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"glamorized" Antonyms

140 Sentences With "glamorized"

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

And yet, it's often celebrated and glamorized rather than condemned.
Whereas his portrait of me was completely glamorized and airbrushed.
Many experts were concerned that the series glamorized suicide, though.
I wanted to be glamorized, outrageous... I wanted to be noticed.
But they never depict any real horrible consequences, so it's glamorized.
"It's inappropriate for editors to be glamorized and revered," he said.
He previously criticized Holliday's Cosmopolitan U.K. cover, saying that it glamorized obesity.
Magnified brain scans of people watching glamorized photos of death in war.
"Obesity in itself is not something that should be glamorized," she said.
Morgan said the couple's actions should not be glamorized with a catchy nickname.
It doesn't add up, this glamorized vision or version of a tortured songwriter.
Hollywood's red carpets have been the stuff of highly glamorized lore for decades.
Penn has received criticism for the interview, with some saying that he glamorized Guzman.
"I Am Not Okay With This isn't a glamorized high school experience," Ellis said.
Amid accusations that the photo deliberately glamorized the subject of immigration, debate raged online.
Entitled "Dear Sisters," it was in support of people in other "less glamorized" industries.
Movie houses, many built by American movie companies like MGM, glamorized the new aesthetic.
Industry and government safe-driving propaganda and public school driver education unintentionally glamorized the gore.
What Trump bragged about, what he glamorized, is sexual assault, and that is an issue.
Combining archival clips with glamorized shots of the women, it's a commentary or gender roles.
As eSports continue to grow, those concrete jungle ideologies will still clash with glamorized marketing ideals.
The series received harsh criticism following its first season after critics said the show glamorized suicide.
Monochrome—like the mausoleum-gray former Berlin Wall, which kids in West Berlin glamorized with graffiti.
Inherently, celebrities are idolized by those same young people who are vulnerable to glamorized mental health struggle.
Last week Grindr users accused the company of creating an emoji that glamorized the potentially lethal drug.
The movie didn't just make the hackers look sexy—it glamorized circumvention, the outcast's superiority, and omniscience.
Critics felt the show glamorized the act of suicide and would have a negative effect on impressionable viewers.
She was dismissive of television characters who glamorized the lifestyle of single young women, like Mary Tyler Moore.
In an interview with the BBC, Mooney said his app was never intended to create a glamorized image.
Which are sort of being glamorized here, these terrible war machines, albeit with no sort of about it.
" But ultimately, Mental Health America stands behind Netflix's portrayal because there's "nothing that really glamorized it or sensationalized it.
Where previous generations needed glamorized rebellion, millennials want an honest reflection of being caught in a permanent state adolescence.
Staples uses this as a broadcast for the unfiltered version of Los Angeles, not the one glamorized on television.
Less glamorized, and for that reason perhaps less examined, is the other aircraft of the 2101.39 percent: private helicopters.
We are not molding ourselves in the image of the messy, dangerous, glamorized train wrecks of a decade past.
But right now more like, kind of like, a glamorized door greeter at the HSBC Lobby in New York City.
The jam-packed unveiling included the traditional presentation of the truck&aposs specifications but in a glamorized and semifailed manner.
Warrior culture, the wielding of power through almost exclusively male aggression, is given a pass; more than that, it's glamorized.
She has spent decades assessing off-color humor, deciding what constitutes glamorized smoking and counting instances of the F-word.
Any campaign against gun violence is doomed to fail if it ignores the cultural surroundings in which guns are glamorized.
From the most glamorized parts to the quiet personal moments, Ray has managed to gather an archive of almost 40,000 images.
You don&apost want to have a conservative voice kind of glamorized, because you want to try to sideline those voices.
I didn't want it to be crowded by over-glamorized things and the pop world can just be really distracting sometimes.
Strangely, head chef status has gotten glamorized, but there's little acknowledgement of anyone else, from the sous chef to the dishwashers.
This wheezing, cranky, incontinent pair of roommates from the Upper West Side are bringing shabbiness back to sanitized, glamorized Times Square.
But I thought, I'm going to decide for myself whether I think it's glamorized and turning Hannah Baker into a hero.
