Sentences Generator
And
Your saved sentences

No sentences have been saved yet

21 Sentences With "making a spectacle of"

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

Making a spectacle of himself online and in the media draws buyers to his books.
Plein is known for making a spectacle of his runway shows, and this year's show already was full of drama.
Fans adore this guy for the simple reason that he gets the job done and has a habit of making a spectacle of it.
So many of us try so hard to get away from the "crazy, loud black woman" stereotype, and there I was, just making a spectacle of myself.
Then I started seeing people in weed T-shirts, smoking on the sidewalk and making a spectacle of it, and I was like, This is fucking goofy.
While Jay-Z and Beyonce were sitting during the National Anthem, President Trump was also making a spectacle of himself with lots of ... Trump-esq hand gestures.
He took one for the team by flailing around on the rock, making a spectacle of himself to distract the Goliaths while Nick and Carl found the vote steal advantage.
"LeBron is making a spectacle of himself, a circus of his son's early playing days and using his son's game as yet another platform to build the LeBron social-media brand."
But he shares with him a certain way of seeing the world and being in the world — and the luxury of persisting in this way of being, and even making a spectacle of it.
"Most guys just want him to shut up and go away," Eric Deming, a retired master chief petty officer and Navy SEAL, told The Times, lamenting Gallagher making a "spectacle of himself" during the dramatic case.
In the 1960s he came up with "The Dating Game" and "The Newlywed Game," making a spectacle of his contestants' romantic yearnings in the first case and their honeymoon-period bliss, adjustments and foibles in the second.
" The cheerful 1950s-style beat of "The Showman (Little More Better)" gives Bono a springboard to mock the artifice of his role as a pop singer: "Making a spectacle of falling apart is/Just the start of the show.
They handled it like they handled every situation — raising their children together and trying to give them normal lives, not making a spectacle of their happiness during Pitt's divorce from Aniston, letting their child Shiloh question and experiment with gender roles.
But what concerns me about her particular brand of white feminism here is that she's making a spectacle of the body of a black boy — who was murdered due to the lies of a white woman — in order to aggrandize her artistic mission.
If you're the kind of MMA fan who likes his fighters engaging in extracurricular combat, online near-maulings of grievously overmatched opponents, social media dick-swinging, rampant cross-disciplinary macho posturing, or generally making a spectacle of themselves by what our fearless editor would call "meathead antics," then this has been the week for you.
" Prosecutors also wrote: "Unfortunately, despite the assurances of defense counsel prior to trial—as well as efforts by defense counsel to control Shkreli—once the jury was selected and empaneled, Shkreli embarked on a campaign of disruption by commenting on trial evidence and witnesses to the press and on social media, and by making a spectacle of himself and the trial directly on the courthouse grounds.
While serving in the U.S. Senate during the Civil War, McDougall again worked on behalf of a Pacific railroad project, but alcohol abuse made him ineffective. By 1862, McDougall was making a spectacle of himself and neglecting his Senate duties. He fought against some of Lincoln's war measures, but he was mostly dysfunctional. Not once did he travel back to California during his entire six-year term.
This pushes Phoebe to begin drinking heavily, often making a spectacle of herself at public events. Her fondness for alcohol once led to a drunk driving arrest, as well as a drunken tumble down her staircase. Phoebe and Charles eventually divorce, and she finds a new love in the form of Langley Wallingford. Langley claims to be a professor, but he has a checkered past as a con artist.
Fudge is Peter's little brother. Disaster follows him everywhere he goes, often making a spectacle of himself and setting a bad image to his family. Some of his best-known escapades in the series include throwing temper tantrums (most notably at the shoe store), finger-painting with mashed potatoes at a diner, scribbling all over Peter's transportation committee poster, and ultimately, swallowing Peter's small pet turtle. Although Fudge is spoiled, will often throw tantrums, and act very immature, he later becomes very intelligent for his age (as first revealed in Superfudge).
Believing that he would not be caught, he made his way back home to Manhattan, stopping at saloons merrily drinking and making a spectacle of himself. Yawl used by Albert W. Hicks discovered by police detectives When the abandoned but still afloat A.E. Johnson was discovered the next day by the coast guard, they found the deck and cabin bathed in blood, including inexplicably a set of severed fingers. The city was shocked by the gruesome scene and intrigued by the mystery of what happened. Police detectives could see that a yawl was missing and began a search for it.
However, it was later discovered that Darwin had much earlier in the night persuaded Dorothy to hit the ball out of turn, and Bribs had hit the ball back-to-back as well, which eased some of the suspicion from Bill. Buy & Sell: Although Bill admitted afterwards that it would have been nearly impossible to turn a profit with the bizarre assortment of wares they were forced to sell, he did little to help matters, spending more energy making a spectacle of himself than being a salesman. Three Questions: When Bill's turn to answer the questionnaire came up, he made it a point to answer the questions using the most illogical reasoning possible. For example, one question asked whether Dorothy or Heather would be more likely to be alone ten years from now.

No results under this filter, show 21 sentences.

Copyright © 2024 RandomSentenceGen.com All rights reserved.