what he represents for this coterie of avenging superheroes.
Donors and others close to the winning campaign typically eye plush postings in Western Europe or the Caribbean, and the coterie of Trump donors are seeking the same.
Jones was auditioning to play one of a terrifying coterie of demons called the Gentlemen who rob everyone of their voices in order to quietly steal their hearts.
Indeed, ease aside, a big motivator for Coterie customers seemingly will be how their parties look on social media, though venture capitalist Laura Chau disagrees with this assessment.
The small but powerful coterie of hardliners in both houses have Breitbart at their backs, ready to rile up Mr Trump's base against anything that smacks of "globalism".
The school is presided over by a coterie of older warlocks, played by BD Wong and Ryan Murphy Universe players Cheyenne Jackson, Billy Porter, and Jon Jon Briones.
Trump was attended by a coterie of fixers and enablers who thrived by playing the roles he gave them, often in violation of the norms that others observe.
And if she were not already so recognizable, the official-looking coterie traveling with her announced that she was — for at least a few more moments — still somebody.
By 1983 it had become a sprawling collective that attracted an international coterie of artists and impresarios (and, inevitably, the police, who shut it down later that year).
Thanks to gaps in the Federal Vacancies Reform Act, he has replaced numerous Senate-confirmed officials in the executive branch with a pliable coterie of "acting" agency heads.
The alternative is that a self-chosen coterie of advisers, esteeming themselves wiser than the president and the people, set policy according to the preferences of their class.
And not in a self-important or self-involved way; that's just the effect Rectify has on those involved in it, and its tiny coterie of devoted fans.
In 1992, the "Dream Team" -- comprising a coterie of NBA legends, including Magic Johnson, Larry Bird, Charles Barkley, John Stockton and Michael Jordan -- claimed to the gold medal.
I was the oldest of a coterie of kids, and I had to see to it that we made an appearance, usually with our hands over our ears.
But he has maintained, among a small but powerful coterie of conservatives, the power not just to influence, but to validate their views with an ex-papal seal.
On Freeform's Good Trouble, Coterie resident and activist Malika (Zuri Adele) is one of the leaders in a Black Lives Matter protest over the slaying of teen Jamal Thompson.
Dostum accused a small Pashtun coterie around the president, including National Security Adviser Hanif Atmar, intelligence chief Massoom Stanekzai and chief of staff Abdul Salam Rahimi, of controlling Ghani.
They live in an "intentional communal" building called The Coterie, which is home to people from different backgrounds who share bathrooms and a kitchen and bond as a family.
She smiles through a montage, politely listening to a random coterie of men ask her about where she's from, why she's single, and how she likes working with kids.
Whatever the rules, the reality is that a small coterie of private businesses stumps up most of the campaign cash almost everywhere, except perhaps in Uruguay and Costa Rica.
The old man even has a "harem," as Paul III calls it, to prove it, with a coterie of four women at his sexual and emotional beck and call.
We found out later that there were a coterie of metal kids in Scandinavia, particularly Norway, who were really turned on by Venom and Bathory, another band from England.
Mandy Moore has played a Disney princess and now a lovable TV mom, but in June she'll join the great coterie of actresses who have played sexy shark food.
Opposing net neutrality The anti-net neutrality forces, on the other hand, are ISPs, cable and telephone companies, and a coterie of conservatives, free-market think tanks and libertarians.
But in the case of the families he studies, they have the added benefit of a coterie of advisers to insure the children understand finance, business and family governance.
If the dwindling coterie of #NeverTrump Republicans can be led to believe that crossing the president will yield primary defeat, then they will be less willing to speak up.
His studio, which occupies an old brewery in what once was East Berlin, has become a frenetic hub, staffed by an international coterie of assistants — not unlike Warhol's Factory.
One of them, the WSJ added, said Li has already told his inner coterie of advisers, including son and deputy chairman Victor Li, who is earmarked as his successor.
"China may have subtly backed the military and Mwangagwa, preferring this combine to the coterie led by Mugabe's wife Grace, given the latter's legendary reputation for corruption," said Chakravarty.
The audience, far from being a fashion insider coterie, was predominantly made up of advertising and marketing executives, all tackling how best to build long-term relationships with festivalgoers.
Putin, and those in his coterie who are guilty of massive corruption, enjoy their ill-gotten gains at the expense of the citizens whom they exploit, rather than serve.
Mr. Abrams explored those possibilities with the Experimental Band, which he organized in Chicago in 21977 to workshop new compositions and arrangements by a coterie of like-minded instrumentalists.
But what Coterie does is slightly different if we're grokking its model correctly: It offers what it calls "commercial insurance as a service," according to an interview with TechCrunch .
Still, many viewed Ms. Carter as Ms. Lee's staunchest protector, and with a coterie of friends from the area, she is now helping to expand Ms. Lee's literary legacy.
As President Trump and his coterie departed on their first foreign trip, a plethora of conservative and liberal political leaders, pundits and citizens were asking themselves this simple question.
Mr. Elsalameen, who maintains a Facebook page highly critical of Mr. Abbas, said he worked with Mr. Dahlan on an international initiative but did not belong to his coterie.
An inveterate viewer of reality shows like Bravo's "Million Dollar Listing Los Angeles" and HGTV's "Property Brothers," she concocted "Bajillion" and its diverse coterie of hypercompetitive real estate brokers.
To replicate this mouse herpes vaccine that Stuermer had read about, he and a loose coterie of other biohackers working with Ascendance got their hands on the herpes simplex virus.
Especially not when they're living in a Gen Y-style commune that brings together a coterie of young people from different walks of life, as our heroines end up doing.
His sharp tongue, patronizing remarks to the working class and habit of listening to only a small coterie of close advisors have helped drive his popularity ratings to new lows.
A coterie of longtime retainers, such as her factotum Huma Abedin and Maura Pally of the Clinton Foundation, appear to worship her with a protective fury that admits no fault.
By the way, she made Jon and his coterie give up all their weapons and the rowboat that would ferry them back to their ship, so, uh, they're trapped here.
When Krystal returns to the coterie of waiting fellow competitors following her stilted conversation with Arie, Bibiana fully transforms into the fiery Latina she has been set up to become.
He rules through a tight coterie of loyal aides, many of whom worked with him in his previous job as governor of the state of Mexico (which surrounds Mexico City).
"Let's see if these Democrats want to ask about his many crimes that have nothing to do with anyone but his coterie of business associates with questionable connections," he added.
In an interview at his office at Comodoro Py, a run-down courthouse here, Judge Bonadio denied the existence of a coterie of judges and prosecutors plotting against Mrs. Kirchner.
But in the early hours of Election Day, the prevailing mood among the coterie of popular websites, internet communities and social media users who support Donald J. Trump was electric.
"Let's see if these Democrats want to ask about his many crimes that have nothing to do with anyone but his coterie of business associates with questionable connections," he added.
You can build up quite a coterie if you take enough trouble, mix your friends intelligently, and show a little shrewdness as to when to invite them, and what for.
Featuring intricate set design and a coterie of puppets, including the largest stop-motion puppet ever built, and a mix of old and new technology, Kubo feels vivid and alive.
Coterie only started selling its products in September of 2019, but noted to TechCrunch that it saw "pretty good growth" from from the jump, and "pretty steady growth" since then.
On display are maquettes, mementos, photographs of finished designs and a coterie of levitating "showpieces," examples of Malone's more conceptual designs, which often blur the boundary between fashion and art.
I'm guessing my future reporting will continue to take the measure of what is more important in startupland: entrepreneurs and employees, or the reputations of a coterie of powerful men.
In 1988, Sitagu Sayadaw was one of a coterie of monks who blessed the nation's democracy movement, which sent hundreds of thousands of people to the streets in peaceful protest.
"In practice, it means that if you're part of a coterie of high-net-worth donors, your private interests get priority over what's best for the province," Mr. Eby said.
The name referred to a coterie of Uber's top executives who were among some of the company's early employees and had some of the same aggressive sensibilities as Mr. Kalanick.
Living in Syracuse in the 1970s, her mother helped start the Black Folk Art Gallery, now called the Community Folk Art Center, and became close with a coterie of artists.
Halston drew inspiration from everyone he let into his world, from his troupe of models dubbed the "Halstonettes" to his creative coterie of Andy Warhol, Elsa Peretti, and Liza Minnelli.
Although nearly every European country had their own coterie of experts, the Italian and Spanish masters were in vogue amongst trendy and young middle and upper class men, especially in England.
Advertise on Hyperallergic with Nectar Ads Next week on October 2514, Sotheby's London will auction off a coterie of gold artworks and objects in an event cheekily titled The Midas Touch.
Over a series of now-classic Good Trouble flashbacks, viewers learn Jesus and the Adams-Fosters' Coterie-mate Dennis (Josh Pence) went to local bar Duoro for a spontaneous boys night.
Even among the sports that do receive funding, cash is diverted to a tiny coterie of elite athletes: the £21m allocated to swimming before Rio was focused on nine "Golden Children".
Keen to transform the session into a "happening," they also invited members of their rock coterie, including Mick Jagger, Keith Richards, Marianne Faithful, Donovan and, bizarrely, Michael Nesmith of the Monkees.
In a letter released by state media, he—or his coterie—acknowledged his health problems and promised to leave "a new republic…in the hands of the new generations of Algerians".
For decades, the GOP has worked in concert with a coterie of right-wing institutions to cripple core functions of the state ranging from tax collection to public schools to healthcare.
Most of the original cast is back, with a few notable exceptions, and now Amy Sherman-Palladino has announced that another of her coterie of talent will be joining as well.
Thereafter, a coterie of new organizations included some other people inside the circle of trust, such as legal immigrants who refused to naturalize, illegal ones who could not, and guest workers.
All of the Viet Cong were dead, their bodies strewn around the embassy grounds where Ambassador Ellsworth Bunker came to inspect them with a coterie of Western journalists recording every image.
Traveling with the secretary Friday was a coterie of federal officials from across the administration, including the Department of Energy, Coast Guard, TSA, FDA, the Army Corps of Engineers and DHS.