It's worth asking whether Agony falls under the same category as Hatred, the 2015 top-down action game that glamorized mass shootings.
Often glamorized in films and video games, it's difficult to fathom how far across the globe these kingdoms and empires once spanned.
In an investing world glamorized by Shark Tank, Silicon Valley, and "unicorns," simple, straightforward communication about what drives VC decisions is rare.
Tiegs, herself a two-time SI cover model, said last week that she believed featuring the size-16 model glamorized being overweight.
Cruz also slammed Obama's trip to Cuba, saying the President was in the company of celebrities who have glamorized the Castro brothers.
Everyone knows the pillbox hat glamorized by Jackie O, the classic pearls on Barbara Bush, and sleek sleeveless dresses worn by Michelle Obama.
But it also generated a litany of critical press coverage from people concerned that the series glamorized suicide and recklessly portrayed mental illness.
One criticism of Tom's work was that it sometimes depicted men in Nazi uniforms; some thought it was sympathetic towards or glamorized Nazis.
ROBIN HALL New York To the Editor: When Harriet Tubman appears on the $20 bill, I hope the artist won't have glamorized her.
Journalists caught off guard by a modern-day racist tended to marvel at Spencer, giving him celebrity treatment that glamorized the alt-right.
Though they have often been glamorized as vicious carnivores, at least one species, scientists now say, consumes and digests "copious amounts" of seagrass.
At Super Bowl I in 1967, cheerleaders wore glamorized versions of Native American headdresses, a form of cultural appropriation that hasn't aged well.
Every depiction of drug abuse and mental illness I've seen in television marketed towards my generation is either disgustingly glamorized, completely untrue, or both.
In October, a Hungarian photographer pulled a "migrant chic" fashion editorial series following accusations that it glamorized the harsh realities immigrants face, BBC reported.
If the middle pillars of Jewish American identity are Auschwitz and Israel, sainted victims and glamorized warriors, Cohen gives them both a mighty push.
"Everyone thinks that Motley Crue glamorized drugs and sex – well that's not true," said Allen Kovac, the band's manager and one of the film's producers.
The glamorized studio portrait, taken by Annemarie Heinrich in 1944, was quite literally constructed by the state as an icon of Argentina's first populist government.
During an interview in Dublin, she worried aloud that novelists are over-glamorized, and said newspapers should write more profiles of nurses or bus drivers.
I think entrepreneurship today is glamorized, so a lot of people don't understand or see the struggle of what it takes to be an entrepreneur.
Mass shootings may be contagious, and the more the people who perpetrate them are glamorized through media coverage, the more copycats there are likely to be.
Totti, and everything about him, could be glamorized in any context, but he is outright fetishized in a country fretting the dearth of men like him.
In the 1800s, consumption was the name of a terrible, yet weirdly chic, wasting disease later known as tuberculosis, glamorized in both society and the arts.
She concentrates on the years between 1780 and 1850, when at its peak tuberculosis caused around 18963 percent of deaths in Europe, even as it was glamorized.
But these glamorized depictions of make-up sex often leave out that using sex as a tool to manipulate a partner can be a dangerous, slippery slope.
Gay people, of course, glamorized meth long before Kimoji, and app companies wouldn't create emojis if people weren't using cute nicknames for meth in the first place.
Those of us who are involved in extreme metal wrestle with its strange dichotomy, wherein strength is valued yet we have entire subgenres where suicide is glamorized.
They're idealized versions, so you look at the photo, you show it, you keep it for generations and everyone remembers your life through that idealized, glamorized memory.
The movie has already created quite a stir, and after the trailer was released, some people argued that it was triggering and glamorized the realities of eating disorders.
Careers in the medical field are glamorized as respectable, helpful, and with high income earning potential, yet physicians are some of the most dissatisfied workers in the country.
"The public is used to receiving sport through the mass media; it's this really larger-than-life kind of version that's highly glamorized," says exhibition advisor Kalia Brooks.
The 1915 silent film "The Birth of a Nation," which was directed by D.W. Griffith and glamorized the Ku Klux Klan, was added to the registry in 1992.
So even if the suicide is glamorized, there are so many benefits in being able to engage people in an issue that normally would not be talked about.
