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55 Sentences With "hell raising"

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

"The tone of Breitbart is hell-raising, offensive, transgressive, vulgar, nasty," said Main.
Litigation was their idea of fun, the continuation of hell-raising by other means.
Satanic Stories (6998)Get in touch with your devilish side with these hell-raising horror films.
More cuddly than hell-raising, Mr Mair has swapped 4m listeners at the BBC for about half that number.
DevilBetween the hell-raising attitude and the crimson attire, it's clear why the devil is a classic Halloween choice.
And it certainly doesn't hurt that the songs run the gamut from hell-raising rave-ups to plaintive ballads.
He first emerged more than a dozen years ago as a hell-raising young talent in the Drive-By Truckers.
Never mind the ball-busting, hell-raising rebel girl, a Nashville stereotype that previous generations found progressive and now looks like male fantasy.
But there will be more American flair on display at the Accra Famous Famiglia—pizzas will be delivered by a fleet of bad-ass, hell-raising Harley Davidson hogs.
Nor was it designed or engineered to be; nor are most vehicles designed or engineered for stop-to-go hell-raising in the daily manner driven by most of us.
Trump campaigned not as a traditional Republican but as a hell-raising populist who promised to work on behalf of "the forgotten men and women," to quote his inaugural address.
He's also continued his hell-raising, picking fights with whatever culture war target is closest to hand, especially women and especially black people and especially black athletes protesting police brutality.
He belonged to a hell-raising confraternity of artists known as the Bentvueghels — "birds of a feather" in Dutch — whose motto celebrated the pleasures of "Bacco, tabacco e Venere": drinking, smoking and sex.
She's just published a memoir, "Make Trouble," in which she writes about her own history of hell-raising, going back to a boycott of the class prayer when she was in grade school.
It is there in every breath of Amma Crellin (Eliza Scanlen), Camille's teenage half-sister and the hell-raising, hard-partying It-girl of Wind Gap, when she leaves the punishing walls of her home.
One informant in Turkey says an Isis contact in Syria sent the number of a member of the group's Hisba, or morality police, with instructions to "give him hell," raising his suspicions of personal vendetta.
Steve Dunleavy, a hell-raising Australian who transfused his adrenaline into tabloid newspapers and television as a party crasher to American journalism, died on Monday at his home in Island Park, N.Y. He was 241.
From Bob Marley, the Ramones, Debbie Harry, and Miles Davis, to James Brown, Zeppelin, and a hell-raising stint as the photographer at London's legendary Rainbow Theatre in its most hedonistic prime, Jill's list goes on.
While the cliche of the drunken sailor—staggering on the docks after a night of hell-raising in some seamy fleshpot—is deeply ingrained in the national subconscious, it bears mentioning that rum was not always the Naval drink of choice.
Outside the elevator in his West Hollywood apartment building, holding a bag of garbage to go out, the tall, silver-haired man in a well-worn black polo shirt appeared a far cry from the hell-raising socialite he once was.
Twenty-one years before they starred in "Girls Trip," Jada Pinkett Smith and Queen Latifah were part of another hell-raising foursome: African-American women who earn very little money working for a janitorial service and suffer various forms of injustice.
But Prine defies easy categorization: Unlike a figure like Blaze Foley (given the prestige biopic last year by Ethan Hawke), Prine doesn't have a deep bench of stories from his hell-raising years or any outsize quirks (like Foley's duct-taping habit).
The overly broad detours are less successful: Only someone as naïve as Nat could think that Richard's unannounced visit to an old flame might go well, and a thread involving Ron Livingston as a former hell-raising friend of Richard's rapidly becomes cringeworthy.
But more than any other movie star he embodied the stance that permeated much of the country-and-western and southern rock of the Carter era, in which regional pride and defiant hell-raising were accompanied — and sometimes drowned out — by class resentment directed against the bosses and their minions.
The skinny teenage boy in an ill-fitting suit, awkwardly waving at the camera and pouring Manischewitz for several dour-faced party attendees, is light years away from the hell-raising Danny whose exploits are forever enshrined in seminal rock tomes like Please Kill Me and No One Here Gets Out Alive.
It was, as NME called it at the time, "the nastiest, healthiest and funniest piece of press in the history of rock'n'roll habits" Then in 1977, after 12 hell-raising issues, it went out with the same immediacy from which it began, ceasing to exist just because Perry feared it would soon become absorbed into the mainstream press.
Anybody that has burned through Michael Azzerad's Our Band Could be Your Life will have read about similar acid-fuelled, hell-raising tales, and even a cursory search of Butthole Surfers online will quickly lead you to videos of their lead singer, Gibby Haynes, looking like a caveman who has been transplanted from the dark ages as he rambles incoherently about worms with the mania and malevolent glare of a guy you would most likely cross the street to avoid if you saw him coming.
