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"glamorizes" Antonyms

53 Sentences With "glamorizes"

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

It glamorizes the peculiarities of outer space and the races that inhabit it.
Critics say the Selena Gomez-produced show glamorizes suicide but is that fair?
"Everybody is saying 'it glamorizes suicide,' but I don't think it does," she said.
Also, does anyone else find it creepy that the show glamorizes Aria dating her teacher?!!
Because there's already enough TV that glamorizes professional cooking, and puts those people on the pedestal.
But Hollywood also glamorizes a lot of what the military is and what military life is like.
Criminologist Scott Bonn argues that the media glamorizes serial killers in movies such as Silence of the Lambs.
It portrays a white man laying claim to the wilderness as it glamorizes the objectification of Indigenous people.
Articles have circulated urging parents to stop their kids from watching the show, arguing that it glamorizes suicide.
Selena Gomez is standing by her Netflix show 13 Reasons Why amid claims that the breakout drama glamorizes teen suicide.
Besides being problematic and offensive, Insatiable glamorizes a draconian, medically necessary liquid-only diet as a viable weight loss method.
The subject matter has sparked outrage among some viewers who claim that the program glamorizes the woes portrayed in the show.
They found that Forbes "glamorizes the tales of entrepreneurship" without considering how much wealth or power the billionaires started with in life.
And some critics have already decried the show's politics, arguing that it glamorizes Nazis and resorts to racial stereotypes for nonwhite characters.
" Hawkins continued, "This show glamorizes sexual abuse and trivializes the experience of countless underage women and men who have suffered through sex trafficking.
I made this pronouncement earlier in my career to never play a whore or a heroin addict, because I think it glamorizes them.
The findings were published days before Netflix releases Season 2 of "13 Reasons Why," a series that according to some critics glamorizes teen suicide.
In this context, media coverage that glamorizes suicide can tip the scales for people who are thinking about suicide and vulnerable to social messages.
Selena Gomez is defending her Netflix show 13 Reasons Why ahead of the second season, after many claimed that the breakout drama glamorizes teen suicide.
Kardashian is the modern female archetype — she is thin (except in the places it's difficult to be plump), she is ageless, and she glamorizes motherhood.
Christian Navarro, a star of 13 Reasons Why, has defended the Netflix show against criticism from some parents and school officials who say it glamorizes suicide.
" In a review for TIME, Stephanie Zacharek wrote that "the movie lionizes and glamorizes Arthur even as it shakes its head, faux-sorrowfully, over his violent behavior.
Such hangups complicate my appraisal of Tse's work, which more often than not glamorizes its LGBTQ subjects in pursuit of an idealized version of queer counterculture in Hong Kong.
Netflix's gripping new historical movie The Highwaymen takes a novel approach to telling the Bonnie and Clyde story, especially when compared the 1967 film Bonnie and Clyde that further glamorizes the criminals.
The Bold Type became a surprising voice for Millennial women, one that neither patronizes nor glamorizes — and hearing that they'll be at least two more seasons of the series is a real win.
This was the perspective of an outsider who glamorizes all of the dorky little things about Americana: the Kentucky Fried Chicken, really just wanting to go as a Star Wars character for Halloween.
In a time when basic financial security is out of reach for so many people, it is perplexing to find so much enjoyment in media that either glamorizes or empathizes with the rich.
Allen makes an odd choice with Stoll's character in Café Society by deciding to glamorize 1930s gangsters just as much as he glamorizes 1930s filmmaking; Ben's many killings are played for laughs, not horror.
Ever since its premiere, on March 22017, 2195, the Netflix series "22017 Reasons Why," about a teenage girl's suicide, has alarmed many health experts, who believe it glamorizes the topic for some young people.
It's one thing to pull an episode that glamorizes violence but it's another to pull an episode that both uses truth and humor to comfort those who are hurting while also jumpstarting a national discussion.
The risk of copycat behavior increases when coverage glamorizes a death, describes the method and victim in detail, and uses dramatic headlines containing the word suicide, according to Gould's research and the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention.
In addition to the special needs comments, more audio has surfaced in which Fouts—or a voice that sounds exactly like him—denigrates older women, compares Black people to chimpanzees, and glamorizes sex with underage girls in Amsterdam.