The group's founders argued that a Jewish cabal had improper access to wealth, and that it was in the interest of this self-serving coterie to weaken national and racial borders.
After an international accord was reached to make peace in Bosnia in 1995, Mr. Mladic spent much of his time isolated in a mountain bunker surrounded by a coterie of officers.
We now have "the deep state," the scheming coterie in the intelligence community supposedly seeking to take down the president to protect its own power, as the viral Web conspiracy goes.
Trump is due to spend the President's Day weekend at his Mar-a-Lago estate in Florida, where he's been known to poll the coterie of longtime friends about staffing changes.
Personal Health Most mornings as I leave the Y after my swim and shower, I cross paths with a coterie of toddlers entering with their caregivers for a kid-oriented activity.
It seems to me that this coterie of artists, who knew each other at a crucial point in their careers, has never been acknowledged as an important force in New York.
King built a durable following among the Fox News coterie thanks in part to his unflinching efforts to demonize Muslims, racial justice activists, critics of torture, and victims of police violence.
But there are real monsters in Weiner's story as well, from the ascetic and ruthless revolutionary Sergei Nechaev to the coterie of sycophants (among them Alan Greenspan) who gathered around Rand.
In return, with the help of a coterie of 15 specialist staff, including psychiatrists and nurses, patients receive a bespoke "one client at a time" service, tailored around their every need.
Cofounders Linden Ellis and Sara Raffa see Coterie as an easy, affordable alternative to strolling the aisles of Party City or piecing together various items from Etsy and other online shops.
Maybe you saw Kanye West's instantly infamous "Famous" video over the weekend, in which he depicts himself in bed with a coterie of famous (GET IT?!?) celebrities, including Ray J himself.
He worries that a successor would hand him over to the I.C.C. And he's surrounded by a coterie that is probably even more determined than he is to stay in power.
Through his many hires and generous Pentagon grants, estimated to total more than $400 million over four decades, Mr. Marshall trained a coterie of experts and strategists in Washington and beyond.
The bristle of his work for The Omen netted him that Oscar, and his panicked atmospherics on the Alien score has won him a coterie of admirers in the experimental electronics community.
Or that maybe the coterie I'd been seeking required a different kind of people, those who could meet me and look beyond my cheeks, and nose, and eyes, and let me in.
There wasn't this coterie of high-powered men around him, so I had the ability to really shape the campaign, and shape the direction we were going in, and shape the hiring.
According to an interview with CNN earlier this week, the friends were determined to start their own company, bouncing ideas off the partners at Female Founders Fund until collectively striking on Coterie.
My own son was talking to kids in Sri Lanka while playing Minecraft at age 9 and he now keeps contact with a small coterie of players who have moved from snakes.
He and his friends formed a group called the Yamakasi, who became famous for their daring stunts, first among an underground coterie and then more broadly thanks to exposure on French television.
Imagine being in your late 20s and suddenly taking control of a small country, one whose government is dominated by a small and ruthless coterie of more experienced military and party officials.
She and Jean-Paul Sartre (pictured), plus their coterie of anti-bourgeois writers and muses, wrote and smoked at its tables, a short step from Sartre's little apartment on the rue Bonaparte.
Backed by a relatively younger coterie of Zanu-PF ministers known as the "G215" ("Generation 22003"), she had already managed to eject one rival, Joice Mujuru, from the vice-presidency in 22002.
Trump hasn't yet attacked the Clintons for trying to create a one world government to benefit a coterie of wealthy elites, but that's more or less where he seems to be going.
First, despite winning an election and being elevated to the position of the most powerful man in the world, Trump remains deeply insecure, constantly searching for validation from his coterie of cronies.
RELATED: How CNN captured video of the Roger Stone raid Stone's role with the Trump campaign An unconventional politician, Trump regularly looks to a coterie of informal advisers and friends for advice.
Space Pope and his coterie of nuns draws crowds at EVE fan gatherings, as followers kneel to kiss his papal ring (a diamond encrusted gift from his wife) and seek his blessings.
This division makes it impossible to ignore the fact that the supposedly permissionless and decentralized cryptocurrency is de facto controlled by a handful of mining pools and a tiny coterie of developers.
They then divided, as still they do today, Hindu from Muslim, Bengali from Punjabi, Indian left from British right, armies of die-hard imperialists from a small coterie of fair-minded realists.
The I.D.C. was created in 2011 by Mr. Klein, whose district includes parts of the Bronx and Westchester, and a coterie of breakaway Democrats who were dissatisfied with the Senate Democratic leadership.
Emotionally reticent, he has a quiet warmth — and a coterie of male friends whose supercilious sexism shifts into high gear at the sight of Joy (Robin Abramson, in her New York debut).
Coterie has eyes on various types of data to power its model (and make good policy pricing choices), highlighting information like business payment flows to vet company health, to pick an example.
Ukraine, as Mr. Zelensky has noted, is fighting two wars — one against entrenched corruption fueled by a coterie of oligarchs, the other against rebel secessionists in eastern Ukraine propped up by Russia.
But the coterie of middle-aged and elderly people running to replace the cranky old man currently serving as president of the United States may not get to do any of that.
Her three eldest children, Lucilla, Lucrezia and Ludovico (she has five in all), have opened LùBar, the city's newest, buzziest Sicilian restaurant, which fills daily with a coterie of artistic, attractive patrons.
Late Tuesday, Mr. Kalanick, 40, said he would step down as Uber's chief executive after a coterie of investors — including Benchmark, one of the company's biggest shareholders — pushed for him to resign.
Andrew M. Cuomo arrives here early on Sunday, he will bring a message of solidarity with the Israeli people, a smattering of economic ideas and a small coterie of red-eyed staffers.
The Queen of the Nile herself, played by the performer Nya and served by a coterie of club kids, commands the runway stage with a soaring voice and cape emblazoned with hieroglyphics.
It's nice to think writers associate and show each other manuscripts, and share manuscripts, but I have never had any coterie with whom I bounce ideas off of or show manuscripts to.
"Tommy Robinson … has acted as a lightning rod for an international coterie of far-right, anti-Muslim activists and extremists," said Nick Ryan, spokesman for British anti-racism group Hope not Hate.
Paul Aker, 48, tells the New York Daily News and a local Fox broadcast affiliate that a coterie of heavily armed US Marshals showed up at his door in Houston last Thursday.
And he most certainly should ask how the international community would ultimately deal with North Korea's human rights abuses, which arguably make Kim and his coterie subject to prosecution for crimes against humanity?
Mr. Xi has elevated a coterie of advisers who have built their careers in part on their ability to interpret and handle the United States, perhaps more so than any of his predecessors.
For example, the coterie of officers who apparently lied about what the now-fired Jason Van Dyke did on scene the night he shot McDonald 16 times—what's going to happen to them?
He has assiduously avoided being tagged as a stalking horse for [Steve] Bannon and his wing of hard-line nationalists or for senior adviser Jared Kushner and his coterie of business-friendly centrists.
More than merely taking a side in a long-running coterie debate, Look's selective disclosures of its method stand out because they represent a way of pointing to artistic process without fetishizing it.
And, while the sisters' jobs—Callie is a clerk for a conservative judge; Mariana is a software engineer—may be snake pits, the Coterie turns out to be surprisingly functional in a crisis.
PARIS — On a cold evening several weeks ago, a coterie of editors and influencers gathered around a candlelit table at the restaurant Caviar Kaspia here for a dinner party hosted by De Beers.
That, of course, is scary to the slippery-slope crowd, who worry that a small coterie of mostly male, mostly white, mostly obscenely wealthy people are making such enormous publishing decisions for everyone.
Charles M. Blow Special counsel Robert Mueller and his widening investigation seems to be closing in on Donald Trump and his coterie of corruption, but Trump and his emissaries aren't sitting idly by.
Senator Susan Collins, a moderate Republican, said that she's working with a coterie of Republican senators to make sure that witnesses can be called in the impeachment trial, the Bangor Daily News reported.
Musk had shaken awake the electric car market with bold thinking and a tech-heavy approach, and this even fresher concept galvanized a coterie of startups to gather funding and realize the whoosh.
Either way, it won't hurt poetry (any worse than it's already hurting) if for a few years a coterie of readers find their thoughts and feelings reflected back at them in verse form.
Neither Arab country has a coterie of Persian speakers, links to a proxy opposition force, or the depth of personnel needed for such an operation, the official said, speaking on condition of anonymity.
The foreign journalists, of which there are fewer, and the photographers, tend to be a little older than the US embeds, and hang around on the fringes of the louder American network coterie.
They then shared the code with an increasing number of other coders until it eventually leaked on Reddit, and was subsequently uploaded to Github by someone unknown to the original coterie of jailbreaking enthusiasts.
He employs a coterie of synthesizers on the 2015 haunted house flick We Are Still Here, but the grayscale grind is dark and oppressive rather than the playful fabulism of many of his peers.
Bolton and his coterie of Iran hawks at the NSC have been pushing for "action for action's sake," one administration official involved in the discussions said, without a clear strategy or set of goals.
They move into a shared living space called the Coterie, which is filled not only with communal bathrooms but also with many beautiful twentysomethings of an array of ethnicities, body shapes, and sexual orientations.
"Good Trouble will reunite the cast of The Fosters when the Adams-Foster clan comes to the Coterie to spend Christmas with Callie and Mariana (Cierra Ramirez)," reads Freeform's description of the special installment.
SparkFun: Similar to AdaFruit, Nathan Seidle started SparkFun out of his dorm room by selling electronics kits and oddball components to a coterie of engineers who wanted to explore exotic new sensors and systems.
Still, I'd envisioned working on my opus in Paris, sipping cognac in my own Café de Flore or Les Deux Magots, belonging to a new, artsy expatriate coterie of Hemingways and Steins and Fitzgeralds.
Much of the action on Good Trouble takes place in "The Coterie" — the communal living building where The Fosters' Mariana (Cierra Ramirez) and Callie (Maia Mitchell) put down roots in the City of Angels.