Alongside his spiritual brother Cody Jinks, Whitey Morgan has staked his claim on the rough and tumble side of the country line, and it's working out rather well; his hell-raising honky-tonk tunes like the swaggering "Just Got Paid" and more introspective, whiskey-soaked ballads like the somber working man's lament "What Am I Supposed to Do" channel country's twin sacred cows of bourbon and the blues, and as someone raised up both (plus the work of classic barroom troubadours), I couldn't be happier about it.
Loud, sloppy, angry songs about revolution, apocalypse, and fucking shit up, or sad songs about the mess we've made already, or beer-drinking and hell-raising songs to scream out with your buddies—punk is many things, and even though there's a snowball's chance in hell that Kardashian can tell Discharge from Disclose or Antisect from Anti Cimex, what could possibly be more punk than a woman steamrolling over any concept of what is "proper" or "respectable" and rising to international fame on the strength of her own sweat and blood, to say nothing of that perfect storm of sexual agency, business acumen, and ego?
It honors Govenlock's wild past and wild spirit of its hell-raising pioneer days.
After yet another night of drinking, arm-wrestling, hell-raising and champion-level tiresomeness, Reed turned up his toes mid-shoot with a number of crucial scenes still to be shot.
Mary Agnes Welch, "Wyatt's abandonment of hell-raising style sign of his ambitions?", Winnipeg Free Press, 13 December 2004, B3.; Mary Agnes Welch, "Transcona tired of being abused", Winnipeg Free Press, 14 March 2003, B1. He also emerged as a prominent opponent of Mayor Glen Murray, with whom he frequently clashed at council meetings.
With the sadness, there's joy involved. It's difficult to share the feelings right now." The positive reviews were not limited to sports fans. The New York Post's TV critic, Linda Stasi states, "You don't have to be a hockey fan to love Broad Street Bullies or the team that inspired this hilarious, hell-raising hockey doc.
Kiick and Csonka were roommates at training camp and on the road. Their hell-raising typically included consuming large quantities of alcohol. In 1969 sportswriter Bill Braucher of the Miami Herald, upon hearing of their exploits on and off the field, dubbed them "Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid" (Csonka was Sundance, Kiick was Butch).Always on the Run, p.
Roger Clinton was born in Yell County, Arkansas, the son of Allen W. Clinton (August 26, 1880 – June 14, 1965) and Eula Cornwell (May 29, 1882 – October 10, 1975).US Census, 1910, Yell County, Arkansas. Clinton was an owner of the local Buick dealership,My Life, Three, p. 17. and "a handsome, hell-raising, twice- divorced man from Hot Springs, Arkansas".
After graduation, Cooper received a prestigious appointment to the U.S. Naval Academy, but was expelled during his senior year for "hell raising and for championing air power". In 1916, Cooper worked for the Minneapolis Daily News as a reporter, where he met Delos Lovelace. In the next few years, he also worked at the Des Moines Register-Leader and the St. Louis Post-Dispatch.
Three parallel story lines draw an exploited hotel stripper (Lomez, who is sent to work a small Quebec town), a drunken gang of hell-raising snowmobilers, and a film crew attempting to shoot a political documentary about exploited textile workers (echoing Denys Arcand's own NFB-banned documentary On est au coton), together into a potent mixture of action, violence against women, and film as a political tool.
Allmusic describes Barnes' vocals as sounding like, "a buzz saw blade that's flown loose and ripped through a bunch of parked cars. The boys come crashing in through the window like a bunch of rowdies with hell-raising on their minds, cranking out the guitar rock rottweiler." Rip It up describes the song as, "a crunching rocker, and one wonders why he's contributed so few songs to their repertoire".
The clubhouse has two bars, which are named after two of the club's famous players – Andy Ripley and Alexander Obolensky. The first floodlights for the main pitch were famously provided by the hell-raising actor Oliver Reed who was also a member of the club and occasional player. Those lights have now been replaced after storm damage. Some 350 Park members served in the Great War, of which 109 died, believed to be the highest number from any club.
Additionally, Jacquet would increasingly 'push the envelope' in his aerial missions, whether volunteering for "special missions", or simply hell-raising. In the latter category, Jacquet bombed the Germans at Groote Hemme on 24 November 1914, and again on Christmas Eve at Beerst and Essen. In the former, while brave men brought home the aerial photographs and reconnaissance sightings from the front, Jacquet penetrated past them to pierce deep into the German defenses, looking for a fight.
