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"minutiae" Definitions
  1. very small details

784 Sentences With "minutiae"

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

She knows the minutiae of politics the way some of us know the minutiae of Star Trek episodes.
Mark saw the overall and the minutiae at all times.
A small thrill for anyone drawn to the style's minutiae.
Focusing on minutiae is not the way to build wealth.
But from an American perspective, such minutiae are basically irrelevant.
Instead, the exhibition examines the minutiae of fandom surrounding boxing.
An app that lingers on the minutiae of your life.
It is a company obsessed with the minutiae of fabric.
Typically, callers ask about visas and minutiae of employment law.
Better Things is grounded in the minutiae of family life.
Minutiae, its name, refers to the literal minutiae of life, but also to minutes: there are 1,440 of them in a day, 303 seconds that many times over in the span of 24 hours.
How do you have such encyclopedic knowledge of pop culture minutiae?
Your wheat field can wait; for now, immerse yourself in minutiae.
It's just this minutiae of social life that trips them up.
Insightful, keen, even trenchant observations of the minutiae of everyday life.
I think about that film when I'm mired in frustrating minutiae.
I could describe the minutiae for you, but this is 2017.
Minutiae in the moment can sometimes be tea leaves for the future.
The network immerses its users in the daily minutiae of the period.
It's the kind of minutiae that passes most of us by unnoticed.
"Very few presidents get into the minutiae of tactical decisions," he affirmed.
The book is brimming with jaw-dropping minutiae of medicine's gory days.
"Tools don't make music," he reminded the audience amid the technical minutiae.
Go over the minutiae: When and how will we tell the child?
Like many films of its type, it doesn't dwell on geopolitical minutiae.
Lyrics slowly wind themselves together, revealing minutiae that expands into a portrait.
They don't always see the daily minutiae of caring for one another.
The point here isn't the policy minutiae, which most Americans won't follow.
Then again, negotiations are typically long, usually tedious and given to minutiae.
The point here isn't the policy minutiae, which most Americans won't follow.
His "minutiae" is that he is a Muslim — his mother is a Christian.
The best athletes pays razor-sharp attention to the minutiae of the game.
To me, that makes it way more fun—to get into the minutiae.
In track, the technical minutiae of body movements take countless hours to perfect.
An Orthodox Jew, Rabbi Freundel was fixated on the minutiae of Jewish law.
What I was interested in exploring was just the minutiae of getting older.
"Bess rewrites all the time, and minutiae — a pronoun, an adjective," Alexander said.
Voters have things on their minds other than the arcane minutiae of lawmaking.
Previously, arguments for gun safety laws got lost in the minutiae of policy.
She acknowledged her privilege, all right, down to minutiae of who's paying for what.
To some, this design flop is simply minutiae, and the public response an overreaction.
Instead, she finds herself duelling with Wilbur Ross, Mr Trump's commerce secretary, over minutiae.
Many big firms loathe these changes, warning that investors will be swamped by minutiae.
The privilege approach is, practically speaking, about raising awareness of the minutiae of injustice.
We hope not to get too bogged down in the minutiae of tasting descriptions.
Mueller's 448-page report on the matter was filled with minutiae and legal jargon.
You are more concerned with the minutiae, how everything is going to fit together.
Even minutiae like the design of cigarette packs would be affected, the government said.
The museum pays great attention to detail and even minutiae, but it isn't myopic.
Being stuck indoors, while boring, snapped me out of the minutiae of daily life.
To be sure, presidents have sometimes involved themselves in the minutiae of making war.
But it takes a certain person to zoom in and deal with the minutiae.
But mostly, and spanning all sports, we guffawed and pointed at unpredictable moments of minutiae.
Never has a Survivor episode turned so fundamentally on the minutiae of the game's rulebook.
For better or worse, internet pop culture is obsessed with the minutiae of movie production.
Lego Boost doesn't getting mired in tech set-up and the minutiae of actual code.
Perhaps it's the same reason we like to read people's Money Diaries: It's minutiae voyeurism.
But we could all use more time to tackle the minutiae of our daily lives.
We: Once you crack this code, you'll feel liberated from 90 percent of life's minutiae.
This sort of minutiae should bore me, but I've fallen under the cable news spell.
Brooke nailed that question, while Gomez looked on shocked that anyone could remember such minutiae.
Cinematic auteurs are generally renown for their intense interest in the minutiae of their productions.
In the music industry's streaming battles, the fight extends to even the minutiae of copyright.
The reasons are buried in the minutiae of tax law and an unbelievably complex transaction.
The minutiae of his experience were the point of the book, elaborated in extravagant detail.
It understood the concerns and minutiae of girlhood, and reflected those things back to me.
But carving the minutiae of one's love life into comedy material isn't exclusive to him.
Policing the minutiae down to the millimeter seems much less productive and much less desirable.
This is all a lot of tedious Harvard minutiae, but it's important to the story.
Keeper: Keeper wants to stop 1099 employees from getting ripped off by minutiae of tax forms.
DS;ND is superbly structured, where all the technical minutiae is arranged in order just so.
There was a deep interest in the minutiae of the drinking setting from a social perspective.
Warren Buffett's workdays no longer include dealing with much of the minutiae of running Berkshire Hathaway.
Mr Schwartz deftly conveys the aesthetic beauty of Fermi's insights without getting mired in their minutiae.
Humming alongside the emotional and technical minutiae of his novels is usually a biting social satire.
And so goes the tyranny of judging one another by the minutiae of our email tone.
Beyond the anonymity and its focus on the quotidian, Minutiae also prevents users from following anyone.
It assumed a broad, edge-of-seat audience for the minutiae of his mulling and maneuvering.
The show — about minutiae, anxiety and show business — set a high-water mark for observational comedy.
One could fill a 98-minute movie with such minutiae, but why would you want to?
They are meticulously detail-oriented, priding themselves on knowing Austen minutiae as much as literary themes.
In its muted, minutiae-obsessed way, "The Assistant" is saying to these men, We see you.
I wanted to really explore the minutiae of getting [an abortion] and how hard it is.
Students, lawyers and community members waited through hours of legislative minutiae for a chance to testify.
Some developers might choose to represent this through the minutiae of the job of soup making.
Whatever the legal minutiae, the mandate survived the Supreme Court by the narrowest and unlikeliest of margins.
Even the newest member, Meghan Markle, has been struggling with the minutiae of royals dos and don'ts.
Weep in transported ecstasy as his aphotic pelage incandesces anew beneath the featherweight legions of efflugent minutiae.
In some sense this is congressional procedural minutiae — but it's worth paying attention to, for two reasons.
In the meantime, experts will be poring through a mountain of minutiae in search of significant revelations.
The bulk of the presentation was (as expected) devoted to the intimate minutiae of Super Smash Bros.
The minutiae of his bones, muscles, and psychological state have been their own news industry ever since.
The light-colored region of Robert Rauschenberg's "Preliminary Study Décor for Minutiae" should appear at the top.
This is the opposite of most people who are overwhelmed with short-term deadlines, meetings, and minutiae.
He used to keep a running commentary on the minutiae of his daily existence—nothing was spared.
I've been playing Total War games for long enough that I get weirdly hung up on minutiae.
But beyond immigration, a president who has made clear his disinterest in policy minutiae offered few details.
In this kind of environment, even Boeing's CEO got lost in the minutiae of the bigger picture.
It quickly became clear, however, that most residents were not there to weigh in on legal minutiae.
In BackStory, historians Ed Ayers, Peter Onuf, and Brian Balogh break down the minutiae of their field.
The travelers who spend the most money take all of this minutiae seriously, and Marriott knows it.
The technical minutiae of putting a paper to bed in hot type are conjured with affectionate specificity.
She seems to prefer the bright lights of cable television appearances to the minutiae of passing laws.
Mr. West sat next to her, head down, fiddling with his phone, seemingly uninterested in the minutiae.
I worried that the minutiae of domesticity would change us into petty creatures who bickered over laundry.
With any object you share with other people, you talk about the minutiae of how it functions.
She started as a production assistant, hated the minutiae, and decided she would rather set up gear.
We covered the minutiae of the game (and the way kids played it in historically inaccurate ways).
But Michael dropping dead of complications from that gunshot throws all of these minutiae into stark relief.
But none of the shows quite understand the minutiae of first world problems the way Girls does.
It works like this: Once a day, at a random time, Minutiae prompts you to take a photo.
We get caught up in minutiae and risk losing sight of what binds us, rather than divides us.
Perhaps the editors pine for the days of print encyclopedias, when the minutiae of time wasn't an issue.
Then, when you get on site, there's still a lot of minutiae and details to get worked out.
Minutiae offers a momentary glimpse into the lives of strangers, fleeting and whimsical and a lot of fun.
Such is the material minutiae eVTOL companies will have to manage, and they're far more than skin-deep.
She makes us pay attention to the minutiae and cosmos of beauty, while the daughter would rather rebel.
After years of watching the triumphs, struggles, and minutiae of their daily lives unfold on their eponymous E!
Walmart is scrutinising the minutiae of e-commerce as closely as it monitors every aspect of its business.
It's odd to consider that our understanding of historical atmospheric shifts depends on the careful tallying of minutiae.
When it comes to diplomacy, great attention is often put on the specific minutiae of the actions themselves.
As they begin receiving briefings, they will soon find themselves overwhelmed with complexity and mired in technological minutiae.
"I was most moved by tiny details about life inside of prison, the minutiae of deprivation," she says.
While some minutiae of Khalilzad's agreement are still under discussion, sources say that the plan is 99% done.
That kind of minutiae, perhaps essential for an aficionado, can be a bit eye-glazing for an amateur.
Similar to Scarry's famous village-wide cross-sections, Wimmelbook scenes are teeming with sub-scenes and silly minutiae.
Seducing us into textual minutiae with the prim tone of the academic before pieing us with vulgar prose?
I can take the time to discuss minutiae with my colleagues or to carefully complete an oil painting.
At a deep level, people want order and predictability and some control over the minutiae of their lives.
Physicists have observed atoms, electrons, and other minutiae transitioning between wave-like and particle-like states for decades.
The new Fed guidance is emerging as bank directors say they are overwhelmed by minutiae in their jobs.
There's the problem of scale; both the minutiae and the panoramas of warfare must be balanced and accurate.
If his straightforward legislation stalls, Mr. Hensarling may find comfort in the minutiae of the budget reconciliation process.
With 10 or 15 reports, a leader can focus only on the big important issues, not on minutiae.
The pre-distribution agenda, while rooted in the minutiae of government regulation, actually has a simple core message.
Large acquirers will even want to look at information like HR policies, pay scales and other human resources minutiae.
For some of us that trajectory meant countless fruitless hours writing about the minutiae of watches or bird feeders.
But these naysayers often focus on transactional minutiae and miss the strategic implications in the service of tactical wrangling.
Particularly since Modernism, which saw Joyce and Virginia Woolf anatomise the minutiae of life, literary time has been circumscribed.
All these things contributed to Monday's drab affair, but England were ultimately victims of Euro 2016's logistical minutiae.
I've never cared about the minutiae of a game in this way before, making every day thrilling and terrifying.
You explore an empty house, painstakingly detailed with real-world minutiae, and discover a romance between two teenage girls.
Otherwise, Republicans vacillated between burying Yovanovitch in minutiae, and attempting to describe her experience under Trump as ultimately positive.