Pre-crash AIS had it docked off the coast of Grand Cayman, executing automatic trades for the usual coterie of batshit one-percenters who lived aboard Gulfstreams and kept their Picassos at the airport.
Members are trailed by a coterie of (mostly young) staffers, all of whom work slavishly long hours for minimal pay -- in support of their dream of making it -- or making a difference -- in politics.
Jimmy Tagliaferri spent Monday afternoon at New York Men's Day, where a selection of hot up-and-coming designers kicked off New York Fashion Week: Men's with a coterie of fresh and eclectic presentations.
They slowed after Mr. Mueller left his post as special counsel and no longer had easy access to a coterie of staff and official government channels for negotiating, people involved in the discussions said.
The elder Folsom elevated an Alabama tradition of tub-thumping economic populism in a state dominated for much of its history by a coterie of wealthy planters and industrialists, known as the Big Mules.
Still, the coterie of Secret Service personnel and other members of Mr. Pence's traveling party staying there will mean a substantial bill paid by taxpayers — with some of that going to Mr. Trump's hotel.
I'm sure they're out there in each country, but I can say with certainty that Indonesia offers an inspiring coterie of hard-working marine guides, bird guides, forest experts and other self-educated naturalists.
In Hour 1 'Nochebuena,' The Fosters visit the Coterie for Christmas and Callie struggles to tell her moms about quitting her clerkship, while Mariana agrees to volunteer for a holiday festival for the underprivileged.
When Bolton entered his post 17 months ago, Trump was agitating to withdraw from the nuclear deal with Iran, frustrated with the coterie of advisers who were urging him to remain in the accord.
He was, in the late '22015s and early '22011s, part of a coterie of young Burmese artists experimenting with abstraction, a style that's historically been little understood and even less supported within the country.
He's railed against Goldman Sachs but appointed advisers who made millions there; while styling himself as an economic populist, he's employed a coterie of advisers who are far richer than even typical political operatives.
Columbia University researcher Jonathan Albright has found more than a thousand posts submitted by a small coterie of accounts between the spring and fall of 2016 linking back to phony websites created by the IRA.
The old invalid is gone, but if Algeria is to move to "the better future" that Mr Bouteflika—or, more likely, his coterie—wrote about in his resignation letter, then much bigger changes are needed.
If Origin of Evil offers anything original in terms of horror tropes or conventions outside the usual coterie of jump scares and creepy children making ghoulish faces, it might be an outstanding jaunt through demonland.
Elsewhere "Coattails" is about the things we did and didn't do—the guitars are reminiscent of a forgotten Saddle Creek swoon song, while Rose harmonizes with a coterie of girls, everyone one of them her.
The coterie of scientists and Nobel Laureates who make up The Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists' Science and Security Board have acted as keepers of the Doomsday Clock since its post-WWII creation in 1947.
In fact, as special counsel Robert Mueller's investigation has painstakingly revealed, the ones to blame are a small coterie of officers in Russia's military intelligence agency GRU, acting no doubt under the orders of Putin.
Along the way, we meet the team's editor Ricardo Baca; his coterie of critics, responsible for detailing the flavors and sensation of each marijuana strain; and a columnist who discusses issues of parenting and weed.
Mr. Rubio's coterie in Florida insists, despite all signs to the contrary, that the polls are wrong: that surveys undercount Spanish-speaking Republicans, for example, because many polling firms do not have enough bilingual interviewers.
His video of a coterie of total strangers collectively losing it to Vengaboys' undeniable 1999 single "Boom, Boom, Boom, Boom!!" has since gone viral, and the world's probably just a little bit better for it.
McInerney isn't just one of the coterie of former officers who have backed the mogul despite his lack of military service and his continued attacks on the integrity of the nation's top generals and admirals.
But the contest sprawls far beyond their numbers, bringing in unions and lobbyists as well as a coterie of high-paid consultants each of whom has been active for months in trying to shape opinion.
The staff is a multinational coterie of volunteers, interns and young idealists who farm, forage, cook, serve and construct most of the resort each season, and the atmosphere hovers somewhere between summer camp and commune.
But as Coterie noted in our call, insurance is a somewhat low-margin business, meaning that policy growth, while good, needs to be pretty steep for the gross margin generated to stack up too high.
Backers include people like Facebook co-founder Dustin Moskovitz, former Google CEO Eric Schmidt, San Francisco power broker Ron Conway, and a coterie of major Democratic donors from across Silicon Valley, including fundraiser Amy Rao.
This song is a profound addition to the out-of-vogue storytelling-rap tradition, and Mr. Cole has always openly craved belonging to the coterie of artists who specialized in this sort of hip-hop.
A Chinese-born Canadian citizen with an Antiguan diplomatic passport, Mr. Xiao has lived in a serviced apartment at the Four Seasons in Hong Kong for years, attended to by a coterie of female bodyguards.
But the watchdog report harshly criticized some aspects of the inquiry, including the FBI's vetting of a so-called "dossier" of accurate, inaccurate and unconfirmed information on alleged ties between Russia and candidate Trump's coterie.
He has used the circumstances of his brief premiership to polish his credentials as a man of integrity who stood up to members of Bouteflika's coterie, many of whom are now jailed facing corruption charges.
In November — 14 months and much cleanup later — I drove the route to assess the scars as well as the renewal, from recently opened (or about to open) resorts to a new coterie of mermaids.
A first for the Smithsonian Institute's coterie of prestigious museums, the gallery will feature 4,500 square feet for an ambitious string of rotating exhibitions that will include first-person narratives, participatory experiences, and viewer-generated content.
He is a champion of new music, and his own work as a composer would place him squarely in the tradition of the Philharmonic's other composing music directors, a coterie that includes Boulez, Bernstein and Mahler.
Thereafter, the story tracks Yoav during his comically bleak and desperate attempt at metamorphosis as he moves between his French friends and a coterie of thuggish Israeli men as well as the opposing worlds they embody.
The last decade or so has witnessed a revival, led by local residents and a coterie of sympathetic patrons who did the dirty work required to clean it up and restore some of the lost dignity.
Surrounded by a small coterie of close aides dubbed the "Macron boys", the 41-year-old pushed through a series of reforms to liberalize the economy and cut taxes in his first 15 months in office.
When: Monday, January 2, 8pm Where: Pieterspace (420 West Avenue 33, Suite 10, Lincoln Heights, Los Angeles) Dancer and choreographer Jmy Kidd pushes the boundaries of contemporary movement, working with a cross-disciplinary coterie of collaborators.
But Mr. Orban instead wanted to lease whole swaths of land to a coterie of his allies, a move that Mr. Angyan predicted would make the countryside beholden to Mr. Orban's party, Fidesz, and its allies.
The second villain responsible for the Northeast boasting the highest natural gas prices in the continental U.S. is the coterie of politicians and environmentalists who fight new gas pipelines because of their opposition to fossil fuels.
GAIA Design, the Mexico City-based online furniture retailer, has raised $2.5 million from a coterie of Mexican and international investment funds and super angels, as interest in startups south of the U.S. border picks up.
Featuring a coterie of beloved indie outsiders like Imogen Poots and Alia Shawkat, as well as the now-late Anton Yelchin, Green Room packs a wallop of high-octane viciousness into the "teens versus rednecks" subgenre.
Their old flat, with its sunny terrace, was where an American coterie — which included Terry Southern, Bill Styron, James Baldwin, Harold Humes and George Plimpton — had concocted the fiction and poetry magazine called The Paris Review.
Motor racing as a pastime for the upper classes led to a small coterie of successful female racers in the 1920s and 1930s, and the manufacturers of the era were not blind to the promotional opportunities.
Since Mr. Trump has surrounded himself with a coterie of advisers obsessed with the twin threats of Iranian influence and "radical Islamic terror," it makes sense that the Saudis decided this was the moment to act.
A new — or at least newish — character has joined the coterie of Nazi-era bohemians awaiting the end of their world in "A Bright Room Called Day," Tony Kushner's feverish retooling of his first produced play.
Goldman joins a coterie of other advisers, including management consulting firm Deloitte and investment bank Centerview Partners, to advise on a "thorough and critical" review of Campbell's operations and holdings the food company announced this spring.
Had Mr. Trump and his coterie done nothing wrong, they would have had little to fear from the special counsel, and a report from Mr. Mueller that cleared him would be the gold seal of approval.
As I wrote last fall, it is also part of a small coterie of investment firms which have pushed their portfolio companies to IPO with reasonable speed (the other firm I noted at the time was Benchmark).
Tillerson's own silence since taking office has fueled the perception the State Department is losing influence to the White House, where President Donald Trump has a coterie of political advisers taking a greater role in foreign policy.
And the President who bemoaned the guardrails that checked him at every impulse-driven bend -- including a coterie of generals whose views of war were shaped by their own military experiences -- now finds himself unbridled and uneasy.
A small coterie of venereal disease researchers headed by John Cutler of the Public Health Service controlled the Guatemalan study and tissue samples from patients, who were listed by their full names in transfers of biological specimens.
"We haven't done a holiday episode yet and the idea of Christmas at the Coterie not only rolls off the tongue — but what's a communal Christmas look like?" executive producer and co-creator Joanna Johnson tells PEOPLE.
What follows is 45 minutes of whooping and hollering as a coterie of awards-hopeful Real Housewives make their way on set to shade their castmates, praise their castmates, and drink clear beverages of different bubbly levels.
After all, her move came just a week after the Times reported that a coterie of her rivals, including Amy Klobuchar, Sherrod Brown, and Cory Booker, "auditioned" before super-wealthy Obama donors, hoping to win their support.
Last weekend, Trump consulted his coterie of aides about going after National Football League players who have knelt during the national anthem; despite a tepid reaction, he launched into a weekend-long assault on the players anyway.
They were not exactly the Hells Angels pulling in, with a coterie of State Police, and other official vehicles escorting them from a park on Long Island and commandeering a highway lane to keep the pair safe.
But he retained an influential position as one of the coterie of informal advisers the President regularly speaks with by phone, often to the dismay of some of the President's top advisers who have clashed with Bannon.