She has become known as a precise and compassionate observer of the British upper middle class, a segment of society that is often either caricatured or glamorized onscreen.
Watching it again from the other side, I recognized how ridiculous some of their intern "tasks" were and how the industry was over-glamorized and the work was undersold.
"Nowadays a lot of younger girls especially are influenced by various media, where this whole self-harm thing is glamorized," said Blue, who quit harming herself earlier this year.
"He glamorized women, and he made them feel sexy by the way he did their hair and by the way he loved them, and I felt loved by him."
But it also alarmed parents, mental health care professionals and school administrators who worried that the show glamorized suicide without providing meaningful context or relevant information for young viewers.
And shows like Netflix's "13 Reasons Why" or artists like indie pop singer Lana Del Rey have sensationalized or glamorized mental illness and suicide rather than taking it seriously.
It is unfortunate that this dangerous individual is already being glamorized in the press as Italy's newest political star and a charismatic substitute for the 81-year-old Berlusconi.
The Secret Service's penchant for protecting presidents has been glamorized by Hollywood films like "In the Line of Fire," but its history and portfolio of responsibilities is much broader.
In A Peculiar Paradise: Florida Photographs, Benn's new monograph from powerHouse Books, he recalls: Cocaine cowboys were glamorized on television in Miami Vice and at the cinema in Scarface.
Your ruling planet Mercury is all about the details, but today it connects with Neptune, the planet of fog, fantasy, and film (a medium that's easily manipulated, exaggerated, and glamorized).
"We're seeing from the participants in our study that there's a different side to the FWB relationship than the stereotypical, selfish, me-focused glamorized version of these relationships," Owen says.
The gig is glamorized in movies — high-speed chases, shoot-outs, and of course the occasional romance — but in real life the hardest parts of the job are the most mundane.
Gazing upon the different glamorized bodies spliced together, of varying hues and indiscernible genders, one surmises that sexual attraction and love are not dependent on identity, but perhaps melancholic longing is.
Glamorized fight scenes like the Battle of Blackwater and the sack of Astapor are few and far between in the books (though admittedly, some specific acts of violence are markedly nastier).
In a 2008 study, researchers at Villanova University and the College of New Jersey found that glamorized ads made young women feel more negative about their sexual attractiveness, weight and physical condition.
While the original "Top Gun" was a glamorized, Hollywood version of the real TOPGUN naval aviation training, there are many parts of the original film — and the new trailer — that ring true.
An organization that valued Omertà and some other attributes of Mafia-dom later glamorized in pop culture, the Black Hand was uniquely brutal and initially preyed mostly on its members' own kind.
"When we look at alcohol, we have almost glamorized it as being this substance that can help us live a really heart-healthy life," said Steinbaum, who was not involved in the research.
Glamorized by Disney and sexualized by a slew of retailers, Pocahontas was a child when she first encountered the English, who later kidnapped and raped her, according to the Mattaponi tribe's oral history.
It's a bad look for a group of warriors that over the past decade has achieved almost celebrity status in America for their daring exploits, many of which have been glamorized by Hollywood.
Granted in a TV show or movie, the teen years are often glamorized — even the Pygmalion-inspired classic She's All That skipped the awkward acne moments — although angst and overly articulate banter abound.
Still, as young adults, we have no real guidance for modeling intimate behavior on anything other than the glamorized, highly choreographed sexual encounters we see on TV and in movies, music and pornography.
Though it'll depend on the size, Kodak's initiative sounds like it could be a boon for up-and-coming filmmakers, who may well share the glamorized view of film that many cinematic greats do.
Whether rooted in reality or a glamorized rom-com, job stereotypes make it easy to assume the voices behind most runway reviews, PR pitches, and cover stories are female — and that might be true.
So seeing all the glossy, glamorized, picture-perfect representations of motherhood when I scroll through my Instagram and Facebook feeds has me thinking: Why do we have the need to make motherhood look so easy?
Mobile design is now light years ahead of the desktop, and we've got an entire generation of current and future gamers who'll be more accustomed to perfectly finished aluminum unibody cases than cheaply glamorized plastic.
The series, which focuses on a high school girl's suicide, set off a firestorm of controversy after it was released last year, with many experts claiming the show glamorized teen suicide rather than spread awareness.