More casual fans, while they may be intimidated by the flood of minutiae, will find it worth the plunge.
Presidents don't always delve into the minutiae of the legislative process, but rarely are they so uninterested in it.
"Looking through the minutiae of the College of Arms is, even for Shakespeare scholars, almost unbearable," Mr. Shapiro said.
But when this rich setting is abandoned, the narrative falters (unless you're excited by endless minutiae about licensing negotiations).
Enfield is a linguist at the University of Sydney, whose research uncovers meaning in the minutiae of everyday chatter.
There are, of course, hyper-minutiae-focused movie podcasts, like Star Wars Minute and its many minute-cast imitators.
The next year, McVay did the same thing — only this time, the nuances were deeper, the minutiae more intricate.
Depressed and desperate for change, he takes a job at a supermarket, hoping to find inspiration through daily minutiae.
Mired in the everyday minutiae of child rearing, she experiences an electric charge from parenting, a warmth and glow.
If you are an Olympic athlete, then, yes, the minutiae of your diet's composition and timing are very consequential.
This is harder than it looks; as Anderson explains, it's often through legislative minutiae that voting rights are curtailed.
It's not just the abstract nature of dating that has changed; it's the minutiae, the details, the small things.
Every time she was challenged, Clinton retreated into technocratic recitations of minutiae This is a real problem for Clinton.
This is a singularly strange and absorbing film that zeroes in on the minutiae of performances of all kinds.
I think it's precisely those details within the minutiae, which can be new and fascinating, that keep us exploring.
This is a strange idiosyncrasy, given the amount of attention I pay to minutiae around the rest of the apartment.
"If you're too close to a situation, like in an office, you get bogged down with the minutiae," Branson says.
Zuckerberg was joined by comedian Jerry Seinfeld, who dug into Zuckerberg's everyday routine using his hallmark focus on ordinary minutiae.
Time will tell who is correct, but such minutiae will matter less than whether one of these new approaches works.
Tesla's forums are full of die-hard fans discussing the minutiae of the Model 23 and agonizing over delivery dates.
"He believes debates are not won or lost on policy minutiae," the Times wrote of his debate prep last week.
In the end, focusing the conversation on the minutiae of the scientific claims in the manifesto is a red herring.
This is smart: My family shouldn't need to have to endure the minutiae of my life when I'm not there.
What there needs to be is an accretion of minutiae that satisfies the listener in his or her own obsession.
The voters may opine on the overarching principle but the voters cannot get involved in the minutiae of policy implementation.
Others, for whom the minutiae of food and wine are unimportant, may deem you fussy if you notice too demonstrably.
This transformation runs deeper than just the minutiae of legislative process; it goes to the big picture of national politics.
Before she got sick, she was very engaged—compulsively reading and listening to the news, wrapped up in the minutiae.
"It was the architects and designers who needed reigning in, because they tended to go into technical minutiae," said s.surface.
On one hand, knowing all of this mythos minutiae isn't imperative to enjoy Fantastic Beasts or the upcoming four films.
If you focus too much on the minutiae in your day-to-day life, you will feel like a failure.
The woman's lawyer, Michael David, said the motion focused on minutiae, not the issues at the heart of the case.
Because if you're planning to move to another country, you should immediately get comfortable with researching minutiae of this sort.
Senator Elizabeth Warren's passion for policy minutiae has become her way of standing out in a crowded field of candidates.
She'll never wake up next to him, but she can ask him to describe the minutiae of his morning routine.
They're served by conventions, online communities, podcasts — whole ecosystems of media dedicated to digging into the minutiae of their favorites.
"Besides the minutiae of this policy, he's ushering a return to the Cold War between Washington and Havana," Acosta said.
Centers are forced to spend a disproportionate amount of time on bureaucratic minutiae—time better spent training more business owners.
Russia's political class marvels at how much time it now spends chewing over the minutiae of the American political system.
But the president's meddling in military minutiae has been steadily on the rise — first at home, and more recently abroad.
While zine-style animated sequences and VHS taped interviews enliven the pace, the documentary is burdened by too much minutiae.
Mr. Eggleston's adroit compositions and vibrant light teasingly suggest that a larger story lurks within the minutiae of everyday existence.
Not the minutiae of it, not the little details of the way that people deliver it, but the real truth.
I've noticed subtlety is often missing in experimental communities, yet I see you finding new details in the musical minutiae.
Wall-to-wall coverage followed everything—from the testimony and evidence presented, to the minutiae of prosecutor Marcia Clark's hair.
Earlier this year, the duo—a neuroscientist and photographer, respectively—launched Minutiae, an app designed to document life's less glamorous moments.
He can be somewhat of a micromanager, at times involved in even the minutiae of decorating decisions throughout his numerous properties.
Some are the volume slider equivalent of chindogu — not useful, but also, not useless — while others are exercises in minutiae frustration.
Some yelp with joy, others laugh nervously, a few get teary and more than a couple quiz him on Beatles minutiae.
When we kind of get caught up in the minutiae, details that make us different, there's two ways of seeing that.
The argument turns on the minutiae of the exchange's labyrinthine warehouse rules but the underlying problem remains the same as ever.
His default expression is one of good-natured equipoise, relaxed but attuned to the minutiae of the shifting world around him.
Kiesling movingly documents the minutiae of single motherhood, and, if the story sometimes drags, it's an accurate representation of Daphne's desperation.
There is a sense that further acknowledgments may be forthcoming from the U.S. But it isn't the minutiae that matter most.
After that, you're on your own, navigating the minutiae of this highly complex and competitive profession on the go — until now.
The players play with a proximity and focus on the minutiae of the game, so why shouldn't the rulings reflect that?
It's so funny because, getting back to the comments and stuff, it's like people get wound up at us about minutiae.
They wait for me after events with pens wagging and notebooks open, ready to ask about the minutiae of my experience.
That feeling was soon blanketed over by the minutiae of motherhood: the feeding, the changing, the first smile, the first step.
Handsome and thoughtful, the senator is a rugged intellectual, conversant in the minutiae of policy and the grand themes of literature.
" Ngaire added: "I think that when we focus so much on the minutiae of identity, we get lost in the sauce.
But it represents Mr. Trump's first real effort to translate his bold but vague campaign themes into the minutiae of governance.
Five days a week, in the foggy hills of San Francisco, 11 writers and artists discuss the minutiae of storm troopers.
The albums that followed Original Pirate Material built upon Skinner's knack for portraying the beautifully nuanced minutiae of everyday British life.
Imagine your own personal intern who knows you better than you know yourself, performing all the minutiae you're loath to do.
The band also posted vlogs on YouTube and shared the minutiae of their lives on Korean livestreaming platforms AfreecaTV and V Live.
All the minutiae that I post about is treated like the most fascinating and mind blowing content to this army of bots.
He subscribes to what he calls the bungee-jump theory of management: plunge down into minutiae then spring back up to strategy.
"With such uncertainty around the minutiae, we expect uncommon volatility in the oil market until OPEC's November meeting," analysts at ING said.
Most of the bedrooms are beige, with the minutiae of the parts of life that are spent indoors lingering around the frame.
The beauty of being a woman today is in savoring the minutiae of life, all the moments that add up to you.
But she didn't really frequent our feeds until early 2016, when stories about the minutiae of her life started to go viral.
Still, they tend to focus more on big ideas for the future than on the minutiae of what's happening in the present.
"Especially with this kind of celebrity obsession with the minutiae of peoples' lives -- I have got out of that," the singer said.
Mr. Rivera has never married, adores baseball, enjoys art house movies and is known for his legal pads scrawled with political minutiae.
But one of the reasons I liked the casebooks as records was because they showed you the minutiae of ordinary people's lives.
But they tend to focus more on big ideas for the future than on the minutiae of what's happening in the present.
Billings, who is 54, easily recalls the minutiae of shoes she wore at important junctures in her transition from boy to woman.
Despite Minutiae being a fully functioning app, Adolfsson and Wilson agreed that it should really be an artwork in and of itself.
When you're new to something, it's often necessary to zero in on the minutiae of what to say and how to act.
They're full of blinding coups de théâtre — but replete, too, with playful minutiae you might see only on your fifth time around.
More important, this was the kind of speech where people focus more on the excerpt-worthy flourishes than on the disturbing minutiae.
In addition to illustrating the subtlety of the author's narrative style, these minutiae add up to a tidy and quite credible solution.
With so many competing priorities to manage, startup founders run a significant risk of getting lost in the minutiae of daily demands.
This allows teachers and students to talk about learning, progress and the minutiae of scores and grades before grades are entered online.
All this at a time when the US, up to its neck in the minutiae of it all, is losing its grip.
The vibrant array of objects is matched by the book's brilliant color and the moments of delightful minutiae present in each illustration.
For the 1954 dance "Minutiae," he cooked up a three-dimensional set from plywood panels covered with collages of fabric and newsprint.
Did that itch influence you to become an executive producer of Crashing, which is about the daily minutiae of a struggling comic?
Readers interested in learning more about the statistical minutiae of our efforts are invited to read the meaty technical appendix to this post.
We kinda get caught up in the minutiae, the details that make us all different; I think there's two ways of seeing that.
That's partly because the season is so squarely focused on the minutiae of the Process, but it's also because resistance seems nearly impossible.
Training AI on the minutiae of our daily lives in service of convenience seems, at first glance, like a not so unreasonable deal.
Change Agent fixates on the minutiae of payment processing, security authentication, and display technology with more verve than action sequences or character development.
In a further gift to dramatists, Lister was also an obsessive diarist, recording the minutiae of her life in more than 4m words.
Unconcerned with the minutiae of policy proposals or manifesto pledges, his work was to articulate a praxis of politics to serve a nation.
The Night Of, with its solemn, contemplative moments, is in such stark contrast to the fast talking, minutiae-focused dramas like The Wire.
Carr is less interested in solving the minutiae of the crime than she is exploring the motivations behind it — and for good reason.
He could go into the minutiae of each leg of the trip, or he could just give an overall outline of the architecture.
Like many middle-aged progressives, I only just broke out of my stereotypical apathy and became more invested in the minutiae of politics.
Knowing that Trump did not share his enthusiasm for fiscal minutiae, Ryan kept his usual 20-minute presentation to less than half that.
Type designers spend their lives deep in the minutiae of reading and the hidden visual codes that permeate the fabric of our language.
But to make it through "The Caped Crusade" in one piece, I'm afraid, you need to care an awful lot about Batman minutiae.
I focus less on the daily minutiae of professional life and more on the big-picture ideas of my own sense of purpose.
They use Nahuatl and other indigenous languages, identify multiple Mesoamerican civilizations by name, and include minutiae on the physical trappings of those cultures.
N.F.L. games command audiences in the tens of millions, so the broadcasts generally cater to casual fans, rather than those who want minutiae.
These expensive soaps make the minutiae of washing one's hands suddenly feel like a little moment of respite — and who doesn't want that?
More minutiae were painted in, down to the reflection on Buzz Aldrin's helmet visor of Neil Armstrong capturing the moment with a camera.
Certainly doctors must understand disease, but medical education is overly skewed toward the biomedical sciences and minutiae about esoteric and rare disease processes.
Gates is narrating an abstract tale of Chicago's past, present, and future, making clear the reverence and care he has for its minutiae.
The photographer who gained fame capturing Hong Kong's dense skyscrapers and the minutiae of its daily life died on Thursday at age 65.