The brand's first collection included oversized flannels, hoodies, and washed out jeans—items not dissimilar from the ones that Abloh had designed for Pyrex Vision, and, like Pyrex, Off-White was coveted by a coterie of influencers.
Multiple civil lawsuits filed over the years by various women who have accused Epstein of sexual abuse also allege that he was aided by a coterie of female assistants and employees, primarily a British socialite, Ghislaine Maxwell.
Along with his wife, Barbara Brennan, an energy healing teacher and author, and a coterie of pets, Mr. Wilner splits his time between Manhattan and Montauk, N.Y. MONITOR THE ANIMALS I'm out of bed at 6 a.m.
He cultivated epistolary relationships with a coterie of admirers, many of whom were women—several, he bragged to a friend, were women "of Condition"—and he began to preserve his correspondence with an eye to future publication.
While the inquiry began with Mr. Peralta, it eventually engulfed a Dickensian cast of characters: two Orthodox Jewish businessmen, an influential union leader, a hedge fund mogul, a coterie of top police officials — even the city's mayor.
"We haven't done a holiday episode yet and the idea of Christmas at the Coterie not only rolls off the tongue — but what's a communal Christmas look like?" executive producer and co-creator Joanna Johnson told PEOPLE.
If there was any tension between Trump and Kim, they did not show it as they emerged from their seclusion and proceeded to a second meeting and working lunch — this time joined by a larger coterie of aides.
Though a performance at a 1991 Tim Buckley tribute concert introduced him to a hip coterie of New York music insiders, he was wary of comparisons to the senior Buckley, and stayed tight-lipped about him during interviews.
Everyone who hit Japan after, from Bob Sapp to AJ Styles, can look to Hansen and his coterie of fellow big Yankees for the way to cut out a thriving career while splitting time between Japan and America.
Joel Benenson, Mandy Grunwald, Jim Margolis, John Anzalone, John Podesta, Mook, Huma Abedin and Dan Schwerin were among the small coterie who huddled in Abedin's mostly bare corner office overlooking the East River at the campaign's Brooklyn headquarters.
Benjamin was loosely attached to the Frankfurt School: a coterie of Marxist scholars that included Theodor Adorno, Max Horkheimer, and Herbert Marcuse (the last of whom shared a house with Sontag and her then husband in Cambridge, Massachusetts).
Cohen was a key figure in the insular coterie that runs Trump's personal and business affairs, and he's now one of the few people ever to have defected from that group and spoken publicly about its inner workings.
Which, in turn, means that a small coterie of global casting directors — the individuals responsible for selecting the Next Big Thing from modeling agency books and putting them on the runway before anyone else — are becoming more important.
A new exhibition at Beirut's Sursock Museum tells the history of that period through her friendships and relationships with a coterie of artists and writers who would become some of the most important artist voices in the region.
With Mr. Trump lacking elective-office experience or the political coterie that accompanies establishment candidates to Washington, administration officials said Mr. Obama would probably spend more time with him than was typical for other incoming and outgoing presidents.
In this environment, anyone who wishes to know what the pope really thinks is better off ignoring official Vatican offices and instead listening to the coterie of papal advisers who take to Twitter to snipe against his critics.
A coterie of other national security conservatives, including a top aide to Senator John McCain of Arizona, also lobbied for him, and Defense Secretary Jim Mattis, who has worked with General McMaster, encouraged him to take the job.
But the watchdog report is also expected to criticize some aspects of the inquiry, including the FBI's vetting of a so-called "dossier" of accurate, inaccurate and unconfirmed information on alleged ties between Russia and candidate Trump's coterie.
The FBI is so powerful — it can, with court approval, issue subpoenas, tap phones, intercept emails and conduct round-the-clock surveillance — that even a small coterie of its agents can find ways of influencing the political process.
As is often the case at such enormous fairs, the strongest booths tend to be those devoted to a single artist, and there are plenty of examples of this at Frieze, including a standout coterie of women artists.
When the primary process for determining the Leader of the Free World has more in common with Andy Dick's pleather-coated fever dream than any sort of esteemed democratic coterie, you get pretty used to spectacularly mind-boggling happenings.
The past ten years of Thai politics, in short, have seen a protracted and destructive battle between the "red-shirts" loyal to Mr Thaksin and the "yellow-shirts" loyal to the king and the coterie of generals around him.
They were spurred on by a coterie of left-leaning consumer groups, like Free Press, Demand Progress and Fight for the Future, which organized a full "day of action" in an attempt to save net neutrality over the summer.
But a coterie of leftists, including Brazil's Lula da Silva, Argentina's Néstor Kirchner, and Venezuela's Hugo Chavez, with the support of soccer legend Diego Armando Maradona, buried the idea, arguing that free-trade agreements were an imperialist U.S. weapon.
Then again, Pen was surely no ordinary child, dressed by his mother to resemble a Renaissance prince, with embroidered blouses, velvet trousers, and long curls flowing under wide-brimmed hats, as was the fashion among the Anglo-Florentine coterie.
Oleksiy Honcharuk, the former prime minister, said in an interview that President Volodymyr Zelensky fired him and most of his cabinet earlier this month after he crossed the interests of a coterie of powerful insiders in the Ukrainian economy.
The disparity between his calm and respectful acceptance of the report, despite its criticisms of him, stands in stark contrast to the ravings of Donald Trump and his coterie of sycophants in the G.O.P. caucus and at Fox News.
Their advent coincides with the stepped-up visibility, and clout, of political outliers like Ruth Bader Ginsburg, whose weathered features loom large these days on theater screens, to say nothing of a voluble coterie of older women in Congress.
We actually say yes, we will bind this policy, or no, we won't," said Coterie CEO David McFarland, adding that "most of the time we have a pretty broad appetite so we can write a good bit of business.
To opponents of the president, the case confirms that she is just like her father, the military dictator Park Chung-hee: an isolated, authoritarian leader who uses state power against critics while shielded by a small coterie of advisers.
Kaia Gerber celebrated her birthday during New York Fashion Week with a coterie of very famous friends and a jaw-dropping ensemble that pays homage to one of the most memorable looks worn by her mother, supermodel Cindy Crawford.
Five years ago, the fortunes of Mulberry, Britain's largest luxury leather-goods manufacturer, were buoyed by booming sales of its high-quality accessories at accessible luxury prices, bags swinging from the arms of a cool coterie of British "it" girls.
Though Brazil is at the center of an epidemic now affecting more than two dozen countries, many of the dubious claims about Zika are born abroad, their purveyors a well-known coterie of critics of genetically modified crops and creatures.
And while Mattis might be on an inevitable collision course, pitted against the irrational views of Michael Flynn and the rest of Trump's coterie, he could be exactly the former Marine who America needs to stand guard in these battles.
MODELS I think it's important to establish a little coterie of couples whose relationship behavior you like, and could conceivably model yourself after, especially if you don't have a lot of working examples of relationships in your regular person life.
Art Nouveau had until then been the province of a small avant-garde coterie, but now fallaciously dubbed "le Style Mucha" it suddenly had a vast new audience, and Mucha, via Bernhardt, became a celebrity in his own right, overnight.
A coterie of men in a handful of top-tier executive roles, while the majority of entry-level, retail, design and distribution center jobs are held by women, creating a gendered, pyramid employment structure reflected across sectors in the fashion industry.
The agency's leaders have done well: an investigation by the Organised Crime and Corruption Reporting Project and Novaya Gazeta, an independent Russian newspaper, claimed that a small coterie of FSO men have acquired oodles of prime real estate for a pittance.
A coterie of diehard Maoists and neo-leftists oppose GM foods partly because of concern about food safety but mainly because they fear that foreigners, especially Americans, will use their mastery of genetic engineering to gain control of China's food supply.
But some observers say those are sticking plaster solutions, and that the long-term answer — real economic reform — is blocked by a coterie of advisors and ministers Aliyev inherited from his father and whom he is reluctant to push out.
Many former Soviet republics were expected to transition to democracy after communism's fall in the 73s — but have, instead, been taken over by a coterie of strongmen who see the country they rule as a combination of a piggybank and playground.
If anything tipped recent attention her way, it was the mini-retrospective she organized over a year ago on Greer Lankton, the pioneering 1980s transgender artist who fashioned her own personal universe, making a coterie of hand-sewn, mannequin-size dolls.
Like national security advisor H. R. McMaster and Defense Secretary James Mattis, Kelly was supposed to be one of the "adults in the room"—a coterie of mature figures whose whose military experience would ground the Trump White House in reality.
In exploring the artistic ferment of Paris between the wars, that book turned the spotlight away from Picasso and his circle and onto the lesser-known coterie of Jewish expatriates from the Russian empire, artists like Marc Chagall and Sonia Delaunay.
At least a dozen government officials, policy advisers and members of the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) told Reuters that policy making has mostly been handed over to Modi's own office and to a coterie of right-wing and nationalist economists.
Earlier this month, the congressman, in blue blazer and open-collar shirt, was in a poor neighborhood, walking through a fruit and vegetable market trailed by a coterie of black women — members of a health care workers union that supports him.
Saudis are not accustomed to young rulers: King Salman is 80, the late King Abdullah died last year aged 90, his predecessor King Fahd died in 2005 aged 84 and each was surrounded by a coterie of similarly aged royal advisers.
" While Coterie does partner with external insurance entities (more on that in a second), it handles a lot of the work in-house: "We actually have the underwriting control, so we don't we don't ship it off to 10 different carriers.
Editorial A coterie of Republicans is planning to have the Senate vote before July 4 on a bill that could take health insurance away from up to 23 million people and make changes to the coverage of millions of others.
She gracefully connected the good-old-boys'-club cover-up happening around her in the Senate with the coterie of protectors who have hovered around Trump — and other men who seem to believe they're too rich to fail — his entire life.
It is a model that is largely untested in New York, among the last American cities with a robust coterie of news organizations covering local government, and one that has struck many observers as a break from decades of political norms.
In that regard, Putin's rule is more akin to that of mafia don, dependent on a close coterie of "soldiers" who are willing to do his bidding as long as he protects them and they share in state-generated lucre.