Critics voiced concern that the film glamorized the serial killer, who was separately chronicled in a four-part Netflix documentary, "Conversations With a Killer: The Ted Bundy Tapes," which also made its debut in January.
Last month, size-16 model Ashley Graham, one of three on the covers of Sports Illustrated's annual swimsuit issue, defended herself against remarks from supermodel Cheryl Tiegs, who said she believed the cover glamorized being overweight.
The iconography of The Club is common pop subject matter (both lyrically and formally, considering how ubiquitous enormous drops have become across pop sub-genres), but it's usually overtly glamorized and rendered one-dimensional, hardly ever relatable.
The opening moments, before the cars take off, emphasize the community aspect of the race and offer a glamorized depiction of the culture and the participants — which is to say, a flattering view of the target audience.
There is a sense in the second half of the book that Schuster is recounting scenes from her life as though they're from a movie — and glamorized for effect — rather than imprinted on her emotional memory card.
Sure, it's glamorized and unhealthy—no stories of self-sabotage and drug addiction end happily, after all—but they are glimpses of occasional realities that a lot of people struggle with but are rarely talked about openly.
Danna HunnesAdjunct Assistant Professor, Community Health Sciences, UCLASugary cereals are kind of like glamorized candy, but the ones with all-natural ingredients—whole-grain, or shredded whole wheat, with minimally added sugar—actually do provide some health benefits.
Players in the world of Philadelphia organized crime, a less glamorized lot than their New York City counterparts, were known to hang out in the Friendly Lounge, described in later years as something like college for young mobsters.
The Italian mafia has been glamorized and worshipped in popular culture for decades, but you hardly ever hear people shouting about the harmful social impact of "Italian-on-Italian" crime when real-life mob crimes have made headlines.
A lot of the idealization of the Instagram influencer, she says, has to with the fact that people have always glamorized the kind of fields — music, art, media — wherein you theoretically get paid to do what you love.
The Good Time Girls doesn't just turn the camera on the Western's often-overlooked female characters — it replaces the pistol-touting storylines glamorized by John Wayne or Clint Eastwood with narratives told and motivated by the women at its center.
The response was both swift and controversial, with many critics saying it glamorized Bundy while the reality — Bundy violently assaulted and murdered at least 28 women, and was also found guilty of kidnapping, burglary, and other crimes — was significantly more horrifying.
Mr. Linnett complained that television reality shows broadcast in the United States and the United Kingdom glamorized prospecting, "making people think they can pull out ounces from rivers," but the reality was that goldpanning required a lot of hard, patient work.
As long as the alt-right continues to be glamorized, we risk making more would-be rebels without a cause like the man who drove his car into the crowd of counterprotesters in Charlottesville, killing Heather Heyer and injuring 19 others.
The 20143-second trailer, which brims with shots of a ripped Efron winking and de-shirting, was met with outrage and dismay in January from many who believe that it glamorized and hyper-sexualized Bundy, who was executed for his crimes in 1989.
There's plenty of hallucinogens to go around, but also a variety of experiences: because XOXO's crowd includes everyone from a wannabe DJ wunderkind to a jaded has-been, EDM isn't glamorized beyond recognition or turned into the frattiest version of the genre.
Simin doesn't see this as cultural appropriation — since 215, she has consulted on Dishoom's design, with its spotted mirrors, dangling electric wires and mood of sepia twilight — as long as the original cafes aren't being glamorized, "because they weren't glamorous," she says.
Long glamorized by Dirty South rap acts like Three 6 Mafia, Lil Wayne, and Future, lean has become a lucrative commodity in American cities with vibrant hip-hop scenes thanks in part to crackdowns on prescription drug "pill mills," according to experts and users.
It's a far cry from the typical celebrity nude pregnancy photo, the often glamorized, sometimes airbrushed (sometimes not) ode to how Hollywood does motherhood -- think the iconic and groundbreaking 1991 Demi Moore Vanity Fair cover (which Moore says, by the way, was not airbrushed).
The rise in vaping, they said, stems partly from the allure of the sleek electronic devices that deliver nicotine and marijuana, glamorized on social media and streaming videos; the gadgets are also relatively easy to conceal because they are designed to reduce smell and smoke.