The 90-second trailer, which brims with shots of a ripped Efron winking and de-shirting, has been met with outrage and dismay from many who believe that it glamorizes and hyper-sexualizes Bundy, who was executed for his crimes in 1989.
Since then, questions around The Punisher have centered on when it would be appropriate to release the series, and the fundamental appropriateness of a show that features, and perhaps glamorizes, heavy gun violence, in light of the gun violence epidemic in the United States.
Starring Joaquin Phoenix in the titular role and directed by Todd Phillips, the film has come under fire from critics who believe it not only glamorizes the iconic villain but might also encourage disturbed young men to follow in his footsteps and potentially commit violent acts.
Maquillage (saying it in French glamorizes mundanity like nothing else) as an everyday hobby, as an extension of personality, as a sacred ritual of multiple steps (that has grown far from the "cleanse, tone, moisturise" of my youth) has become popular enough to grow its own field of thinkpieces.
Yet in defending the film against allegations that it "glamorizes" Bundy, Berlinger has said that it's really meant to be a cautionary tale about how easy it is to be taken in by someone like Bundy, how a serial killer could be handsome and charming and well-educated.
To find out what someone who treats patients for eating disorders thinks of the film—and suggestions that it glamorizes anorexia, or could be triggering for vulnerable viewers—Health spoke with Bonnie Brennan, a licensed professional counselor and senior clinical director of adult services at Eating Recovery Center in Denver.
Why experts think the show is dangerous Numerous credible evidence-based organizations with a firm grasp of the suicide prevention world discourage graphic depictions or discussions of suicide, because, according to the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention and others, risk of additional suicides increases when a story explicitly describes the suicide method, uses dramatic or graphic headlines or images, and when repeated coverage of that story sensationalizes or glamorizes a death.
A popular manhwa called Yongjugol Blues glamorizes the prostitution in the area.
The British are shown as cowardly and duplicitous. It also glamorizes death in battle: the British ship was torpedoed even though it had German POWs, and one dies, speaking of the honor of dying for the fatherland.
TIME Magazine. More Bishops May 4, 1936 In 1946, he described Howard Hughes’s film The Outlaw as "a destructive and corrupting picture which glamorizes crime and immorality".TIME Magazine. That Outlaw June 10, 1946 The Bishop attended the Second Vatican Council from 1962 to 1965; Fr. William Keeler served as his peritus, or expert, at the Council.
Western media glamorizes the image of the self- sufficient youth, showing examples of both men and women who lead strong, individualistic, empowered lifestyles. Globalization has destabilized previously immutable social institutions, shifting cultural value away from old traditions to new more individualistic and market friendly ideas. This combined with a privatization and individualization of labor has in many ways made fluidity more the norm than structure. The availability of geographic mobility can also directly affect an individual's self-empowerment.
In November 2010, a woman was sentenced to two years in prison for the possession of MP3s of instrumental music, on the grounds that the titles constituted praise of North Korea, notwithstanding the actual music's lack of lyrics. Songs that "stimulates sex desire or [are] sexually explicit to youth", "urges violence or crime to youth", or "glamorizes violence such as rape, and drugs" are classified as a "medium offensive to youth" by the Government Youth Commission.
This was met with widespread controversy. The game also received controversy for its depiction of crime, and allowing violence against police officers. Psychologist David Walsh of the National Institute on Media and the Family stated that the game "glamorizes antisocial and criminal activity", and that "the purpose of the game is to perpetrate crime". In response, Kotaku writer Owen Good wrote that the game does not reward players for "proficiency at crime, no matter how much it is accused of doing so".
PluggedIn Bob Waliszewski viewed "I Don't Like the Drugs (But the Drugs Like Me)" as one of several tracks on Mechanical Animals that glamorizes drug use, contrasting it with the anti-drug sentiments present in another song on the album, "Coma White". According to Kenneth Partridge of Billboard, "I Don't Like the Drugs (But the Drugs Like Me)" portrays "Illicit substances...[as] the antidote to living the white-bread life available to most Americans." Conversely, The New York Times Jon Pareles viewed the song as anti-drug.