He has the ability to arrange and compile minutiae into tiny worlds; the personal systems he has created are all exciting to me.
He has the classic advantages of a governor, who can speak in broad terms, rather than the minutiae that senators often fall into.
The program strikes a playful tone as it educates viewers about the minutiae of weasel life, and the lives of some related mammals.
I share this dribble of minutiae because I recently asked Jack, er, Sean to send me his latest list of Harden scoring superlatives.
There's an old saw about Washington, D.C., that staffers in their twenties know more about the minutiae of government than their bosses do.
A fall was considered a huge mistake because programs were judged as a whole, with less attention paid to the minutiae of individual elements.
"When we kind of get caught up in the minutiae, the details that make us different, there's two ways of seeing that," Ali continued.
The need to control my surroundings, the desperate fear of new situations, the uncomfortable minutiae of "making friends," had followed me since grade school.
A minor character's casual mention of some boring history minutiae is actually a piece to one of Game of Thrones' biggest unifying plot puzzles?
Grushin isn't dealing with a supposedly grand life; she is dealing with the mostly unspoken, sometimes desperate, bickering minutiae of a fairly ordinary life.
Rachio goes into some minutiae about the kinds of trees, grass, and shrubbery you have as well as how much sunlight each zone gets.
"While old-school Salafists are arguing over the minutiae of Islamic law, their children are debating whether or not God even exists," he adds.
Die-hard fans know that first show's name ( "The Man Trap"), plot (it involved salt), and massive amounts of other Trek minutiae by heart.
He's also seen boring dinner guests with highly technical talk about tax rate minutiae and later demonstrating transportation solutions with slices of his steak.
There is abundant evidence that high-level U.S. officials were well-aware of various operational minutiae and shifting structural dynamics, virtually in real time.
There have been times when she's got so engrossed in the minutiae of their lives, bodies, and clothes that she almost misses her stop.
Trump, who isn't exactly attentive to the minutiae of foreign policy, has appointed a team whose decisions seem to keep making war more likely.
His success in both fields stems from his knack for zeroing in on invisible minutiae and slowly perfecting his form until the result soars.
Miller has made an effort to call the shots on the minutiae of immigration policy, including calling up midlevel officials and demanding status updates.
The global Guided By Voices community have sought each other since the earliest days to debate and trawl over the minutiae of every release.
If you want to really get into the pop culture minutiae of it – and this writer clearly does – Cruel Intentions 2 was released Nov.
His intention was to present conflict in metaphysical terms, and to probe deeper than newscasts do despite a nightly deluge of facts and minutiae.
The Mayor's Management Report reveals New York City government in glorious minutiae, from the number of potholes filled to the number of condoms distributed.
Anderson is a stinging polemicist; her book rolls through a condensed history of voting rights and disenfranchisement, without getting bogged down in legislative minutiae.
Mr. Lowell questioned Mr. Lavey further about other luxuries, appearing to skewer the prosecution's intense interest in the minutiae of the senator's travel history.
Stories containing only a single fantastical element pose an authorial challenge: How to make the unreal real without the help of other fantasy minutiae.
The emails show how Clinton's Brooklyn team utilized the former president, and how he sometimes wanted information even about the minutiae of the campaign.
She made a game out of the domestic minutiae of their days, tagging along around the house, picking up on everything her mother knew.
Known for its over-the-top hospitality, the restaurant took it a step further by figuring out minutiae like which anniversary guests were celebrating.
Since I couldn't control Jack's outcome by waving a magic wand or wielding surgical tools, I fixated on minutiae and silently bargained with God.
But most swing voters do not follow the minutiae of policy debates, and many simply decided that she understood their problems better than Trump.
Not because of his vast knowledge of sports minutiae or his experience in the field but because he is an unrepentant and devastating troll.
Remy Charlip's multicolor leotards for "Minutiae" (1954) and Sonja Sekula's costume for "Dromenon" (1947) allow the viewer to marvel at their artistry and boldness.
A lot of the show's attempts at showing both the boring and the wonderful minutiae of life in a post-apocalyptic society have felt disjointed.
Instead of meandering through minutiae of my daily life – which is far less thrilling — I rode the emotional highs and lows of Connie Nikas' life.
But, as ever, the public was quickly picking up on the minutiae, including the president's "wildly crooked tie" and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi's paper shuffling.
At a minimum, that doesn't sound like the behavior of an official prepared to navigate the minutiae of Middle East diplomacy or the opioid crisis.
In a collective exhibition at the Adams and Ollman Gallery, the three contemporary artists scrutinize the minutiae of daily life through deeply personalized surrealist narratives.
The removal of the collar's interior lining, however, constitutes a major moment in the history of minutiae, as it reinstates a first-rate collar roll.
Silicon Valley technologists love to explain how they have disrupted the minutiae of daily life, from our commutes to the ways we share family photos.
Many novices embrace the idea of talking to people and writing about their lives, but are not aware of the minutiae and marketing strategies involved.
On set, the legions of specialists and consultants working on the minutiae took orders from Kubrick, whose conception of the whole remained in constant flux.
The author, a scholar of linguistics, revels in the minutiae of spelling, grammar, and usage, and her love of our living, changing language is infectious.
He is the father of my children and the only one in the world who cares about the minutiae of their lives like I do.
As voters grow up along with candidates, we'll care less about a Speedo dancing videos, and more about the minutiae of their past selves' convictions.
It includes every like, comment, and event invite from the past decade so you can cherish these internet minutiae until you grow old and die.
Tuesday's game could have been a symphony of hoops minutiae, all timed pin-downs and immaculate rotations—math-y, maybe, but a delight for connoisseurs.
In Artifact, players control an entire Dota 2 team and manage both the placement of five heroes and the minutiae of battle in every lane.
"Not a lot of people are into the minutiae of baseball uniforms," Tom Shieber, the Hall of Fame's senior curator, said in a telephone interview.
Mr. Allen was the darling of the urban art-house cinema and the critical classes who created comedy from the minutiae of his own angst.
How can the minutiae of unemployment insurance compete for attention with movies describing the birth of Skynet, the diabolical neural network in the "Terminator" series?
While some minutiae of US special representative for Afghanistan reconcilliation Zalmay Khalilzad's agreement are still under discussion, sources say that the plan is 99% done.
"There's no *substantive* reason to argue about things like the legal standards of obstruction of justice or similar minutiae," the political scientist Matt Glassman tweeted.
Necessary changes — in education, environmental enforcement, municipal governance and, of course, law enforcement — happen at a glacial pace, while the political elites bicker over minutiae.
Jeter, while a famously heady player on the field, was never known to immerse himself in the minutiae of the game after leaving the ballpark.
But former staffers also said that Mr. Schneiderman could be detached from the minutiae of the attorney general's office, and rarely spoiled for political fights.
But now, instead of getting sucked back into the minutiae of my inbox, I set aside some quiet time after dinner for big-picture thinking.
Often, we are too busy and entrenched in the mundane or the minutiae of our own lives to even notice what is happening around us.
Instead of seeing the news as a flood of minutiae, I'm preoccupied with the human moments that the grand spectacle of the big story obscures.
Even if he does make a clean break, Trump will have to guard against getting bogged down in the bureaucratic minutiae inherent in the office.
We had lively dinners, battles over report cards and curfews, and days when we were just plain silly, delighting in the delicious minutiae of family life.
Rather than telegraphing the minutiae of punk sentiments with every line, the punk characters and music are just the basis on which the narrative can evolve.
It means that I come up with fantastic, original ideas — but it also explains why I have had difficulties with the minutiae of running a business.
It has bare bones production like this but his vocals in there are more observant of minutiae instead of making some grand argument that goes nowhere.
I can't wait to watch this movie and then spend nine hours online, looking up minutiae about the extremely fraught IRL friendship of these two gals.
But Khaled is just like us Along with filming the mundane minutiae of his life, Khaled makes time to encourage and support his friends (that's us).
That faith and attention to minutiae and ritual are what make The Show 18 a far more inspiring tribute to the game than any saccharine intro.
Whether rats, pigeons, cats, or dogs, their chemistry thrives and attention to the minutiae of everyday life persists, together forming the good-natured core of Animals.
The Sims might now be, as GQ's Lauren Larson wrote recently, better meditation than meditation itself—a low-stakes world of minutiae and minor wish fulfillment.
So, too, have the reams of data that are now available thanks to sophisticated cameras that can track minutiae like the spin rate on a curveball.
This scrutiny of technical minutiae has turned the European Union into a regulatory superpower, allowing it to help set norms and standards used around the world.
To most people, zoning and land-use regulations might conjure up little more than images of late-night City Council meetings full of gadflies and minutiae.
After the Little Image paintings, Krasner's difficult second phase would also involve the creation of sublime paintings built from beautiful minutiae and utterly original visual grammars.
Will Mr. Trump, a micromanager who practically bounces quarters on the beds in Trump hotels, become bogged down in résumé minutiae, or entrust hiring to others?
Prosecutors on Monday continued to methodically question witnesses about the minutiae of swanky accommodations at two resorts in the Dominican Republic where Menendez and Melgen vacationed.
They're not the hippies who use pot to supplement their loose ideologies or even the meticulous connoisseurs who can tell you the minutiae of each strain.
They say it never got weird in the real world, and their only hurdle was "figuring out all the minutiae" of their day-to-day lives.
The above video shows how it all actually works — from the minutiae of the selection process to the business model that keeps the kiss cam running.
In a series of short essays, he delves into the minutiae of word choice, syntax and rhythm that make up the substance of a translator's work.
Lott appears to believe that mass shooters are incredibly attentive to the minutiae of gun policy when there is little evidence to support such a claim.
But I did, and I became close with him and his family, and I knew all the minutiae of what was going on in his life.
The irony of a store that encourages customers to "do it yourself," regulating the minutiae of sausage and onion construction, was not lost on its customers.
After 15 years of helping families track down missing soldiers, Ms. Hang has become an expert on the minutiae of military records and arcane government paperwork.
Philip D. Murphy's campaign and had always preferred the behind-the-scenes machinations of a campaign, found she was enthralled by the minutiae of city ordinances.
The minutiae of interpersonal frustrations occasion images of spiritual conflict, which are condensed into laconic, jewel-like poems, many not more than six or seven lines.
As smartphones approach the ideal of being basically just a screen, the design minutiae like camera bump sizes and screen curvature angles become less and less exciting.
Instead of focusing on plot twists, he might spend five minutes describing a painting on the wall of a character's home (chronicling minutiae ''just melts people's minds'').
Ali pointed out that the details about people — the "minutiae" — can be seen as the texture of a person, or they can be seen as a threat.
But during his week off, after a month on the road, he grinds on American Truck Simulator, a 2016 PC game simulating the minutiae of truck-driving.
I guess the biggest thing that's happened over the last week or so is that I've relaxed about all the minutiae of life in a big way.
Whenever a beloved celebrity dies, there's a bit of a Twitter arms race to pull out the most obscure and / or poignant piece of minutiae about them.
The older we get, the harder it can be to remember ourselves as people who were once excited about the minutiae of a sound or a personality.
"The Substance of Bliss" is a sympathetic study of suburban despair that, like its two characters, becomes mired in the conversational minutiae of their HGTV-variety distractions.
The water rushes forward and then recedes, like waves (foreshadowing the film's climax, which I won't spoil), as we follow Cleo in the minutiae of her duties.