Much of the film consists of conversations among O-Ei, Tetsuzo (Hokusai, stripped even further of reverence through the use of his real name), and their coterie of fellow artists about the demands of their industry and the nature of good craft.
On Tuesday's episode, "Parental Guidance Suggested," Stef (Teri Polo) and Lena (Sherri Saum) visit their girls at their new DTLA home "The Coterie," only to come face to face with the harsh realities of the Adams-Foster daughters' new life in Los Angeles.
There's a mass revolt of cultist fanatics, and the Han Dynasty's sluggish and inept response is what reveals the depths of its incapacity, while the rise of a coterie of effective commanders and governors opens the door to a series of coups.
Chou Wen-chung, a composer, teacher and cultural diplomat who taught a coterie of celebrated and award-winning Chinese composers and who tended to the legacy of Edgard Varèse, the linchpin of American modernism, died on Friday at his home in Manhattan.
It has really changed the game of launching a label, and Plan de Ville was created to solve the problem of providing a high-end customer service experience on behalf of the emerging brands that have inspired a new coterie of excited consumers.
Democrats point to the surge in low-dollar contributions as evidence that the party has shifted the paradigm for campaign fundraising away from a reliance on the coterie of wealthy donors and outside groups that have leveraged outsize influence in politics for years.
"This is beyond anything anyone even thought about in their worst nightmare," Mickey Kantor, a longtime Clinton family friend who was the United States trade representative and secretary of commerce under President Bill Clinton, said of the new conservative coterie around Mr. Trump.
After Sunday night's game, James reportedly insisted on three portraits: one with his mother, Gloria; one with his coterie of close friends, some of whom he has known since childhood; and one with his wife and their three children — on Father's Day.
The coterie of pimps who all meet up at Leon's Diner to eat greasy bacon and talk shop are portrayed as tough, sexist, flamboyant braggarts—but also as unhappy cowards trapped in a system from which they find little respite and no escape.
Mr. Nunes, supported by a rotating coterie of conspiracists in Congress and the usual suspects on right-wing cable news, has labored to divert attention from the expanding Russia investigation by tossing out sinister-sounding allegations of wrongdoing by federal law enforcement officials.
By conflating censorship with the responsible maintenance of its platforms, and by providing "rules" that are really just capricious decisions by a small coterie of the rich and powerful, Facebook and others have created a free-for-all with no consistent philosophy.
The move was seen as an effort to assuage the thousands of protesters who have camped outside the country's military headquarters in the capital, Khartoum, for the last seven days, demanding that a civilian government replace Mr. al-Bashir and his military coterie.
The secretary is widely seen as lacking influence with Mr. Trump; often eclipsed on the world stage by the ambassador to the United Nations, Nikki Haley; accessible only to a small coterie of aides; and detached from an increasingly demoralized diplomatic corps.
Whispers had reached their zenith before his triumphant — now final — show for the house, with an '80s-inspired couture collection, no music and personalized seats for the coterie of editors and buyers invited to the private Parisian mansion where it was held.
Until recently, Mr. Trump had talked loudly about some of these goals while allowing himself to be talked out of following through on them by a coterie of advisers that included Secretary of State Rex W. Tillerson; Defense Secretary Jim Mattis; Lt. Gen.
For his spring 2700 collection, Yves Saint Laurent was inspired in part by childhood memories of his mother's dress in 21960s Algeria — and also by the flea market clothes sported by his coterie of female friends, such as Paloma Picasso and Donna Jordan.
Despite airing on a niche cable channel, the show found a loyal audience that included an elite coterie of celebrity fans who appeared regularly as guest judges, including Lily Tomlin, Debbie Reynolds, Vanessa Williams, Margaret Cho, Amber Rose, Rosie Perez and Khloé Kardashian.
In New York, he reunited with his friends Hugh Masekela and Jonas Gwangwa, prominent South African jazz musicians who were also living in exile, and befriended a coterie of Harlem-based writers, including Amiri Baraka (then known as LeRoi Jones) and Ishmael Reed.
In a film where Pink rides a unicorn and Justin Timberlake cuts carrots, the most riotous guest scenes belong to the coterie of Will Arnett, Chelsea Peretti, Eric Andre and Mike Birbiglia, whose running media commentary inflates and punctuates the film at perfect intervals.
It attracted 3,500 business, financial and political bigwigs, and then left a bad taste in the mouth when less than two weeks later he locked up a coterie of Saudi princes and businessmen in the same Ritz Carlton hotel where the foreigners had stayed.
The second thing is that British politics is a profoundly dysfunctional game played by the British equivalent of Italy's La Casta: an inward-looking coterie of politicians and political journalists who live in each other's pockets and then periodically engage in a blood bath.
A sizable coterie of editors and buyers had come to the show, too, curious to see more from the man who, alongside the likes of Demna Gvasalia, has emerged as a lodestar of casual streetwear in the heart of deeply uncasual Parisian high fashion.
On October 28, after learning that the federal grand jury in Portland had issued a sealed indictment against him for violating U.S. immigration laws, Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh and a coterie of followers attempted to flee the United States to Bermuda in two chartered Learjets.
Advertise on Hyperallergic with Nectar Ads In her memoir, Blood Memory: An Autobiography, Martha Graham, the pioneering modern-dance choreographer, recalled an incident from the early 18983s, sometime after she and a coterie of collaborators had begun teaching summer courses at Bennington College, in Vermont.
He is hiring a coterie of advisers that give him more political muscle than the average mega-donor, and is positioning himself as a lighthouse to other wayward billionaires who want to get involved in politics but don't know where to send their money.
When it matters, the proposal has more than enough detail to signal to President Trump and the Republican Party's coterie of oligarch financial backers that their personal taxes will be slashed, not by a few hundred or thousands of dollars, but by millions and millions.
If there was any community in which Mr. Ghosn seemed to finally fit, it was the global elite, a coterie of chief executives and billionaire philanthropists who have yachts in the south of France and standing invitations to the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland.
The perception that such an approach can yield success in Washington has been exacerbated in the Trump era, veteran lobbyists say, because of Mr. Trump's inclination to value the counsel of a small coterie of friends, relatives and allies over the federal government's experts.
Once a month, he is host to free luncheons at his cabaret for an adoring coterie of older Montmartroise, local residents who seem to have known each other for years and whose tight bonds keep Montmartre an authentic Parisien village beneath the tourist crowds.
But when you take a broader view, you can't help noticing that of the 10 writing and directing credits in the first five episodes, nine are shared by inner members of the show's coterie — Darin Morgan, Glen Morgan, James Wong and the creator, Chris Carter.
She held the design helm at Valentino, Moncler and Tod's — some stints longer than others — but more recently became part of a coterie of onetime fashion stars appearing to step away from the frenzied game of musical chairs at the top of the luxury industry.
We will see how that other "lord of misrule," Donald Trump, with his coterie of enablers in the Senate and the Department of Justice, fares as he faces an impeachment process and a difficult election in 2020 — should he survive that long in office.
Like so many others who have covered Trump and his coterie of dullards, I have often been caught up in questions of whether despots have blackmail leverage over Trump or offer him favors; of whether he recognizes his kind or he's an easily influenced idiot.
In addition to his own frequent visits — with an expensive coterie of aides and security in tow — most of Mr. Trump's cabinet members and about half of House Republicans have been seen at or spent money at Trump-branded properties, according to an independent tally.
But some in the president's orbit continue to argue that Trump's congressional allies would provide a strong counterweight to the House Democratic impeachment managers — a coterie of lawmakers who will be hand-picked by Pelosi to prosecute the case against Trump on the floor.
But time is running out, tensions are growing, and hard-liners in Iran—including many who have called to pull the country out of the NPT—might soon have free rein to steer national policy in Tehran, just as Trump's coterie has in Washington.
Moross, best known for his film scores to westerns including "The Big Country," was a member of Aaron Copland's coterie and brings the familiar sound we call American, with its modal harmonies and widely spaced voicings, to a work of astonishing breadth and beauty.
Unified around the theme of how imagination shapes the world, different issues tackle everything from a man who becomes immortal simply because he wishes it to a nighttime coterie of house cats who believe they can dream themselves to the top of Earth's food chain.
The Judiciary Committee also approved subpoenas for a coterie of Trump administration has-beens, including former chief of staff Reince Priebus, former adviser Steve Bannon, former communications director Hope Hicks and former White House counsel Don McGahn (along with his former deputy Ann Donaldson).
The statement is much more than a mere dedication, as many of the album's highlights come from the inclusion of voices other than Hynes—from the Paris Is Burning samples that dot the lovely "Desirée" to the coterie of female voices that provide star turns throughout.
" Cohen, part of the #NeverTrump conservative coterie, recounted his experience working with a friend on Trump's transition team -- despite his personal opposition to Trump, Cohen had still hoped to discreetly "steer good people to an administration that understandably wanted nothing to do with the likes of me.
North Korea's state-run Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) reported that Kim attended the opening of the Games Monday alongside his wife and a coterie of top officials from the country -- including Kim Yong Chol, the diplomat whose purported demise last week turned out to be untrue.
Last November, in preparation for a day that I was confident would be marked by the greatest collective release of breath in my lifetime, I put together an A-to-Z children's coterie of the best (or most persistent) memes of the nightmarish 63 presidential race.
Also on hand will be a host of regulators who oversee the big banks, including Jacob J. Lew, the United States Treasury secretary, as well as an influential coterie of central bankers who determine monetary policy, including Mario Draghi, the president of the European Central Bank.
Enter Coterie, a nine-month-old, New York-based startup that was incubated with the help of the investment firm Female Founders Fund and that is assembling party kits that it's delivering to customers' doorsteps, for everything from birthday parties to baby showers to friendversary get-togethers.
Unlike on the first leg of his international tour, in Saudi Arabia, where King Salman bin Abdulaziz Al Saud's lavish embrace of the president and his coterie was almost obscene in its over-the-top opulence, in Israel Trump faces a minefield of his own making.