A more modern example of a princess/prince charming duo, and one that some consider to not be so damaging on the formation of relationships and image, is the spectacle of Bella Swan and Edward Cullen in Stephenie Meyer's Twilight series. Some say that the relationship of Bella and Edward "glamorizes dating abuse." Others see the construction of Bella's character to be enlightening for the current generation of young girls, teens and even young adults. Meyer characterizes her as incredibly clumsy, short of words, awkward, normal, bland and not sexy.
The figures advance towards the viewer dressed in black suits against a stark white background. The painting, with a title taken from an American popular song, acts as an ironic commentary on the racial violence of her time.Jorge Daniel Veneciano, "Rosalyn Drexler and the Ends of Man," in Rosalyn Drexler and the Ends of Man, exhibition catalogue, Paul Robeson Gallery, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey, 2006, pp. 16-18. Similar in composition and intent is the painting F.B.I. (1964) that both glamorizes the depicted government agents and questions their status as figures of authority.
Kristelle Miller, an Adolescent Psychology Professor at University of Minnesota-Duluth stated that "[t]he Juno effect' is how media glamorizes pregnancy and how it's also ... pregnancy is also redemptive of any past problems". After Senator John McCain named Alaska Governor Sarah Palin as his running mate on the Republican presidential ticket, it was revealed in September 2008 that Gov. Palin's daughter, Bristol, age 17, was pregnant with the child of another teenager. News reports and editorials termed Bristol Palin's pregnancy as the latest episode in the debate over teen pregnancy of which Juno was a part, while conservative commentators made comparisons between Bristol Palin's pregnancy and the film.
It featured almost non-stop fighting between guests—5 to 12 per day during one April 1998 week—and religious figures and even other TV personalities complained. Chicago City Council suggested that if the fistfights and chair-throwing were real, then the guests should be arrested for committing acts of violence in the city, as alderman Ed Burke was concerned over the fact that the off-duty Chicago police officers serving as security guards for the program failed to take legal action against fighting guests. Springer explained that the violence on the program "look[ed] real" to him, also arguing that the fighting on the show "never, ever, ever glamorizes violence". Ultimately, the City Council chose not to pursue the matter.
On December 29, 2019, Poppy released a statement on Twitter announcing that she parted ways with Sinclair, claiming that he "glamorizes suicide" and used it as a way to manipulate her. An example of this behavior is an instance in which Poppy alleges Sinclair was going to hang himself with one of her personal belongings and had also messaged fans details about his suicidal attempts for attention. She said that Sinclair "lives an illusion that he is a gift to this Earth" and that she was "trapped in a mess that [she] needed to dig [her]self out of." Prior to the statement, Sinclair's directorial credits were removed from recent videos on Poppy's YouTube channel, with his songwriting credits later being removed from several songs on streaming platforms.
Spy-Fi does not necessarily present espionage as it is practiced in reality but rather glamorizes spy-craft through its focus on high-tech equipment, agencies, and organizations with nearly limitless resources and incredibly high-stakes adventures. The spy protagonist may discover in his or her investigation that a mad scientist or evil genius and his secret organization are using futuristic technology to further their schemes. Examples of these include the James Bond film series, the use of advanced scientific technologies for global influence or domination in The Baroness spy novels, using space travel technology to destroy the world as in Kiss the Girls and Make Them Die, weather control in Our Man Flint, using a sonic weapon in Dick Barton Strikes Back, a death ray in Dick Barton at Bay, or replacing world leaders with evil twins in In Like Flint.
Bob Donat wrote in Rolling Stone magazine in 1972 that while the film's message "was diluted by schizoid cross-purposes" because it "glamorizes machismo- cocaine consciousness... the anti-drug message on [Mayfield's soundtrack] is far stronger and more definite than in the film." Because of the tendency of these blaxploitation films to glorify the criminal life of dealers and pimps to target a mostly black lower class audience, Mayfield's album set this movie apart. With songs like "Freddie's Dead", a song that focuses on the demise of Freddie, a junkie that was forced into "pushin' dope for the man" because of a debt that he owed to his dealer, and "Pusherman", a song that reveals how many people in the ghetto fell victim to drug abuse, and therefore became dependent upon their dealers, Mayfield illuminated a darker side of life in the ghetto that these blaxploitation films often failed to criticize. However, although Mayfield's soundtrack criticized the glorification of dealers and pimps, he in no way denied that this glorification was occurring.

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