He's heard more of the Beatles session tapes than nearly everyone on the planet, but he refuses to let archival minutiae distract from the Beatles' true gift.
This sort of inside baseball story isn't likely to push voters, who I can't imagine care about the minutiae of messaging, to vote one way or another.
We may never know the minutiae of what went down behind the scenes of the on-again-off-again Blac Chyna-Rob Kardashian saga back in December.
Other filmmakers might fetishize this stripped-down tale, fascinated with the minutiae of the Lovings' world and the particulars of their lawyers' journey to the Supreme Court.
Instead, they could just focus on the minutiae of life, the little bits and pieces of larger things that add up to form our points of view.
Instead of headlining festivals, the show was dedicated to those playing weddings, bar mitzvahs, school dances, and focussed on the boring (but important) behind-the-scenes minutiae.
In the hard-charging startup world that the two men entered there was little time to remember the minutiae of everyday life — like paying bills on time.
Holt clearly went into the debate thinking of his role as molding conversations, keeping them on central themes rather than minutiae, and distinguishing between fact and opinion.
When he reemerged in 277 with Relapse, he was rapping discursively, in faux-Arabic accents, about imagined kidnappings and the biographical minutiae of 20th-century serial killers.
The first day has already provided some incredible yo-yoing, sure, but it's the minutiae around the performances that have already made the live stream feel legendary.
But the most contentious part of the dispute is over the minutiae of music licensing, an area in which the Zappa estate has long taken controversial stances.
Called "sneak attack feminism" by the Wall Street Journal, the series follows two friends in New York City navigating their way though the minutiae that is life.
The group recorded each of their nine shows, and when not onstage, spent the bulk of their time rehearsing and picking apart the minutiae of their performances.
Where Antin's talk poems enact the felicitous meanderings of storytelling, Greaves' performative revisions, so focused upon compositional minutiae, enact the writer's groping search for le mot juste.
The minutiae of the "All-Out War" story line were often frustrating week to week, with characters used as tools for easy drama, interrupting their developmental arcs.
House Democrats risk looking self-indulgent as, rather than getting on with fixing infrastructure or health care, they obsess over the minutiae of internal White House communications.
He outlined the minutiae of the case against him and discussed specific emails and statements to prosecutors, complete with a presentation of documents to support his argument.
You know, when we kind of get caught up in the minutiae, the details that make us all different, I think there's two ways of seeing that.
Throughout, Chinese internet users have obsessed over the minutiae of the case, many of them getting a crash course in the American legal system in the process.
I left sessions wondering if it would be a breach of ethics to text her the minutiae of my day just because I knew she understood me.
"The 18-year age difference seemed nonexistent as we chatted about everything ranging from the minutiae of our day to the meaning of life," Ms. Yesnowitz said.
So, again, we can go into the minutiae, but both of them are probably going to have to give something up to make the deal go through.
It's telling of the series' strengths that the grander storyline Juliana is involved with is less interesting than the minutiae of the lives of the people around her.
She told the court that she had never asked her husband, who is an Olympic handball medalist, about the minutiae of Aizoon, a property company they jointly owned.
Mr Trump relies not on the minutiae of policy, but on the assertion that he can get the best deal for America through sheer force of will. NAFTA?
We can get so bogged down in the minutiae of incremental technological change that we forget to remind ourselves that incremental technological change is how literally everything happens.
It's mostly focused on the minutiae of your average, really rich 28-year-old: studying, posing in front of impressive landscapes, and working out in full make-up.
This attention to minutiae is important because most of the Toy-Con kits are very precise creations that need to be put together in a very particular way.
By the time Hannibal becomes the film's epicenter, Demme has conditioned us to hone in on the minutiae of his facial movements: The audience is made honorary detective.
Thanks to Serial, millions of listeners became obsessed with the minutiae of cell phone tower pings, tracking down decade-old eyewitnesses, and endlessly debating Syed's guilt or innocence.
In the /r/FrankOcean subreddit or the Frank Ocean thread on the notorious KanyeToThe forum, fans have gone SAS with the minutiae of information surrounding Boys Don't Cry.
It's about a regular dude who works as a vigilante crime fighter — albeit a relatively low-level one who deals with the same daily minutiae as everyone else.
That the process winded on interminably allowed anyone paying attention (Democratic legislators and reporters, for the most part) to familiarize themselves with a head-splitting quantity of minutiae.
" Kohn, a proud progressive, admitted, "Those of us in the bubble think the public cares about the minutiae of the policies and policy positions more than they do.
Meaning has been stripped from the minutiae in your daily existence, and joy feels like the faded new-shirt smell that slipped away from your clothes long ago.
In a Wednesday email, association vice president Melvin Thompson said "public policy that interferes with the minutiae of restaurant operations exacerbates the business challenges already facing city restaurants."
The important parts of existence are what we as individuals experience in hyperlocal contexts, daily minutiae like oversleeping an alarm clock or falling in love with a stranger.
But overall, they spent two hours attacking each other's voting records -- often focusing on the sort of legislative minutiae (Hyde Amendment!) that the average voter simply tunes out.
His fast, dynamic, stream-of-conscious comedy is on fire here as he digs into the minutiae of life and the backing band is icing on the cake.
Senators treated her with more respect than the Judiciary Committee had shown Anita Hill in 1991, mostly ceding questions to Arizona prosecutor Rachel Mitchell, who focused on minutiae.
The whole thing feels like psychedelic East Coast commuter music, the same vein of Lou Reed, where the freak minutiae of living in a dense city comes out.
We tend to get caught up in an angry voice or in minutiae or in stress or in tons of things that ultimately aren't that important to us.
It is a kind of social network where users debate the minutiae of history and modern life, climb the editorial hierarchy and even meet friends and romantic partners.
But as BLDG increasingly develops buildings, instead of just buying existing ones, Mr. Goldman, who has previously renovated thousands of units, seems to relish the minutiae of designing.
In nearly 20 years of covering media off and on, I've never seen people — especially Times readers — take such an interest in the minutiae of government-press relations.
Is it possible that there are people left on this self-publicizing Earth who do not want to regale unsuspecting audiences with all the minutiae of their lives?
He kept a thick binder on his desk at Trump Tower packed with information about filing deadlines in different states for the 2016 election and other campaign minutiae.
At the very least, in 2018 we'll see a sharp rise in the number of readers biting their nails over what would otherwise be considered tedious courtroom minutiae.[TechDirt]
Depending on how you use it, the plugin is a lightweight add-on that could save you a load of time navigating the minutiae of sending tons of emails.
Khrzhanovsky follows grooves laid by Andy Warhol, Chantal Akerman, and John Cassavetes, filmmakers who approached the vanishing point of cinematic realism by boring into the minutiae of everyday life.
The minutiae of his life, from what he likes to eat for breakfast all the way to what he would eat for his last meal, are all available online.
Her team cuts businesses slack for "the little minutiae stuff," she says, but has still sued more than 1,000 since switching from criminal law to ADA infractions in 2009.
At any moment in time, we can glimpse at minutiae like what they eat for breakfast, what they use to wash their faces, or what their bedrooms look like.
Swift, who first wrote about the island in 1999, spent a year there to write the book, getting to know the island's people and the minutiae of their lives.
The endless panels parsing Donald Trump's lies into oblivion, the expansion of minutiae into headline news, the countdown clocks to nonevents — TV coverage has morphed from journalism into telemarketing.
Berlin has museums dedicated to the Ramones and the currywurst, but the quirkiest might be this diminutive collection of minutiae dedicated to the American actor and singer David Hasselhoff.
Rather than calling for revolution, he immersed himself in the Kremlin's own often ignored legal statutes, memorizing them down to their minutiae, and then demanded that they be observed.
Rehearsal time is limited, so it's key for performers to learn as much about blocking, choreography, how cast members navigate the stage space and other minutiae through visual osmosis.
After a bureaucratic reshuffling, the members of China's new negotiating team have deep backgrounds in economics and finance, but they are less comfortable with the minutiae of trade laws.
He assumed, as I did, that a bare handful of the usual search-for-meaning suspects would be straining minutiae while still clinging to the meaninglessness of it all.
"You know, when we kind of get caught up in the minutiae, the details that make us all different, I think there's two ways of seeing that," he said.
It's where he's been most comfortable as a candidate, hitting each of Texas's 229 counties during his 2018 Senate run and capturing minutiae — usually by live-stream, not blog.
When we're hunting for the perfect Instagram shot, we're not listening, we're not smelling, we're not always paying attention to the beautiful, complex minutiae that make up the moment.
The system really does look like it could thwart Trump's massive grassroots support, and Cruz could win the nomination simply because he's gamed the minutiae of these state rules.
But Charles, when he wrote about a political movement or event, he wrote about it in a way that he cut through where so many others were mired in minutiae.
Visual minutiae are so finely tuned that each of the frogs hopping their way through the aftermath of a decadent party is rendered in a unique texture, reflecting their personalities.
The couple introduced farmers to the minutiae of crop rotation, such as crop planning, diversifying the use of their lands, picking the right seeds, and measuring the distance between crops.
In another work, "The treaty is in the body" (2017), silent video footage of Omaskeko Cree families in North Bay depicts the minutiae of Indigenous knowledge transmission and oral culture.
Whoever is hired for the position will be less focused on the minutiae of engineering and more concentrated on creating a full, luxurious adventure for customers flying with the company.
Tatiana Ikasovic, a Sydney-based actress, has recently come to grips with the Internet's ability to fixate on the physical minutiae of women and turn it into a cottage industry.
Advertise on Hyperallergic with Nectar Ads Catholic Renaissance art is well-known for its iconographical tropes, which is why scholarship tends to focus on the minutiae of an artist's composition.
I like the minutiae of a lot of things, so it gives me a sense of ease when I have targets to hit instead of just this big open canvas.
Farms, cattle and health care debates This is a district where farmland dominates the landscape, where working-class people gather at the local diner to talk about life's daily minutiae.
While ostensibly concerned with exploring the minutiae of everyday life, the monotony soon becomes overbearing — the characters too eccentric to be relatable and the plotting too inconsequential to be memorable.
You've literally put yourself directly in harm's way, you're watching a game but only the boring minutiae of it, and you get constantly berated when things aren't necessarily your fault.
His wife Fatima, 47, has yet to return to work as a maid and instead spends her days handling the endless minutiae of living away from and securing their home.
It was clear that he had been thinking about this minutiae for some time, and experts lauded the idea of trying to make such a massive feat realistic and affordable.
" Mahershala Ali, for Classiest, Most Nuanced Message: "When we get caught up in the minutiae and the details that make us different, I think there's two ways of seeing that.
So, the question might be posed, why was Mr. Sondland mainly working on the minutiae of Ukraine relations, a country that is not even a member of the European Union?
Where grime represented the rougher, "edgier" side of the country with its sparse production and clash-ready lyrics, Skinner gave detail to the minutiae of another side to being British.
Lequeu also drew unabashedly lovely make-believe rooms unsparing in their immensity of minutiae, such as "Hotel Montholon (Salon Project)" (313) and the "Temple of Earthly Venus: Boudoir" (1795–1779).
Given the complexity of the problems inherent in meeting the needs of a diverse state of 221.5 million, Newsom plunged into the logistical minutiae of the crisis from the beginning.
They share the tray with a lot of peculiar minutiae gathered over the years, like stones, shells, a toe spacer I no longer use and a little black baby doll.