Double Feature: "Born On the Fourth of July" (1989) Oliver Stone directs a de-glamorized Cruise as a disabled, disillusioned Vietnam vet in a moving portrait of the human cost of war (Available to stream via rent or purchase on Amazon Prime, Fandango Now and Vudu).
Drag has exploded into the spotlight in the last couple of years, thrust into mainstream culture by RuPaul's Drag Race and Drag Queen Story Hour, glamorized for its glitter and the generally over-the-top, too-big-to-fail personalities involved in many of the shows.
While the trope of the glamorized tragic homosexual has thankfully faded from our cultural landscape, each and every one of us has dealt with a level of isolation, especially in those formative years, that may seem like ripe fodder for a project steeped in teen angst.
The answer came in the form of a rousing premiere in January at the Sundance Film Festival, Netflix's reported $227 million purchase of the film, a trailer that went viral with 261 million views in the first week and arguments over whether it glamorized excessive thinness.
On television, we have the frivolousness of the Kardashians, American Idol still selling the lie of being the next Kelly Clarkson, and rich people complaining about roaches in a mansion ("Real Housewives of Atlanta") -- the top series, from reality TV to Ryan Murphy, are about glamorized escapism.
The popular FX program has received praise for offering a different and less glamorized depiction of the day-to-day grind of someone trying to make it in the music industry, allowing black people to be regular on screen, and seamlessly transitioning between heavy topics to thoughtful humor.
More and more women-run shows are broadening the horizons of what can and can't be shown or discussed with regard to sex on TV. More often than not, it is all in the pursuit of a more realistic portrayal of sex rather than the glamorized scenes of decades past.
Willem de Kooning called Davis one of the Three Musketeers of the New York art scene in the thirties, along with the Ukrainian émigré John Graham and the mercurial Armenian Arshile Gorky—men who glamorized the lives of a tiny, impecunious avant-garde that was besieged by philistinism and reaction.
And the biggest difference that I'm trying to tackle right now is — and again with everything that's happening in the world today — is how do you balance out what's essentially still a blue-collar labor, which is cooking, which is now glamorized to the point where it now has white-collar values.
One pauses in wonder at the cynicism of such a thesis, then moves on to the conclusion, where Ms. Bellafante suggests that Ms. Nixon's having starred in a television show that glamorized New York City ("Sex and the City") negates some 15 years of activism on behalf of the city's least advantaged citizens.
Predictably, they were ahead of an even larger style movement: Normcore, coined by New York magazine in February of the following year, glamorized the nondescript style of a Midwestern parent on vacation in the '90s, which along with Birks also happened to include some of the ugliest sandals known to mankind: Tevas.
Nevertheless, there is an edge to the woman's clearly impoverished surroundings and dress, her sickly figure not yet glamorized, as such a figure will later become in the age of Calvin Klein commercials and fashion trends like "heroin chic" (Williams wrote in the Dulac biography on Constantini's naturalist acting style and the film's semi-documentary aesthetic).
Bankers and lawyers move into former manufacturing neighborhoods, spend their weekends in Red Wing work boots and before long find themselves in thrall to the glamorized pilsner; the meatball; the breakfast sandwich of bacon, egg and cheese, which come to clerical assistants and plumbers off a cart on the sidewalk but to the more discriminating via heritage animals and the Berkshires.
Brooklyn, unsurprisingly, is home to a vast number of them, and so it is that the borough with its own epicurean abbreviation (NBC: New Brooklyn Cuisine) is witnessing the arrival of Parm Williamsburg, where the garlic bread is glamorized; Ichiran in Bushwick, where tonkotsu broth will soak the ramen; and Harvey, in a boutique hotel (also in Williamsburg), where the grains will be house-milled.
"I wrote this book myself, honey," said Ms. Cleveland, as she glided indoors and into a sunlit studio where stacks of early drafts lay piled alongside snapshots of a freckle-faced girl in pigtails and scores of magazine tear sheets showing a glamorized Ms. Cleveland as captured by nearly every late-20th-century fashion photographer of any note: Richard Avedon, Irving Penn, Bruce Weber and Steven Meisel.

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