By showing an interest in the art of the objects populating the lives of the majority of American Catholics, the celebrity coterie of this year's Met Gala demonstrated an awareness, however subconscious, of the Hispanic and Latino Americans who are the religion's future in this country.
The Secret Service traveling with Mr. Clinton established that Mr. Cruz was on the other plane with a small coterie of aides; when Mr. Cruz learned that the former president was there, he expressed interest in saying hello, according to the people briefed on the encounter.
It would have been a typical late-night New York City gathering but for the smiling participants: Mayor Bill de Blasio; the outgoing police commissioner, William J. Bratton; the man just named to replace him, Chief James P. O'Neill; and a coterie of senior police officials.
Plans that prepared for nationwide civil defense under Eisenhower today simply focus on saving a coterie of top government officials—for example, Clinton adviser George Stephanopoulos would have been saved, but press secretary Dee Dee Myers, along with almost all of us, would not have been.
This tension provides the backdrop for a Museum of Modern Art exhibition opening Tuesday, "Club 57: Film, Performance, and Art in the East Village, 1978-1983," focusing on the barely five-year existence of Club 57 and the close-knit coterie of artists who called it home.
"In Vino" examines the story of Rudy Kurniawan, a wine collector of mysterious wealth and origin, who fooled a coterie of even wealthier collectors along with covetous hangers-on, bilking them all with fraudulent bottles of rare, old wines, many of which he created in his kitchen.
Startups through their D.C.-focused advocacy groups, like Engine, also pledged to get involved, and a coterie of members of Congress, all Democrats, said they would hold a press conference outside of the U.S. Capitol later in the day to stress their support for the open internet.
So far, these trailers have offered little more than brief glimpses of the fairy tale world so many have come to love over the years: Belle's pastoral French village, the Beast's castle, the coterie of delightful enchanted castle objects, and, of course, that iconic ballroom scene.
Mr. Richardson was among a powerful coterie of global leaders, human rights advocates, journalists and diplomats who had championed Ms. Aung San Suu Kyi for her principled stand against Myanmar's military junta, which kept her under house arrest for more than a decade and a half.
While busy Revolucni street houses shops like Naoko (Revolucni 24), a source for quirky housewares, Petrska's magic thrives on its narrow lanes at places like Showroom (Klimentska 3), a site for a coterie of indie designers, several of whom have ateliers in the back of the shop.
In spite of the vitriol and outrage surrounding the appearance of Drag Syndrome, the assembled protestors were fairly minimal and non-preventative to the theater-going experience, and basically matched one-for-one by a coterie of Grand Rapids bike cops on hand to keep the peace.
In middle age, Woodhead explained, Arden fell in with a coterie of patrician lesbians who had moved to a stretch of what was then still called Avenue A ("the heart of the slums," as the Times noted reprovingly; "the Amazon Enclave," said wags of the era).
NEW DELHI — Under a highway bridge in New Delhi, where a large protest had shut down several lanes of traffic, a coterie of veteran dissidents took turns speaking: men with shaggy beards, singers strumming guitars, social activists so impassioned that spit flew from their wet lips.
He is still surrounded by the same coterie of advisers, is remaining a political independent and is as convinced as ever that people will respond to his well-honed pleas to confront the billionaire class, provide health care for all and offer tuition-free access to college.
"She took me on as this country bumpkin, and it was like a rite of passage to be accepted into that circle," of the superstars who formed a stable core of Ms. Sui's runway coterie, people such as Naomi Campbell, Linda Evangelista, Kristen McMenamy and Christy Turlington.
Beyond the companies that fuel the fantasy world — ESPN and Yahoo, DraftKings and FanDuel — a coterie of other entities, from niche analysis websites to merch stores to sports bars hosting live contests, have popped up to cater to fans and cash in on this growing market.
But as his trial over lying to Congress and tampering with a witness nears its end, Stone has left his defense in the hands of external factors: lawyers, God, the race card, a coterie of MAGA-world figures and, if all else fails, President Donald Trump.
Allegedly reporting to her and to Epstein was a coterie of assistants in their early 20s, and prosecutors are examining whether their experience with the accused predator should categorize them as an accomplice or as one of the abused, the people familiar with the matter said.
Like his New York School contemporaries in the US (about whom he was almost certainly unaware), Kholin's diaries and poems seem to draw much of their energy from the gossip and shit-talking of an inwardly looking coterie that had no real audience outside their own circle.
"This scares him more than anything he could imagine," writes Haddon, speaking at one point of a would-be assassin who has the misfortune of encountering the goddess Diana and her coterie of fierce women warriors before he can murder a young girl he has kidnapped.
"Obviously Vigano is being used as a weapon by a whole coterie of people who can't stand Pope Francis and the changes he wants to make to the Church," said Alexander Stille, professor of international journalism at Columbia University in New York and author of several books on Italy.
When Mr. Obama appeared before reporters in the Pentagon briefing room last month to discuss his administration's strategy for fighting the Islamic State in Syria, he was flanked by a coterie of top national security officials, including Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr.; Defense Secretary Ashton B. Carter; Gen.
More by accident than design, the country has a coterie of players who have specialised in Test cricket—though the fact that the world's most lucrative T20 league is based in India, which bans players from its national nemesis from participating in the circuit, may be a contributing factor.
Trump, who insisted on the presence of voter fraud by the millions in an election he ultimately won, and a coterie of prominent Republicans spent the week after the 2018 midterms delegitimizing the very notion of counting all the votes in key races in Florida, Georgia, and Arizona.
We met at the small cottage Reichardt rents for a few months each year in Portland, where she socializes with a small coterie of artists, including her occasional writing partner, the Oregon-based novelist Jon Raymond, and Todd Haynes, who has executive-produced five of her six feature films.
None of which excuses Jar Jar fucking Binks, the film's coterie of overtly racist alien caricatures, or the fact that Phantom is full of dire-logue written by someone who's seemingly never met another human being in his life and delivered as if at gunpoint by otherwise talented actors.
On campus, Mr. Roma often surrounded himself with a coterie of male and female students who would sort his negatives and act as teaching assistants, the five women said, adding that Mr. Roma would regularly invite students on outings or to gatherings at his house in Park Slope.
It all sounds like a bizarre, modern-day version of Trump idol Andrew Jackson's so-called "kitchen cabinet," the term the press used for Jackson's coterie of informal advisers after his regular Cabinet imploded amid scandal and infighting — except this one is made up of cable news talking heads.
The best vines seemed to combine all of the elements listed above — editing, music, comedy — to make entertainment magic: Sure, Vine gave the world what seemed to be an endless coterie of shaggy-haired, white teenage boys who were all friends and seemed to be vaguely famous for being famous.
His shots are peopled with workers at the camp, a coterie of tourists and visitors, survivors at a reunion gathering, and the artist himself — who was making the risky decision to travel while Jewish at a time when Eastern Europe was still mostly stripped of any trace of that population.
Others, including Mrs Litvinenko, call for more: a comprehensive travel ban on Mr Putin's coterie of politicians, spooks and oligarchs; a boycott of Russia's football World Cup in 2018; a public inquiry into the mysterious death of Alexander Perepilichny, a Russian whistleblower who collapsed near his home in Surrey in 2012.
In "Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee," Dee Brown describes the treaty, signed at the end of Red Cloud's War: For a few more weeks [Red Cloud] kept the treaty makers waiting, and then on November 6, surrounded by a coterie of triumphant warriors, he came riding into Fort Laramie.
Since then, a small but fierce coterie of bands (primarily British, but with a few notable American exceptions) have been burning up the Bandcamp metal charts and annoying the absolute bejesus out of extreme metal's scummy fascist contingent in a new wave of militant, outspoken, and unapologetically anti-fascist extreme metal.
While Los Angeles contemporaries like Rudi Gernreich explored futurism with topless swimsuits, thongs and monokinis, Mr. Galanos stuck to supplying the "little nothing" dresses that were his trademark to a coterie of celebrity loyalists like Marlene Dietrich, Rosalind Russell and Diana Ross, and to the moneyed elite of both coasts.
Anne Olivier Bell, who edited the diaries of Virginia Woolf into five landmark volumes and was a rare surviving link to the Bloomsbury Group, the coterie of English artists and intellectuals prominent in the first half of the last century, died on July 21980 at her home in Firle, England.
Men responsive to the insistent call of sexual pleasure, beset by shameful desires and the undauntedness of obsessive lusts, beguiled even by the lure of the taboo — over the decades, I have imagined a small coterie of unsettled men possessed by just such inflammatory forces they must negotiate and contend with.
Whether or not Mr. Cohen or Mr. Manafort end up directly aiding the Mueller investigation, the twin courtroom dramas on Tuesday have — at the least — added fuel to the argument that a president who rose to power pledging to "drain the swamp" surrounded himself with a coterie of unscrupulous advisers.
Dia:Beacon was created by the foundation's director, Michael Govan, another Krens protégé (who now heads the Los Angeles County Museum of Art), and it fulfills the Krens model: It is intended for long-term displays of the foundation's deep collection of works by a coterie of mostly male Minimalists and Conceptualists.
But in the 10 days since he was acquitted by the Senate, he has grown more vocal about it and turned paranoia into policy, purging his White House of more career officials, bringing back loyalists and tightening the circle around him to a smaller and more faithful coterie of confidants.
But he will leave behind a coterie of leaders like President Robert Mugabe of Zimbabwe, 93, who has been in power for 37 years, and President Teodoro Obiang Nguema Mbasogo of Equatorial Guinea, 74, who has ruled for close to 38 years, beating Mr. dos Santos by just a few weeks.
" He made the comment in an interview with the art historian Barbara Rose, and added, intriguingly, that he could not discount the possible influence of a coterie of artists he had met in Paris in the early '60s who branded their efforts "sans chassis" — which is French for "off the stretcher.
Mr. Rainbow, 35, who uses his own video equipment, home computer and wit for his politically sassy videos — in which he pretends to interview and insult the president and his coterie before breaking into song — took a moment to look at a headline in The Washington Post on his phone.