Right from the start — months before the cockpit voice recorder was found and listened to — his obsession with altitude clearances could only be explained as a pilot drowning in minutiae.
Today, Mr. Soom Yin owns the largest export firm in the area and can talk for hours about the minutiae of the cassava trade, from moisture levels to price fluctuations.
There Sarah Burton continued the exploration of paganism and community she started last season via the Shetland Islands, this time going south, to Cornwall, and the minutiae of handworked detail.
Mr. Ryman extended this tradition with an insistent literal-mindedness, a tinkerer's joy in physical minutiae and an abiding faith in the plain-spoken poetics of his materials and tools.
Trump, not a master of minutiae, has turned Ryan's party on its head, blowing up long-held policy convictions and upending a political order that had been intact for decades.
In Afghanistan '11 there is only procedural minutiae as you attempt to arrest the negative momentum that constantly works against you, grinding your way to some kind of acceptable resolution.
If your Snapchat app won't load, your friends won't know how fun and cool you are, and you won't be able to keep tabs on the minutiae of everyone else's lives.
After one drink with a female friend, I feel like we could delve into the minutiae of my life and their life, the axes on which our relationships and fears settle.
With all this effort—much of it to create minutiae that a player might never pick up on—I was curious to know whether Woods believes his creation is a success.
After more than two years of tortuous discussions about the minutiae of the separation, EU leaders are weary of London's failure to agree its own divorce and patience is wearing thin.
Like the Kardashians, the Real Housewives stars pump the dull minutiae of everyday life—getting a job, hanging out with one's friends—with drama until the screen is fit to burst.
After a successful, widely praised first season in which it delved into the minutiae of the Zodiac killer case, the podcast Criminology chose EARONS as the subject of its second season.
I want to be able to live my life fully and as best as I can without getting caught up in the minutiae, you know, and the drama and the negativity.
At the same time, simulators had reached a point where they could optimize the minutiae of rotations and stat weights, eliminating the need for painstaking math and theorycraft on that front.
Emails obtained by CNN that were sent to KRLA "The Morning Answer" hosts Elisha Krauss and Ben Shapiro explicitly urge the two to tamp down coverage of "negative minutiae" on Trump.
Richard Price, a creator and writer of this series with Steven Zaillian, was also a writer on "The Wire," which similarly burrowed into the minutiae of setting up a surveillance unit.
The detente follows last week's Swift-Braun-Borchetta flare up involving the sort of music business minutiae that doesn't commonly interest the general public — the particulars of re-recording old masters.
Putin is always well briefed: His annual marathon press conference is perhaps the Kremlin leader's most telling display of his vast knowledge, having mastered the minutiae of economic data and statistics.
Drawing on Einstein's statistical theories, the work incorporates a vast amount of research and evaluation of personal stories, and takes into account all the minutiae of what makes our lives different.
Composed of roughly 80 percent of Rader's words and 753 percent Ramsland's commentary, it is a murderer's "My Struggle," obsessed with Knausgaardian minutiae, including mistakes in the police report and biographies.
In this memoir, he dives into the day-to-day minutiae of the birds' care and keeping, their habits and history, and the journey that led him to become their steward.
It's something that didn't quite sink in as I kept track of the minutiae of FBI special counsel Robert Mueller's investigation into possible Trump-Russia collusion over the past two years.
The very things we throw back at teenage girls as noxious self-indulgences, from selfies to the recording of daily minutiae, are the things we look for when unexplainable tragedy hits.
I'd expect lofty constitutional arguments that the entire case against Trump is defective and should be tossed, rather than a point-by-point rebuttal of the minutiae of the Ukraine episode.
With exacting economy, Mr. Nichols borrows from the documentary — its people with lined faces, its rooms with weathered walls — drawing on signifying minutiae, textures and cadences to fill in his portrait.
The Army Futures Command is responsible for leveraging innovation, improving agility, and leaping ahead of emerging threats — a hearty task for the service, which has historically faced layers of bureaucratic minutiae.
Britain says that the issue of security is too important to become entangled in the minutiae of Brexit negotiations, something that European Commission chief Jean-Claude Juncker also said on Saturday.
She revels in the minutiae of his life—financial woes, medical recommendations that include hedgehog grease for sciatica—and chronicles his obsessive documentation of scientific advances and of Britain's ancient past.
It's not gangland standoffs that lend Better Call Saul dramatic tension or emotional heft; rather, it's an attention to detail, turning the minutiae of everyday life into moments that feel practically titanic.
Like an episode of MTV's Diary or Cribs running on a perpetual loop, some of the most popular content on the platform involves watching "content creators" filming the minutiae of their lives.
They teed up Barkan, the doctors on the panel, and the left-leaning experts who could parse the policy minutiae to espouse the potential positives of moving to a single-payer system.
Never before had moviegoers seen the horrifying minutiae of Neo-Nazi skinhead culture –– flowing blood and cracking bone, the hypocrisy, the devotion to hate, the difficult journey of leaving hate for good.
Her focus on the tactic in 2016 is part of what Bloomberg's Sasha Issenberg recently called the Clinton campaign's much stronger embrace, this time around, on the minutiae of the Iowa primary.
A passion for metal minutiae might not seem like a priority for someone like Mr. Keller, who studied art history at Notre Dame and went on to obtain an M.B.A. from Harvard.
But where many people might have gone into legal minutiae or resorted to namecalling to make their point, Wayne went with astrology: "I'm a Libra," he said, as if that explained everything.
So while some parents debate the minutiae of motherhood, seeking control over what is ultimately totally beyond it, we want to talk about what else is going on...like, really going on.
Set in Berlin in the 1930s, the first episode that Howard directed wastes no time leaping into the minutiae of Einstein's personal life as society around him drifts unavoidably toward global conflict.
What he's actually doing is ticking off all the perils that she may not foresee and which may harm Mesa Verde, because she is not steeped in the minutiae of banking law.
But the college lobbyists are extremely interested in this issue, because that's how industry associations succeed: by manipulating the minutiae of federal lawmaking, far from the heat and light of partisan politics.
Like anything in tech, we could get really geeky on you, but if you're looking to just buy an HDMI cable to hook up some audio-video gear, let's skip the minutiae.
If the 21s have been thoroughly examined, the early '2500s have been left relatively unexplored, and while Mr. Lawrence provides a lot of minutiae, he also delivers a story with some sweep.
For those unfamiliar with the minutiae of the presidential nominating process, 85 percent of delegates are elected to attend the Democratic National Convention by voters who cast ballots in primaries and caucuses.
It's a been a pretty major boon for stats nerds, allowing fans to drill down on all sorts of fascinating minutiae, including things like launch angle and exit velocity for batted balls.
Throughout this season, even while granting fan wishes, dispatching extraneous characters, and dodging back to dangling plotlines, the show really rewards viewers by the attention in pays to the minutiae of storytelling.
That's not how music and TV work; you don't learn the minutiae of the mafia from listening to the songs on The Sopranos (even this one, by the guy who plays Silvio).
As with Google in Europe, there will be plenty of time to examine the minutiae of the different arguments — the fight against the Comcast-Time Warner Cable merger took about 14 months.
The others — who also include Pepper (Donnetta Lavinia Grays) and Cheddar (Kyle Beltran) — are eager to initiate her into the mindless minutiae of said System, as well as their shared personal mythology.
We'd all be better off if our leader was more excited by the minutiae of policy and the detailed work of being a politician than by the public spectacle of an election.
Each year state legislators go through a Groundhog Day routine in which they introduce dozens of new housing bills that are full of technicalities and minutiae but fall into two basic categories.
Before there was an internet, before websites detailed the minutiae of each game, Mr. Zimmerman produced his own charts, filled with game specifics, large and small, that helped him tell his stories.
To Mr. Blake and Mr. Be at Lichen, coffee was key, and a Nespresso wouldn't cut it — it was important to learn brewing from scratch, even the minutiae of scales and timing.
And this case, Fernow said, could be very costly, he said, pointing to "just the sheer volume of evidence, the minutiae that have been collected" by investigators and be introduced in court.
According to the Football Association, which governs the game in England and in that role is no stranger to either cherished traditions or arcane regulations, no rule has ever governed such minutiae.
"Look Alive Out There" preserves Crosley's instinct to observe minutiae and uncover answers to universal questions, while introducing a new willingness to acknowledge that sometimes stories don't end with such neat answers.
"Sarah Burton continued the exploration of paganism and community she started last season via the Shetland Islands, this time going south, to Cornwall, and the minutiae of handworked detail," our critic wrote.
The $21.4 trillion tax plan unveiled by Republican lawmakers on Thursday is a sweeping rewrite full of complicated minutiae, but one thing is clear: Many Californians are not going to like it.
However, unlike Whatever People Say I Am That's What I'm Not—an album littered with the minutiae of a night-out—Tranquility Base Hotel & Casino is immersed in the grand vision of cinema.
Yet this document dedicated to minutiae does not mention MCAS once — not by name, not by description — which is kind of astonishing when you consider that even the seat belts get a mention.
That's because most people can't perform the role of the super citizen: Without any knowledge or experience in policymaking and administration, it's difficult for voters to stay involved in the minutiae of politics.
Like many of the people in the book—a Dutch customs inspector with an interest in mammoth bones, a young British fossil-hunter—Ms Blackburn is a collector with an eye for minutiae.
Pre-scripted lines may not suit a heated exchange of insults about infidelity, but they're good when candidates are keen to show that they're on top of the minutiae of health care policy.
To me, Steve Bannon is the polar opposite of Henry Waxman in every way, shape, and form, from his personality to his approach to politics to his interest in the minutiae of policy.
What differentiates his content from the combo tutorials of old is how he boils the minutiae of fighting games into digestible videos through use of real world examples like pop culture and sports.
The result was that Mr. Kerry and Mr. Zarif veered from the monumental significance of what they were accomplishing — an end to a decade of open hostility — to the minutiae of uranium enrichment.
Big Bang Theory fans know that Mayim Bialik's character, Amy Farrah Fowler, is all about details and minutiae, but it looks like real-life Bialik is just as obsessive as her TV counterpart.
If you didn't become familiar with the league during your formative years, I don't know how your mind could be pliable enough to absorb the all of minutiae necessary to understand pro football.
The few tracks we've heard so far feel like an attempt to capture minutiae in vivid color, zooming in as far as possible on a moment in order to tell a longer story.
"If I need to get through a big project and don't want to get distracted by my inbox and the minutiae of the web, I hop on the treadmill desk," Mr. Pandolfi said.
"It's a little surprising to see the Yankees do this, because they never seem to change anything," said Paul Lukas, whose Uni Watch blog on ESPN catalogs all matter of sports uniform minutiae.
And though he has tried to go even deeper into the minutiae of municipal governance, his focus on details, as described by close aides, has not extended to the subjects of the investigations.
Mario accompanies his mother, first in Buenos Aires and later in Milan, as doctors attempt to reconstruct her face, and reports on the minutiae of coloration and tone, the topography of the flesh.
A former "Bachelor" producer Sarah Gertrude Shapiro and the veteran TV producer Marti Noxon propped their dual character study against a backdrop of wobbly TV-production minutiae and a profound examination of power.
Every moment in that ten hours was dedicated to pursuing minutiae about the game, all the while waiting for Danni to die in a comical way to so I could clap about it.