Williams was born in Newport News, Virginia, where he attended the segregated public schools. He was a "hell-raising" rambunctious student who never took a textbook home. Still, Williams's brilliance was recognized by some of his teachers who permitted him to read whatever he chose while in school and who devised especially difficult tests for him, independent of his classmates. Along with one or more of his teachers, he would also occasionally make up and grade the quizzes of his classmates.
Unimpressed by the show, he throws tomatoes at the performers and then at the ushers when they come to kick him out. Fleeing behind the scenes he swipes a can of green paint from a scenery painter and amuses himself daubing it on half-naked chorus girls; in the ruckus created he escapes the building. Next he steals a policeman's horse for a joy ride. Abandoning it soon after, he ducks pursuit in a barbershop and contemplates more hell-raising.
Leila Fujimori, "UH law professor was Asian-American activist", Honolulu Star Bulletin, January 17, 2006. Iijima was a founder of Asian Americans for Action, one of the first Asian American-focused civil rights organizations of the 1960s. / Andrew Hsiao, "100 Years of Hell-Raising: The Hidden History of Asian American Activism in New York City", The Village Voice;;, June 23, 1989. Iijima later became a law professor and wrote about discrimination against Asian Americans, Native Hawaiians and members of other racial groups.
Right before the CMJ gig, the band had just finished a U.S. tour (some gigs with Nebula) and recorded their second full- length release Powderkeg for Small Stone Records. Powderkeg was released in spring of 2002, followed by more and more shows. The band was working extensively during this period and leaving a scar of hell-raising, drug- taking, and loud rock and roll all over the United States. Near the end of 2002, the band grew tired and took a long break (long break for them) until the spring of 2003.
The Tourist Information Centre at Cleveleys reported a large increase in enquiries in the weeks after Riverdance grounded. Local residents complained that the influx of visitors "made their lives hell", raising parking, traffic and litter issues. By early April, the number of visitors had begun to drop. The owner of an ice-cream parlour in Cleveleys prepared a display of photographs of the stricken ferry and used them to raise funds for the local Fleetwood branch of the RNLI, in appreciation of their work in rescuing the passengers and crew.
The hero of The Little Nugget is a well-to-do man of thirty, in excellent health, with a little sadness in his past. During a hell-raising and somewhat self-absorbed youth, he became engaged to Audrey Blake, but treated her rather poorly, patronizing her from his position of great wealth. When she left him for another, his arrogance was brought home to him, and he wandered the earth for three years, a broken man. When we first meet him, he has recently returned to London and has just become engaged to Cynthia Drassilis, mostly because he felt sorry for her.
" Richard Corliss of Time gave the film a positive review, stating that "Angels & Demons has elemental satisfactions in its blend of movie genre that could appeal to wide segments of the audience." Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun-Times awarded the film three stars, praising Howard's direction as an "even-handed job of balancing the scales" and claiming "[the film] promises to entertain." The Christian Science Monitor gave the film a positive review, claiming the film is "an OK action film." Peter Travers of Rolling Stone gave the film two- and-a-half out of four stars claiming "the movie can be enjoyed for the hell- raising hooey it is.
In Rolling Stone's Alt Rock-a-Rama, Mars detailed the kind of hell-raising that he and the other Replacements—singer-guitarist Paul Westerberg, lead guitarist Bob Stinson, and bassist Tommy Stinson—indulged in when they were together. Among other incidents, Mars was thrown in jail for playing chicken with an unmarked police car. Also, in conjunction with Bob Stinson, he sabotaged a gig where he knew there would be a lot of record-industry personnel in attendance by going to a novelty store and purchasing some bottles of stink juice. Mars sometimes transformed into an alter ego named Papi the Clown while on tour; he would paint his face when inebriated and spook the band and road crew.
In 1960, he reached Top 35 status in Cashbox magazine's country charts as Donny Young with the tune "Miracle Of Love". From the early to mid-1960s, he also enjoyed some success as a songwriter for others, with his biggest songwriting hit being "Apartment No. 9", which served as Tammy Wynette's first chart hit in December 1966. In 1964, he changed his name legally to Johnny Paycheck, taking the name from Johnny Paychek, a top ranked boxer from Chicago (and not directly as a humorous alternative to Johnny Cash as is commonly believed) who once fought Joe Louis for the heavyweight title."Obituary: 'Johnny Paycheck: Hell-raising country singer'", independent.co.uk, February 21, 2003; accessed March 26, 2015.