The first is a replay of what happened to the fashion business 25 years ago, when brands began to dominate a landscape once ruled by a global coterie of mom-and-pop boutiques, said Thomas Tochtermann, an independent adviser to fashion and jewelry companies who is based in Hamburg, Germany.
According to the prosecution's memo, "a large coterie of cooperating witnesses" — among them, Colombian cartel members, Mexican couriers and United States-based distributors — is ready to testify about every aspect of Mr. Guzmán's organization, including bribes paid to politicians and murders of rival drug dealers and government and law enforcement officials.
When Linden Ellis, a founder of the party goods company Coterie, found out some friends were going on a honeymoon in Maine, where she grew up, she thought she had the best, most New England welcome present idea in the land: lobster rolls waiting in their hotel room when they arrived.
" Another approach was suggested by journalist Kerry Eleveld, writing in DailyKos: "Why not introduce a handful of reforms all centered around Trump's corrupt coterie, almost like baseball cards but with the offender's picture, a title for their offense and a brief description of the abuse the law would seek to eradicate.
Woody does his best to rehabilitate Forky and convince this glue-caked Gumby of his own value, but the wispy thing soon gets itself into more trouble involving an ominous set of characters, including an unloved 1950s pull-string doll named Gabby Gabby (Christina Hendricks) and a coterie of creepy ventriloquist dolls.
The White House has been aided by a coterie of consiglieres, like Congressman Devin Nunes (R-California), who have astonishingly accused the FBI of lying to federal judges in obtaining electronic surveillance warrants, and the President's personal attorney, Rudy Giuliani, who compared FBI agents executing lawful court-ordered investigative activity to German stormtroopers.
The first Treasury secretary, in the 203th century, Hamilton became a 21st-century rap-musical phenomenon, and a small coterie of history-minded Hamiltonians swelled by millions to include not just well-heeled adults shelling out up to thousands of dollars a ticket but teenagers rapping Hamilton's life story at the dinner table.
Trump was joined on the South Lawn of the White House by a coterie of aides, including his top economic advisers: Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin, Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross, US Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer, Office of Management and Budget Director Mick Mulvaney and Kevin Hassett, chairman of the council of economic advisers.
But the first episode does an efficient job of establishing three central settings: in addition to the Coterie, there's Callie's clerkship, where her Ivy League peers vie for the attention of the judge (crisply played by Roger Bart), and Mariana's dot-com gig, whose diverse sales pitch turns out to be a sham.
Though the campaign's overall staff on the ground was relatively small, its effort was augmented by a large coterie of local elected officials who endorsed Mr. Biden, like Representatives Marc Veasey, Colin Allred and Sylvia Garcia, who organized their own get-out-the-vote efforts for Mr. Biden, particularly during early voting.
Geoff Schumacher, the author of "Howard Hughes: Power, Paranoia & Palace Intrigue" (2008), said in a phone interview that there had been no logical reason for Mr. Hughes to be in the desert without his usual coterie of aides, and that the handwriting on the will was not even close to Mr. Hughes's.
Mr. Trump and Mr. Pence drew sharp criticism this week after the vice president and his coterie of family, aides and security stayed a night at the Trump International Golf Links & Hotel in Doonbeg during a trip to Ireland, despite the fact that it was 181 miles from his meetings in Dublin.
Nevertheless, it's not hard to imagine how the attention, however minimal, of being included on a debate stage can be leveraged into a better paycheck down the line—whether it's hopping on a corporate board, or grabbing a luxe lobbying gig, or being absorbed within cable news' elite coterie of green-room layabouts.
Campy and dripping with theater references, the gang from The Muppet Show escape to New York to hobnob with a coterie of stars from Liza Minnelli to legendary Sardi's owner Vincent Sardi Jr., all while trying to make it big on Broadway so that Kermit and Miss Piggy can finally get hitched.
Mrs May has belatedly come to accept the need for compromise—to the fury of a small coterie of hardline Brexiteers who would sooner crash out of Europe, kamikaze-style, than maintain any kind of obligation to the EU. The prime minister's continued claims that Britain can simply walk away play into their hands.
Mr. Tillerson, the former chief executive officer of ExxonMobil, left a legacy as the worst secretary of state in modern memory by cutting the department's budget, forcing out scores of senior diplomats and marginalizing those who remained, leaving many top jobs vacant and cloistering himself with a small coterie of aides unfamiliar with the institution.
More than 2,250 miles away from the Bay Area, a coterie of Trump-hating tech activists — including Reid Hoffman, the co-founder of LinkedIn — devoted millions of dollars and countless hours in November toward securing Democrats another term in the governor's mansion and capturing more than a dozen new seats in the state's legislature.
The books are being published at the same time new transcripts are released by the House documenting how Mr. Trump's personal lawyer, Rudolph W. Giuliani, and a coterie of allies, including Mr. Mulvaney, sought to sideline career diplomats and other foreign policy officials who warned against enlisting Ukraine to help the president's personal political interests.
In the 285st century, such monetary largess on behalf of the arts is, to a great extent, associated with different groups: ministries of culture in Europe; the National Endowment for the Arts, foundations, and state and local government programs in the United States; art museums; and a small coterie of very rich art collectors.
Near the end of his years in office, however, Mr. Stern was accused in a federal class-action lawsuit of having discriminated against black and Hispanic employees in awarding jobs and setting salaries, while rewarding a handpicked coterie of less experienced white workers with plum assignments and relegating anyone who complained to lesser roles.
McKinsey consultants spread across the kingdom in recent years to advise government agencies such as the planning ministry, nicknamed the "Ministry of McKinsey" by some Saudis; the royal court; and a coterie of companies in industries such as banking, media, telecommunications, real estate and energy, internal McKinsey documents viewed by The New York Times showed.
Within weeks of opening, the 32-seat venue secured its place among a coterie of new, critically acclaimed all-day Paris restaurants — the kind that transition from the homemade granola on sheep milk yogurt for breakfast to beet velouté with yuzu for lunch, to lamb brains with mint, followed by bee pollen meringue, for dinner.
"He usually goes around and says hello to people and he's extremely friendly," explained Thomas Peterffy, a Mar-a-Lago club member and billionaire businessman who said beyond the coterie of Secret Service agents, Trump hasn't changed how he spends his time at Mar-a-Lago or at his golf club since becoming President.
In "The New York Intellectuals," his seminal 1968 essay looking back on the coterie of writers who burst on the scene in the late 1930s and exercised an outsize influence on the American mind until the rise of the New Left in the early '60s, Irving Howe nicely captured what is distinctive about intellectuals in all times and places.
What killed off the governor's hopes of survival was the release nearly two weeks ago of a massive trove of electronic messages, shared between Mr Rosselló and a coterie of privileged friends and advisers, in which they mocked the poor, jeered at victims of the 2017 hurricane and joked about the idea of assassinating political opponents.
It's about how an angry young conservative with reactionary views got herself involved with a small coterie of ideologues in Washington and prepped for a conservative media career in the crucial years before the rise of Donald Trump, as extremism became more popular on the right and as people could optimize themselves for success through attention on social media.
The gallery's inaugural show, War Games, curated by Benjamin Godsill, featured a coterie of national and international names — Simon Denny, Yngve Holen, Haley Mellin, Yuri Pattison, Oliver Payne, Hannah Perry, Jon Rafman, Chadwick Rantanen, Sean Raspet, Yves Scherer, Hugh Scott-Douglas, and Sean Townley — and one Detroit-based artist, the internationally known ceramic artist Anders Ruhwald.
In the process of presenting their case, which centers on allegations of securities and wire fraud, the feds have painted a picture of how the 34-year-old financial wunderkind came back from a bet gone horribly wrong: lying and stalling his way into the windfall needed to pay back a coterie of well-off investors.
Russia's people are not the problem, but the political leadership led by Vladimir PutinVladimir Vladimirovich PutinAs Buttigieg rises, Biden is still the target Yang jokes first thing he'd say to Putin as president is 'Sorry I beat your guy' Biden: Impeachment hearings show 'Trump doesn't want me to be the nominee' MORE and his small coterie of oligarchs is.
The troupe shared a social scene with the denizens of the Factory, Andy Warhol's studio — the back room at Max's Kansas City, a once well-known nightclub on Park Avenue South just north of Union Square, was a shared hangout — and Mr. Vaccaro's populous casts, many of them amateur performers, often included members of Warhol's coterie.
But the subtext of Bannon's decision to air out all of his White House grievances is to delude Trump supporters into believing that the failures of the Trump presidency rest not with him, or even with Trump, but with the remaining coterie of White House "globalists" (read: Jews and their allies) who serve masters other than Trump and Trumpism.
In Nigeria, Adichie is considered a national icon, not only because her books have garnered such acclaim, but because quickly after her success she founded the Farafina Trust Creative Writing Workshop, a program where aspiring Nigerian writers spend a few weeks every year workshopping with Adichie and a coterie of international writers she brings to Lagos.
" In an interview earlier this year with Charles McGrath in The New York Times, Roth replied that he had tried to be uncompromising in his portraits of "a small coterie of unsettled men," even when "these have not been in harmony with the portrayal that a masculine public-relations campaign — if there were such a thing — might prefer.
Representatives of Mr. Price and Mr. Collins say they have not broken any rules, but what has puzzled Washington and industry insiders alike is how a no-name Australian biotech, with only one experimental multiple sclerosis drug under development, attracted a coterie of Washington investors, including the man who is likely to become the next health secretary.
"The result for the human rights cause is a `perfect storm' — a powerful centralized state, a coterie of like-minded rulers, a void of leadership among countries that might have stood for human rights, and a disappointing collection of democracies willing to sell the rope that is strangling the system of rights that they purport to uphold," he said.
The first Fantastic Beasts movie purported to focus on hapless Newt's antics in America as he chased a coterie of adorable CGI creatures, but it veered into more somber themes — with heavy allegorical references to the need to drive shadowy extremist forces into the light, culminating in Grindelwald's capture at the end of the 2016 film.
The Dada ballet, with Dada music by MM. Milhaud, Honegger and several other members of that already famous coterie of ultra-modern composers, turned the elegant audience of the Comédie Montaigne, almost without its knowing it, into a mass of men and women wildly riding emotional hobby-horses and making themselves as intelligible as the Dada ballet which evoked their outbursts.