The Nottingham duo excel at capturing the minutiae, banality, dread, toxicity and awfulness of life, then sync it to a grinding beat that twitches between gristly post-punk and electronic-leaning hip-hop.
Coated in the kinds of shimmering, fibrous textures you might associate with ASMR, "Peeling" builds from an experiment in ambient minutiae to a full-fledged electro stomper over the course of eight minutes.
There is a throwback, in these recent works, to the everyday impressions of "American Surfaces," and the Instagram account parallels, too, Warhol's documentation of forgettable daily minutiae on Polaroids or 16-millimeter film.
The group does not disclose how each brand is doing (its annual report contains more pictures of jewel-laden models than financial minutiae), easing the pressure on creative types to meet quarterly targets.
A deeper look at GOP-led states' economic success explains why — but beyond the minutiae of simple policy, the bottom line is that electing a Republican often means increased growth and lower unemployment.
Legislation can languish for different reasons: political spats, legal minutiae, nuanced input from state agencies or simply optics — the governor might want to time a bill's signature around a news conference, for example.
That is of a piece with a work in which the dubious ethics of an industry that preys on female insecurity are considered at length, as are the minutiae of packaging and marketing.
Now here we are, eight years later, with most economic commentators obsessing over the minutiae of monetary policy while basic questions about how to prevent another financial crash have yet to be addressed.
"A really good quality agency will actually interview you to the point that you feel uncomfortable sharing details with them, because they want to understand absolutely the minutiae of your lifestyle," Reif says.
Some readers may wish that Mr Sachs offered more of these rich historical descriptions and less of the minutiae: how important are the names of the ships that carried Toscanini between Europe and America?
Without getting too buried in the statutory minutiae, the case was hung up in appeals courts over technicalities regarding a conspiracy charge that included AT&T but didn't name the telecom as a defendant.
It's unsurprising that HQ is trying to reach other demographics, and sports is an obvious choice, considering that there are millions of fans obsessed with sport stats, history, and random minutiae like, uh, mascots.
But I think that is the point, actually: a game of reverse psychology I play with myself, wherein I'm so ensconced in the minutiae of shitty home decor that I can forget about death.
On Wednesday, a TechCrunch investigation revealed that apps using analytics companies called Glassbox are not only recording the minutiae of how you use those apps, but also potentially jeopardizing sensitive data in the process.
Most people can go about their day to day without thinking about it too much, covering up concerns of an eventual apocalypse with grocery lists, carpools, training your Snorlax—the minutiae of daily life.
Were he to start looking, he wouldn't trust himself not to then refresh his inbox continuously, and pore over the minutiae he found there, while he should be supping margaritas in the beachside bar.
Gaddis writes that some strategists are hedgehogs unalterably fixed on a grand goal but unable to manage obstacles, while some are foxes so fixed on minutiae that they lose sight of the end goal.
Throughout the proceedings, Mr. Barrera sat slouched in his seat with a look of exhaustion, yawning frequently at the legal minutiae, as he listened to a translator through a pair of chunky black headphones.
Daren took a particular interest in the refurbishment, pouring himself into plans for a spa, the overhaul of a restaurant and minutiae like drapery selection, according to Gilbert Baeriswil, the hotel's former general manager.
Mr. Doig took the stand on the first day of the trial, called as an adverse witness by the plaintiffs, whose lawyers asked him to go through the minutiae of how he creates art.
A grand total of 300 subscribers, very early adopters, got to see the start of his exploration into the series' minutiae, his quest to see under every metaphorical rock, to turn every proverbial key.
Thus was born Minutiae, an anonymous photo-sharing app that, unlike uber-serious photography apps, encourages people to embrace the boring and mundane instead of meticulously sculpting the digital replica of their everyday lives.
Past immigration debates have focused on the minutiae of how unauthorized immigrants would be able to apply for legal status, how many of them would be eligible, and what their ultimate status would be.
When she asks her assistant to look up case law for her horse statue problem, we can see that her love for this kind of minutiae, for these types of causes, is nearly dead.
If you remember adjusting the toast in the flying toaster screensaver to your preferred level of toasted, then you know well our ability to distract ourselves with minutiae did not begin with the internet.
He has gone to only one council meeting since then — it was a special meeting about road paving — and he has largely stopped monitoring the political minutiae of the city of about 2,300 people.
A new era for the Muslim world would deemphasize the purist obsession with minutiae and rituals, and emphasize the overarching moral codes of egalitarianism and compassion that are at the core of Islamic teaching.
"The NRA gets into the minutiae of weapons and tells people they're not experts and that they don't understand what they're talking about, while Hogg and others' rhetoric cuts right through that," Rosenblatt said.
Every time she was challenged, Clinton retreated into technocratic recitations of minutiae — showing her expertise, sure, but also seeming to demonstrate Sanders's point that her expertise is great but not a replacement for judgment.
While antitrust-related legal battles have been known to drag on for years and become mired in regulatory minutiae, Google's case has already made headlines for a high-profile incident involving a prominent academic critic.
Looking at her paintings, I couldn't help but think of the autofictional books of Rachel Cusk, Sheila Heti, and Karl Ove Knausgaard, which focus a microscope onto the everyday minutiae of the authors' personal lives.
That The Field Study Handbook devotes so much ink to the minutiae of a craft that most of its purchasers will never actually practice works only in its favor: It's emphatically (indeed, exhaustively) bullshit-free.
Insiders credit not only the precision of the engineers who oversee the daily minutiae of the manufacturing process but also the attention that was paid to building the plant and its components to exacting specifications.
About geeky, minutiae-driven niche topics that don't resonate with everybody, but the people who do get it ... not everyone is into it, but the people who are into it are really fucking into it.
Of course, over the years, betting on sports has advanced to include the minutiae, calculated by an advanced series of equations that determine the possible outcomes—based on statistics and a certain degree of intangibles.
Let's get this big caveat out of the way: Donald Trump probably isn't interested in the minutiae of being president — that is to say the actual, everyday management of the most powerful state on earth.
Sacconaghi attributed some of Musk's behavior on Wednesday to Musk's quirks, saying the Tesla CEO is a "visionary" who thinks decades ahead and may not always enjoy getting caught up in near-term financial minutiae.
Kotkin's eye for revealing minutiae — Stalin's failure to attend his mother's funeral and penchant for doodling pictures of wolves during meetings, for example — does much to bring the dictator alive in the years before 1938.
An engineer, he seems obsessed with management minutiae and metrics; last week, for instance, his deputy secretary spent part of a senior staff meeting telling his underlings how to write effective memos to the boss.
It may sound like a lot to keep track of, but the magic system and geopolitics are both elegantly simple; this is not a book about the minutiae of postwar economics in a fantasy setting.
Paying fastidious attention to the minutiae of moods, appetites and sleep habits (or those of a pet) is an activity long enjoyed by the rich and underoccupied, from Edith Wharton heroines to the Kardashian sisters.
Filmmakers watched the minutiae of Anthony D. Weiner's daily life as he strode back onto the New York political scene in 2013, only to be undone by further revelations about his lewd texts with women.
But I tell you now, we put things to the side, and I'm able to see her, she's able to see me — we love each other, the love has grown, and that stuff in minutiae.
But I tell you now, we put things to the side, and I'm able to see her, she's able to see me — we love each other, the love has grown, and that stuff is minutiae.
House Democrats know the vast majority of Americans don't pay attention to the minutiae of how Congress operates and all the rules surrounding how bills are brought to the floor and how budgets are passed.
I found comfort in its indifference to the daily minutiae of its visitors; it had seen millions of people over hundreds of years, all with their own uncertainties, yet it was still there, nearly unchanged.
As the human resources department for the federal government, the agency oversees the legal minutiae of how federal employees are hired and promoted and manages benefits and pensions for millions of current and retired civil servants.
Incoherent, disconnected, self-interrupting, obsessed with pointless minutiae and crammed full of odd, limp stabs at profundity from a closed-off man in his 70s who apparently has no ability to edit or accept constructive criticism.
The interior is bedecked with all manner of G.D.R. minutiae — enough East Berlin flags and portraits of former dear leaders to bring tears to the eyes of those nostalgic for five-year plans and collective farming.
Even Chris Kraus's 1997 novel I Love Dick, which last year was turned into a Kevin Bacon-starring show on Amazon, documents the minutiae, beginning to end, of a relationship that never really existed at all.
The primary complaint about Twitter, or at least the stereotypical one, used to be that "no one cares what you're eating for breakfast" — that the network was too crowded with personal minutiae to be of use.
I realize there is this real geek factor with firearms: I can suddenly imagine how once you start learning about caliber, handling techniques, accessories, and all the intricate minutiae, a person could get really into it.
The video game hardcore in school did see it as a game, though—but that only made you okay in their book, too, especially when you really got into the minutiae of the previous night's events.
Though Devlin hasn't worked with Frank Ocean, the two share the same reverence for being meticulous; for placing importance on minutiae as much as the grandiose, understanding how the two come together to form a whole.
But One Day at a Time has found a way to tell stories about living in Trump's America without anchoring them to the minutiae that makes following the news in Trump's America such an exhausting endeavor.
For as much as "The Night Of" engages in the minutiae of this particular case, it is also a show about the system and how the institutions of justice process the people who pass through them.
Ultimately, though, as fitness becomes more intrinsic to the kind of wellness-focused lifestyles we're supposed to aspire to, it's natural that we're increasingly accustomed to seeing the minutiae of our friends' workouts on the platform.
Chico officials even hosted a town council meeting for Paradise officials, allowing them to use the chambers to discuss the minutiae of running a city, with the added challenge that most of the city is gone.
Chico officials even hosted a town council meeting for Paradise officials, allowing them to use the chambers to discuss the minutiae of running a city, with the added challenge that most of the city is gone.
O'Rourke's defense of football players who kneel during the national anthem went as viral as imaginable, and his live streaming of everyday minutiae on Facebook has been the perfect complement to his folksy, hyper-accessible brand.
To divulge more would spoil a rollicking plot, but it isn't revealing too much to say that Cliff's background as a short story writer gives him a rare skill with the minutiae of structure and characterization.
And indeed, it's possible to dismiss Kidd as a man who found a handful of serious errors and then used his fussy mastery of minutiae to inflate a few hundred other flecks into a raging scandal.
Mr. Guzmán's lawyers and the government have largely sparred at hearings and in court filings over technical minutiae and, as well, the conditions of his confinement in the highly secure solitary wing of Manhattan's federal jail.
The International Butler Academy China opened in 2014 here in Chengdu, a haze-covered city in southwest China, and offers a six-week boot camp on dinner service, managing homes and other minutiae of high living.
Upon her return home to New Orleans, Edna trades the social minutiae expected of upper-crust Victorian white women — receiving callers and returning their calls — for painting, walking, gambling, dinner parties, brandy, anger, aloneness and sex.
She was enjoying her life of celebrity and wealth, she had done little to immerse herself in policy minutiae and she was no doubt unsettled by Bannon's warning that she stood little chance of defeating Obama.
By demonstrating his willingness to intercede in the minutiae of military justice and disciplinary procedures, the president tells those who step over ethical boundaries that they can appeal to a sympathetic ear in the Oval Office.
Democrats ignored GOP broadsides and repeatedly returned to lofty themes about the Constitution, the Founding Fathers and America's rebellion against monarchy — part of an effort to ward off attempts to mire the hearing in procedural minutiae.