Double Trouble remains the "oddest" album George Jones ever recorded. The singer was enjoying the attention of hip rock & rollers, thanks to a glowing article in Rolling Stone, and it appears that this album was an attempt on the part of Epic and producer Billy Sherrill to take advantage of the crossover potential. Enlisting Paycheck, who had played bass for Jones as part of the Jones Boys in the 1960s and had scored numerous hits throughout the 1970s, the album consists of mostly covers of 1950s rock and roll but with Sherrill's heavy handed production and a chorus of female backing singers. The title was more than appropriate, considering that Paycheck and Jones in particular were at their raging, hell-raising worst.
The following season's "The Living Skins" saw aliens transforming themselves into fashionable plastic jump suits that would control and eventually kill the millions of people who wear them. The most notable example was in the fondly remembered 1974 adventure "The Blue and the Green" which sees the whole of humanity divided by a craze to wear blue or green badges and for a children's show, the whole concept of classroom violence is handled maturely by Price and his production team. In 1977 Mike joins a pop band, "The Heart of Sogguth" whose hell-raising music will bring back the Devil when millions of teenagers are watching them on television. The popularity of the book "Chariots of the Gods" was also an influence on 1975's "Worlds Away" when it is revealed that the evil Kulthan had controlled and assisted the ancient Egyptians.
Ralph Hubert "Sonny" Barger (born October 8, 1938) is an American biker, author, actor, and convicted felon who is a founding member (1957) of the Oakland, California chapter of the Hells Angels Motorcycle Club. He is the author of five books – Hell's Angel: The Life and Times of Sonny Barger and the Hell's Angels Motorcycle Club (2000), Dead in 5 Heartbeats (2004), Freedom: Credos from the Road (2005), 6 Chambers, 1 Bullet (2006), and Let's Ride: Sonny Barger's Guide to Motorcycling (2010) – and editor of the book Ridin' High, Livin' Free: Hell-Raising Stories (2003). Onscreen, Barger was identified but did not speak in Hells Angels on Wheels (1967) and was one of several members of the Angels who had speaking parts playing themselves in Hell's Angels '69 (1969); he has appeared in several additional films. He also appeared in the Sons of Anarchy television show as Lenny "The Pimp" Janowitz.
"Same Ole Me" is a song written by Paul Overstreet and recorded by American country music artist George Jones with The Oak Ridge Boys. It was released in January 1982 as the second single and partial title track from Jones' album Still the Same Ole Me. The song reached number 5 on the Billboard Hot Country Singles chart[ George Jones Billboard Singles] and number 1 on the RPM Country Tracks chart in Canada.RPM Country Tracks The song, an anthem of survival that celebrates the companionship of true love, was released when Jones was at his hell-raising worst; the same month of the single's release, he caused a minor riot when he failed to show for a performance in Jackson, Tennessee, resulting in the police being called when causing enraged fans stormed the box office to demand their money back. He was also accused of throwing a bottle through the sliding glass doors of his room at the Holiday Inn Rivermont in Memphis.
The "hippo" of the title (occasionally referred to as "the happy hippo" and given to wallowing in long baths) is Edward (Ted/Tedward) Lennox Wallace, an aging, lecherous, one-time hell-raising poet, reduced by diminishing poetic talent to working as a theatre critic. The story opens with the aftermath of Ted being fired from his job on a newspaper. At the suggestion of a sick goddaughter, Jane (suffering from leukaemia), he goes to stay at the Norfolk country house of old schoolfriend and Army colleague from National Service, Lord Michael Logan and his wife Lady Anne, to investigate unspecified mysterious goings-on. Ted reports back to Jane regularly, in the form of long, rambling letters, apprising her of events at Swafford Hall whilst also offering his views on numerous other issues (women, art, poetry, sex, morality and modern life being favorite topics), all the time attempting to uncover the nature of the unusual events that Jane has instructed him to look out for.
" (this was, in reality, spliced from a stray comment made during the recording of the album; the upcut of ambiance, reverb and clipped voices can be heard in the background.) Produced by Steve Rowland, the album consists mostly of '50s rock and roll remakes, but does contain a couple interesting contemporary cuts: a foot- stomping version of Creedence Clearwater Revival's "Bad Moon Rising" and the Gordon Lightfoot classic "Early Morning Rain." The remake of Lewis's old Sun cut "Drinking Wine Spo-Dee-O-Dee" would be the album's hit single, reaching number 20 on the Billboard country chart and peaking at number 41 on the pop chart. Another noteworthy cut, Charlie Rich's "No Headstone on My Grave," would become a concert staple as a sort of anthem for Lewis and his God- fearing, hell-raising persona. Lewis would later confess that he was impressed by the British musicians and their professionalism, stating in A Half Century of Hits, "I sat down at the piano, put the headphones on and started to record. These kids, there wasn’t any one of them smokin’ pot, takin’ any pills or liquor.

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