To navigate market stalls and find consistent purveyors, Henry turned to a coterie of like-minded expatriate chefs including his friend Max Levy, the New Orleans native behind the Beijing sushi bar Okra, also opening in Hong Kong this month, and Matt Abergel, the Canadian chef behind Yardbird, home to some of the city's buzziest yakitori, and the seafood bar Ronin.
But the future queen of England (and the former Kate Middleton) has faced a challenge unknown to her predecessors: She travels in the era of social media, when the reporting on her smiles, waves and outfits extends beyond a contained group of tag-along journalists to a coterie of bloggers who chronicle her life from the vantage of their couches.
He is part of an expanding coterie of American tycoons who are forking over big philanthropic dollars for high profile civic spaces by star designers — among them "Diller Island," an off-and-now-on-again performing arts center on a Hudson River pier in New York underwritten by the billionaire Barry Diller and his fashion designer wife Diane von Furstenberg.
Advertise on Hyperallergic with Nectar Ads If you're looking for a good excuse to shout "WAKANDA FOREVER!" this week, the National Museum of African American History and Culture announced its acquisition of a coterie of objects associated with the Black Panther movie, most importantly, the iconic costume worn by Chadwick Boseman in the role of Prince T'Challa, aka Black Panther.
"Very much like the president, Bolton has picked a small coterie of people from past lives who look more like cronies and buddies than they do the array of senior experts on different issues that past national security advisers have brought in," said David J. Rothkopf, a former Clinton administration official who wrote a definitive history of the National Security Council.
But read correctly it offers an intriguing window into the mentality of a group that is very influential right now but whose power is going to vanish in the near future — the coterie of dovish national security hands who embraced Obama early in his campaign against Hillary Clinton and who continue to chafe against the influence of the foreign policy establishment even from inside the White House.
Michael Luchs is more or less the platonic ideal image of the Detroit creative spirit in the wild and untamed Cass Corridor — once the rough-and-tumble area situated just south of Wayne State University, and home to a coterie of interdisciplinary creatives who gave birth to Detroit's highest-profile homegrown contemporary art, the Cass Corridor Movement, most active from the 1960s to the '80s.
It's kind of a no-brainer that organizations that work to protect and fight for civil rights, indigenous rights, immigrants' rights, disability rights, women's and LGBTQ rights (especially reproductive health) and the environment could really use a few extra bucks right now, given the orange fascist and the coterie of soulless monsters who are about to improbably assume a staggering amount of power over our everyday lives.
Hark is trailed by a coterie of confused pilgrims, including Fraz Penzig, an underemployed tutor and gym-rat; Fraz's wife, Tovah, a stalled poet whose day job in educational technology keeps their family financially afloat, but who can't keep her marriage intact; and young heiress and group benefactor Kate Rumpler, who spends much of the novel trafficking bone marrow as penance for her privilege.
Ohio-based Coterie, a startup working on in the commercial insurance space, has announced today it has raised $8.5 million Series A. The company had previously raised a little over $3 million in early investments, bringing its equity capital raised to nearly $12 million to date; the firm also told TechCrunch that it has raised $2.5 million in available venture debt as part of its current round.
The notion must cross Tillerson's mind that Trump's inaccurate tweet is needless provocation of a friend; that simultaneously infuriating Asian and European allies may not be smart; and that his task will be a thankless one as Trump's White House coterie hatches seat-of-the-pants policy and leaves his already restive State Department to deal with weighty issues in Luxembourg and the Solomon Islands.
Undaunted by their failure to affect any electoral outcomes, the coterie of thinkers and writers who have coalesced loosely around the "Never Trump" movement have staked their careers on the notion that Donald Trump is an aberration, a kind of eruption of atavistic "tribalism" from the prehistoric past, instead of the result of a historical narrative that's hiding in plain sight for less blatantly self-interested interlocutors.
Whatever their personal politics, most Washington civil servants and military men are likely to be alienated by Trump's aversion to professionalism, his preference for relying on a tight coterie of loyalists, his status as an outsider, his heterodox views on everything from vaccination to trade alliances, his tendency to run organizations by stoking rivalries among competing individuals, his preference for getting information from cable news to briefing books.
Now pump up the circumstances and bring many more people into the arena of the big hush-hush: Depending on your penchant for mystery or puzzles, is it more exciting to be on the outside looking in, wondering what a particular family, club or clique might be concealing, or to be on the inside track of a coterie that, for whatever reasons, might have something very special to hide?
It's a Holly Hobbie illustration come to life, consisting of a coterie of young people, mostly in their teens and early 20s, who congregate online to swap bread baking recipes and photos of their foraged mushroom hauls, stare at pictures of farm animals and otherwise partake in an aspirational form of nostalgia that praises the benefits of living a slow life in which nothing much happens at all.
Potential acquirers include grocers like Kroger, which could seek to diversify or further consolidate the grocery industry; Walmart, which has been building its coterie of digitally native brands; Target, which has been struggling to find its place; Nordstrom, which may need another route if its leveraged buyout falls through; and sit-down restaurant companies like Dinequity or Bloomin Brands, who may look to buy more on-trend, faster-serve concepts.
With a president who ran for office almost never having talked about the war, a coterie of political advisers who bitterly oppose deeper American engagement in it, and a national security team dominated by generals worried about the consequences if the United States does not act quickly, the decision could succeed in buying time for Mr. Trump and his advisers to fully deliberate over what to do in Afghanistan.
He took inspiration from the Art Deco buildings left by the Belgian colonials and also from the more bizarre structures ordered up, if not always completed, by the reigning dictator Mobutu Sese Seko, who came to power in 1965, changed the country's name to Zaire in 1971 and began destroying its economy and infrastructure for the benefit of his family and coterie, eventually resulting in civil war and finally, in 1997, his ouster.
Kelly has done away with "meeting crashers," the West Wing aides who showed up for meetings uninvited, according to a White House aide, but he has not been able to curb Trump's practice of adding and subtracting advisers to meetings throughout the day or of turning scheduled gatherings into freewheeling discussions of subjects that suit his interests — including those suggested to him by his coterie of outside advisers, including Fox News host Sean Hannity.
A guy who hung out around campus, long-haired, scraggly-bearded, a kind of sloppy, happy-go-lucky, sinister phony, a powerfully persuasive and manipulative guy with a malodorous charm about him, Charlie Manson before anybody had heard of Charles Manson, other than my friend and his coterie of fellow eccentrics and visionaries who circulated among themselves counterculture news and views through a kind of crude precursor of the Internet before anybody else had heard of Internet or Manson.
So the collective appearance of four new designers at four big-name luxury houses in Paris this season — Anthony Vaccarello at Yves Saint Laurent, Bouchra Jarrar at Lanvin, Maria Grazia Chiuri at Christian Dior and Pierpaolo Piccioli, solo for the first time, at Valentino — had the potential to trigger a sizable creative and commercial ripple effect, especially among the front-row coterie of buyers from the world's best-known luxury department stores, boutiques and e-commerce sites.
Filler capsules once conceived to give customers something to wear on their winter vacations, the cruise collections have transmogrified into a sort of Frankenstein's monster of a fashion moment that involves (at least for the super-brands: the names in the billion-plus cohort that can afford to transport models, clothes and coterie around the world) three-day-long marketing-meets-shopping-meets-content-creation extravaganzas in far-flung places not normally served by the ready-to-wear calendar.
Rather, the rise of the far-right is the result of a deliberate organizing effort by a small coterie of uber-wealthy industrialists and financiers; the gradual, bipartisan destruction of the New Deal welfare state; the neoliberalization of the postwar economy, with formerly well-paid, unionized employment morphing into gig-ified precarity; and a demographic shift that left many white Americans feeling culturally marginalized, allowing shrewd hucksters to exploit their resentments for electoral and financial gain.
Such, at least, is the contention of a coterie of perfectly reasonable, non-reaching, academically credible internet people who cite a 2012 paper by Dr. Charli Carpenter, which contends that, far from being mere bloody-minded entertainment, the television show is intended to "trigger public discussion about the dangers of global warming" (actually, the paper is perfectly smart, but you wouldn't know it from the videos and articles spread by venues hungry for the slightest amount of GOT content well after the end of the last season).
"It's giving more and more power to an informal coterie of people in the White House to play leading roles on national security — whether it's Bannon in the NSC role or Jared Kushner, who has been given portfolios in China, Mexico and Israel," said David Rothkopf, a former Bill ClintonWilliam (Bill) Jefferson Clinton3 real problems Republicans need to address to win in 2020 Buckingham Palace: Any suggestion Prince Andrew was involved in Epstein scandal 'abhorrent' The magic of majority rule in elections MORE administration official who has written a book on the NSC.
JON STRAND: ORACLES, TEMPLES AND WAVES… and a dragon called Raoul not only features a cross section of works from Strand's 50-plus years of art-making (42 of them in Detroit), but emphasizes the role of collaboration in Strand's creative process, calling out contributions by a coterie of other artists in the old-Detroit pantheon, including Bob LaRose, Jeff Hucul, Leslie Ann Pilling, S. Kay Young, Christine Welch, Judy Adams (and Fabrazzio), Barb Prusak, Sherry Jolls, Stefan and Kathy Graf, Jack Whitehead, Dolly Whitehead, and Jo Levett.
A secretive coterie of prominent GOP leaders is considering transferring its support from Republican presidential hopeful Ted CruzRafael (Ted) Edward CruzTrump moves forward with F-16 sale to Taiwan opposed by China The Hill's Campaign Report: Battle for Senate begins to take shape O'Rourke says he will not 'in any scenario' run for Senate MORE to his primary rival Marco RubioMarco Antonio RubioTrump moves forward with F-85033 sale to Taiwan opposed by China The Hill's Morning Report — Trump and the new Israel-'squad' controversy Trump crosses new line with Omar, Tlaib, Israel move MORE, multiple sources familiar with the situation told National Review Online.

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