Ellis, an Irish playwright who attended a school much like Malyn Park, is expert in depicting the minutiae of relations among the women, the use of pet names without pet feelings, the flimsy loyalties and simmering jealousies.
Loosely based on Hawkins's own status as a rockstar in the suburbs (he doesn't like the word himself), it focuses on minutiae, small stories from his Calabasas neighborhood where he lives with his wife and three children.
The abduction of Adolf Eichmann from Argentina by Israeli agents the same year and his subsequent trial before the District Court of Jerusalem provided additional grounding in the minutiae of the Holocaust for those who paid attention.
If I'm Kathleen Kennedy and I've been diligently overseeing the minutiae of productions since Raiders of the Lost Ark, then the saga of the Starbucks cup — while Benioff and Weiss cavorted in costume in the same scene!
By driving down into the minutiae of every Olympic event to find the best opportunities to improve design, the brand is ensuring its footwear directly caters to those crucial moments as much as athletes' preparation for them.
Not even six months after the U.K. got to grips with the minutiae of European Union rule-making and its enormous, surreptitious dastardly implications for our country, we have all suddenly become experts in British Constitutional Law.
Going through the minutiae is exactly what ARMY members love — that's why fans will watch hours of the guys playing games with each other, shopping at the grocery store, or eating dinner on live-streaming app VLive.
Speaking of his upcoming adaptation of Moby Dick, he stressed that his goal is to preserve the voice and transfer as much "word-for-word Melville" onto the stage — as well as the minutiae of his details.
The document, now being translated from the original Spanish, is expected to tell young people that they should not be obsessed with doctrinal minutiae but blend the Church's rules with social activism to help those in need.
It's a fitting vessel for this litany of conflicted sorrow as Laux takes us from the cellular level to the vastness of the universe, all the while gathering the devastating minutiae of a not-quite-vanished life.
Two people sharing a bright, clean room: Kazuki, a still, silent man in stocking feet, and Honoka, a cheerful, chatty, barefoot woman who roams the space, tracing and retracing the minutiae of her memories — or maybe his.
Life is Strange 2's thoughtful minutiae add up to make it one of the best games of the year, and one of the only mainstream games to ever successfully address the lived experiences of the oppressed. 
"Man, did those old computer screens suck when it came to visual nuances," Larson wrote, explaining that he didn't previously feel the details and minutiae of his cartoons could be properly seen on monitors displaying online content.
On most days, more than a hundred and fifty pages arrived at Barakat's desk, cataloguing the minutiae of perceived threats to Assad's rule—graffiti, Facebook posts, protests—and, eventually, actual threats, like the existence of armed groups.
Featuring approximately 150 objects including sculptures, paintings, and drawings made from a remarkable array of everyday materials, the exhibition presents the artist's visual language that centers on the minutiae from daily life in ways poetic and whimsical.
Contrast this with a more traditional family drama (say, Parenthood), where the emotional moments feel earned because the show is generally trapped by the forward progression of time, by the day-to-day minutiae of everyday life.
"I had already been in court all week and had to watch this man's attorney bully, badger and harass my team including my mother over inane details and ridiculous minutiae, accusing them, and me, of lying," Swift said.
Primo's fascination with life's minutiae would seem to put them in the same arena as macro-lensed songwriters like Frankie Cosmos' Greta Kline, but unlike Kline, Primo's goal is rarely to find joy or metaphor in the mess.
As Drake's life has become less accessible to his fans who relied on his in-depth specificity and sharp lens on minutiae, it seems as though the distance he has from his previous life has weighed on him.
Whereas SimCity and Cities: Skylines try to mimic the form and function of sprawling cities—their complexity emerging from the breadth of the simulation—Block'hood is content to hone in on the minutiae of a single city block.
And yet, for all the minutiae I've retained about a show that piloted the year I was born and hasn't been on the air for 220 years, there's one seemingly basic fact I still don't know about it.
When he talks about his coming records—and zooms out from the minutiae of writing and recording—he speaks about them in terms of what they'll provide to listeners: solace, motivation, the feeling of being seen and heard.
The bulk of the materials released Tuesday come from the last decade of Bin Laden's life, and include letters to lieutenants and loved ones, drafts of speeches he was preparing to release and stray bits of operational minutiae.
So sure was Mr. Gröning of his own position that he went public in 2005 with long interviews retelling the minutiae of his experiences as what he termed a tiny cog in the gears of the Final Solution.
That idea extended beyond marriage into the larger church community, where Bible studies and small groups and midweek church services were meant to bring people into each other's lives, to share the daily minutiae of belief and praxis.
That's a minutiae-flecked argument for another day, but for our purposes here today, can we just talk about how Weedeater is probably the weediest band that ever wended their way through a weedy field of blunt guts?
In a poetic moment, Preger recounts one of her favorite entrances to a dance, Minutiae, by maneuvering from behind one of Rauschenberg's first "Combines," a large, self-standing piece colored a bright orange that signals excitement and hazard.
At their finest, the two men examine the minutiae of everyday life with the precision of a keenly observational stand-up set; that they are doing so on the fly makes it all the more exhilarating to watch.
In "Catching Up With the Matriarch Behind Beyoncé and Solange," Alex Hawgood writes: For sisters in the public eye, Beyoncé and Solange Knowles have managed to resist the siren call to overshare the minutiae of their personal lives.
It wasn't always clear whom Clinton was defending; because Hillary's voice in her husband's Administration was both strong and unofficial, sorting out the credit and the blame can, at times, require a thorough mastery of nineties-era minutiae.
Robert Rauschenberg, "décor for Minutiae" (1954/1976) (photo courtesy the Walker Art Center, Merce Cunningham Dance Company Collection) To the Walker's credit, the live performances they've lined up in conjunction with the exhibition, really help round it out.
Often made from found wood — carpentry tools alternate with wooden relica — those works are painted entirely black or white so their minutiae coalesce and, fully integrated, the objects ascend like postindustrial totems or statuary for a bygone religious sect.
Scott's Cheap Flights warns that the low prices probably won't last longer than a day, so anyone wanting to get away this winter or spring should act now and think about the minutiae – like rail connections and hotels – later.
But the reason everything feels so real is because the show is a trove of detail — from the gold embellishments of Buckingham Palace, down to the minutiae of royal protocol that governs almost every aspect of the queen's life.
For others on the visits, it was at best a kind of safari: an opportunity for strangers to nod their heads at the hassles and minutiae of daily existence in jail and then go home to their comfortable lives.
We would always get into a groove about something and I thought, I'll take a break and explain what it is and give a little history lesson because I do have a lot of interest in really weird minutiae.
" So often anything posted online that is funny, personal, heartfelt, examines the minutiae of our existence, gets into the subtleties of our popular culture, tells us something about our humanity is met with a loud screaming "WHAT IS THIS?
Mandating visiting opportunities between lawyers and inmates planning a defence does not implicate the court in the "minutiae" of day-to-day administrative decisions, she explained; the judiciary's big-picture aim is to vindicate the inmates' fundamental constitutional rights.
The FBI is far more interested in keeping tabs on ISIS and preventing acts of terrorism than taking down bloggers who can't be bothered to learn the minutiae of porn law before posting a bunch of hot sex pix.
The record is filled with the unfiltered musings of someone that's been shattered, picked up, and glued back together, told via innocuous moments and minutiae, non-events that, loaded with context, can tell the story of periods like this.
Even if the minutiae of cyber-security insurance feel a little too "suit-and-tie," it's still possible to roll up the sleeves of your hoodie and get down in the guts of crypto, hypervisors, memory heaps and more.
Rather than getting bogged down in the minutiae, Democratic voters — and candidates — would be well-advised to focus their strengths on the big boss fight that's still to come: defeating President Donald Trump in the general election come November.
For Republicans, the stakes of the coming budget season go beyond the intricacies of budgetary minutiae: Republicans want to use their budget to pave the way for an overhaul of the tax code that could skirt a Senate filibuster.
The tax legislation process therefore has always rested on a foundation of expertise in the form of lawyers and public finance economists deeply immersed in the technical minutiae of the tax code and in its impact on economic behavior.
I write every day about words and crossword puzzles, but I shiver at the thought of what it must be like to sit and ruminate on all of the minutiae that goes into compiling our most valuable lexicographic resources.
Hutchinson, who is thirty-three and teaches at Cornell, might be called a post-post-colonial writer: his art, suspicious of top-down institutions—including academia—finds in the impasto treatment of sensory minutiae a protest against abstract authority.
The cost-of-living category addressed minutiae like the cost of a liter of milk and a movie ticket, while the healthcare category covered the costs of medical procedures, common medications, and ease of access, as well as quality.
Bill Clinton's Presidency was so lacking in history-making events, yet so crowded with the embarrassing minutiae of scandalmongering, that it was easy to miss the great change that those years meant for the country and the Democratic Party.
I'm not sure he did this consciously, and we were too focused on minutiae to see the big picture, but the events of American history were arranged to suggest the Civil War was inevitable and not truly about slavery.
It does so by zooming in on the minutiae of her first love, elevating it beyond one of many moments in our lives that can seem to flash by so quickly that they never lodge themselves in our minds.
Faced with two prints, analysts determine if they came from the same source by marking small features in the loops and ridges of a fingerprint, called minutiae, and then deciding if the features correspond well enough to report a match.
One struggles to imagine President Josiah Bartlet (Martin Sheen) on "The West Wing" tearing himself away from the minutiae of policymaking to complain to his chief of staff that he is unable to "smuggle in an orgasm", as Grant does.
Meghan Markle is still in learning mode — and on Thursday, her nerves and lack of experience with the minutiae of royal protocol were evident to observers as she first arrived in Cheshire, England, for her big day out with the Queen.
The Fulops thought carefully about timing, location, whether or not to hold inventory, how to design the space, and some of the other details that might seem like minutiae but that make a meaningful difference in the success of the store.
Amid the stats and figures, dot-driven maps of New York City and questions about the minutiae of neighborhood issues, a hearing at the City Council on Thursday included more than the usual amount of personal revelation from Council members.
While encouraging its users to overshare minutiae from their own lives, the firm has been guarded in the past about sharing details of how its extensive data-collection machine works and what it tracks beyond the data users provide directly.
But whatever the minutiae of the trials themselves—whatever errors the prosecution might have made, whatever the relevant statutes in play—the message being conveyed is clear: If Gray's death was a crime, it was a crime without a perpetrator.
"When I testified, I had already been in court all week and had to watch this man's attorney bully, badger and harass my team including my mother over inane details and ridiculous minutiae, accusing them, and me, of lying," she continued.
They have routines to keep the minutiae of the day-to-day from cluttering their minds; there's a reason Steve Jobs' daily uniform was jeans and a black mock turtleneck and Mark Zuckerberg wears a grey T-shirt every day.
You may have been the type to print out hopeful budget spreadsheets, with cells waiting to be filled with the minutiae of all of your spending, only to leave it crumpled in that draw with all the old keys and lighters.
Even for those not invested in the minutiae of the jet set, it's a literary champagne cocktail that goes down easy as it sloshes from quote to quote, each one scandalous, wry, vicious, knowing or salacious, and often all five.
But when our Iran debate focuses on misleading nuclear inspection minutiae or whether the Obama administration is "kowtowing" to Iran with things like the alleged hostage payment, we aren't having a serious conversation about how to address Iran's actually bad policies.
DACA recipients themselves may not be following the tactical minutiae of the DOJ's court fight, but activist groups have worked hard to spread the basic message: DACA is open for renewals again — but no one knows how long it will last.
Friends and advisers say Mr. de Blasio would perhaps be happiest next in a job like chairman of the Democratic National Committee, where he could return to his political operative roots while mucking around in the minutiae of the party platform.
But the news conference also showed how the mayor's interest in running for higher office may derive, at least in part, from a desire to escape the persistent interest of local media in probing the minutiae of his mayoral management.
After only a few minutes, I was lost in soup of corporate acronyms, slogans and minutiae — and no closer to determining whether this training will actually help Walmart workers get ahead in life (or just make them better at selling things).
Call of Duty's narrative campaigns are warfighter psychodramas, whole seasons of 24 packed into six to eight hours of gameplay, all built around straight-from-the-headlines paranoia and exhaustive research into the minutiae of Western military culture and equipment.
But each Democratic demand for procedural minutiae and details on nominees' stances on Mr. Trump's travel ban illuminated an immutable fact: There is little Democrats can do to stop Republicans from ramming through both Mr. Trump's cabinet and their policy agenda.
He asks people about entertainment-world minutiae with the intensity of a thousand suns; he brings megastars and civilians together in strange, humble scenarios; when a contestant's answer upsets him in one segment, he flops onto a mountain of garbage bags.
While packing her seven-month-old son's things for a trip to Europe a year and a half ago, Alejandra Tejada became so overwhelmed by the minutiae — from food pouches to infant thermometers — that she forgot to include diaper cream.
And two administration officials said that Mr. Trump's lack of interest in the talks meant that the acting chief of staff could dip in and out of the discussions, sticking to the big picture without getting sucked into the minutiae.
Instead, Lochery, a professor of Middle Eastern studies at University College London, aims much lower, taking us on a slog through what he identifies as nine decisive moments in Netanyahu's career and then rehashing, largely using newspaper clips, the Machiavellian minutiae.
I applaud your empathy, D.G., even as I worry about the logistics of addressing all three girls on a sensitive subject while they sit in the back of your S.U.V., glued to their cellphones and the minutiae of middle-school life.
Getting 100,000 Ultimate Rewards points for $1,000 is nothing to sneeze at, however, and may be the best option for those who don't travel frequently or simply don't feel like working out the minutiae of squeezing more value from the points.
The blue Brexit monster is apparently the distillation of Dutch fears of the unknown as Britain has spent more than two years negotiating the minutiae of its departure from the European Union and a no-deal exit seems more likely.
She shows how the edges of a book, fragments of text or sewing patterns from the last century, displayed in her current show — "A Long Dress" at Bureau — offer a wealth of information that initially seems like innocent or irrelevant minutiae.
The mixed media decor created for Cunningham's 1954 "Minutiae", for example, as well as his piece "Trophy II (for Teeny and Marcel Duchamp)" in 1960, pop with whirling colors, drawing the viewer in without necessitating a performer to enliven them.
Yeah, I think it'd be weird if you were listening to this podcast and not consuming Digiday in some part, because you guys do a kickass job covering the ins and outs, and minutiae, and big picture of digital media. Right?
A. Harry was starting to phase out when I was working at the company, but my experience with Harry was that he was always very straightforward, very direct and to the point, never wanted to waste a lot of time with the minutiae.
Only by describing the houses in the most painful of minutiae did he feel he could offer an honest portrait of these people's circumstances — to convey a sense of "what is," as he put it — but nevertheless, he knew he was failing them.
"I said, 'Eric, if the show gets picked up by Netflix, I want someone who has swum in the water and really knows the cultural minutiae, the nomenclature and slang," Baer recalls of the show's season 3, which premiered Friday on Netflix.
Google, the world's premier vendor of web services subsidized by user data, should be scrutinized just as closely as Facebook, because it endeavors to collect just as much, probably more, minutiae about its users' lives in order to sell more valuable ads.
Such feats were possible as they mostly recorded other people's music; they did not have to engage in the time-consuming minutiae of composition and production (Mr Timberlake has been working on his latest album, scheduled for release in February, since 2016).
By organizing your expenses into three main spending categories, the 50/30/20 rule is a surefire way to getting your spending under control while helping you get closer to reaching your financial goals — all without having to stress over money minutiae.
This is a book that glories in quotidian detail — one of the most memorable sequences is of Kara and a friend reminiscing over diner food — because, crucially, this is a book that understands how vivid that sort of minutiae is to a teenager.
"We wanted to do a new production, a modern production, but modern as concept without being avant-garde," said Mr. Giammetti, who with Mr. Garavani has been sitting in on most of the rehearsals, discreetly fussing over minutiae, including jewels, fans and hairdos.
Joe Rospars, CEO of political media consultancy Blue State Digital, said that the increase in the number of media outlets pushing content to users on more platforms has led to an explosion in coverage, much of it on the minutiae of the race.
True-crime stories lend themselves to the episodic format because they contain a wealth of minutiae, much of it in case files that filmmakers can pick over, filling hours and providing fodder for audience D.I.Y. detective work that the Internet culture fosters.
Squads of enforcers ensured strict Sharia observance at the point of AK-47s; citizens who wore their pants too short, or allowed their cellphones to ring with Western tunes, or otherwise violated the minutiae of strict Islamism were liable to thrashing or worse.
The worry is that an increasingly politicized Fed – one where members of Congress and the executive branch meddle in the minutiae of decisions relating to the institution's mandates of maximizing U.S. employment and keeping prices stable – fails to do its job well.
This big blue machine plays an ever-expanding role in society and in the lives of many individual users, but no one seems to have a solid grasp on either the minutiae of what's going on there or the larger repercussions of it.
But she declined to provide a timeline or detailed information about the events that led her to end her campaign and resign from office, saying she did not want "the glossy minutiae" of her case to distract from larger issues of systemic racism.
Scientists involved in the excavations (led by Chrysoulaki) are interviewed at length, to discuss minutiae of the excavation work that can provide insights into the everyday life of archaic Greece, and precise measurements that will enable the performers to recreate this strange event.
To his surprise, his friend arrives at the airport with another man already in the car, a man who talks endlessly about workplace minutiae while the arriving traveler looks despondently out the window at the endless banks lining the streets of Kiev.
More than anything, the hardcore creators are obsessed with setting up their creations' logic; in World, you can dig into the minutiae of how a wrestler behaves, tweaking everything from what percentage of their attempted moves are grapples to how often they taunt.
Non-Muslims are unlikely to make much contribution to the minutiae of debate about what this or that passage in the Koran really means, but they can at least offer encouragement from the sidelines whenever the matter is being addressed in good faith.
The minutiae of bread-making are at the heart of two books put forth by beloved bakeries: "Zingerman's Bakehouse Cookbook" by Amy Emberling and Frank Carollo (Chronicle Books, $29.95) and "The Sullivan Street Bakery Cookbook" by Jim Lahey and Maya Joseph (W.
The Modern Language Association just released a new version of its style handbook that departs from its predecessor's fetishism of citation minutiae in order to show how documenting sources is a crucial way to publicly record meaningful conversations in a changing digital world.
Meade, a technocrat with a sharp command of the minutiae of the economy, launched his campaign for the PRI candidacy in a straw sombrero festooned with red and green streamers in the poor southern town of San Juan Chamula on Dec. 14.
For Uber, Rowe said the perfect juror would be someone who is willing to have the patience to delve into the minutiae of what exactly constitutes a trade secret, as opposed to focusing on Levandowski's expected refusal to answer questions on the stand.
The latest in a long-running and cultishly beloved series of Japanese role-playing games, Persona 5 is obsessed with the minutiae of modern life, and the injustices of the adult world; both threaten to drown your character, a second-year high school student.
Hours have been spent discussing the minutiae of character development and world building, but video essayist Celia Gómez, dissects most of these Golden Age series in a matter of minutes using the "first and final frames" format we first saw used by Jacob T. Swinney.
In reaffirming Farber's vision even in the minutiae of his classroom preparation, the book also crucially foregrounds the influence that Patricia Patterson (his second wife and long-term collaborator) had on him, both in his painting and as a co-writer of his criticism.
From the time Catherine, the Duchess of Cambridge, entered the maternity hospital until she and her husband, Prince William, emerged with their newborn boy 12 hours later, the minutiae of the royal birth on Monday dominated the news in Britain — and not only there.
Dissatisfied with the response of race officials, they methodically gathered evidence from the minutiae of her record: official race photographs, timing data, photographs from spectators along the routes, the accounts of other competitors and volunteers who saw, or did not see, Miller at various points.
The 2005 emails published by the New York Post show Schwimmer engaged in minutiae that could get the deal done: He suggested connecting the head of human resources for the NYSE with a peer in Goldman's HR department to talk about employee-stock plans.
While this film doesn't specifically delve into the minutiae of Tomlin's character's sex life, she is paired up with Judy Greer, an actress 40 years her junior — a statement about the continued desirability of smart, feisty women in their 70s if we've ever seen one.
As much as we live in an era in which we strive to quantify the tiniest bit of statistical minutiae across hockey, this situation boils down to belief in Drouin's abilities, and Drouin is taking control of them, as they are his abilities, after all.
She is preceded in her lyrical practice by songwriters like Paul Simon, Bob Dylan, Liz Phair, and Craig Finn, of the Hold Steady—artists who find clever and effective ways to turn arcane impressions into narrative fodder, thus revealing the strange poignancy in minutiae.
While I was at university I was in constant contact with my home friends via a private Facebook group, and Facetime meant we were able to stumble in fucked, cheesy chips in hand, and catch up on the dumb minutiae of the night immediately.
While budgets often are concerned with the minutiae of state operations, Mr. Cuomo's plan singled out some name-brand, nationally known locales — the subways, for one — which the governor said the city must help pay to repair or suffer hundreds of millions in withheld funds.
Coogler's telling took us slowly through the minutiae of Grant's last day alive: We saw his family and child, his struggles at work, his relationship to a gentrifying city, his attempts to make sense of a young life that felt both aimless and daunting.
He grounded his players in the same minutiae he now preaches to the Warriors: angles, foot positions, how to spread their hands, how to be an instigator instead of lying in wait, how to be flexible enough as a unit to protect multiple positions.
HONG KONG — Michael Wolf, a photographer who was known for his vertiginous depictions of rainbow-hued skyscrapers in Hong Kong as well as the minutiae of everyday life there, died on Thursday at his home in Cheung Chau, an outlying island near the city.
And if, as we read, we experience the fugue-like recurrence of those details and hundreds of others, we begin to understand what it might be like for the girls' fathers to have to relive the minutiae of their daughters' deaths, day after day, forever.
"The myriad of details which people joke about, the academies, the uniforms and what not, those may seem trivial but they are details that need to be worked out," James said raising concerns that the proposed space force will be buried in bureaucratic minutiae.
It's also why her videos keep going viral; her ability to demystify technical, often esoteric financial concepts is a boon to those who understand that nitty-gritty details, all the minutiae of government work, are important, but aren't sure how to connect the dots.
The official text of the plan itself, CNBC reported Tuesday, will be specific enough to circumvent the criticism initially heaped on the scant first version of the administration's tax plan, while remaining broad enough to avoid its chances of passage being bogged down by minutiae.
A few beats later: "The American people think they know me and they know me," again instructing voters not to examine the fine points of his record or the minutiae of his proposals but to look into his eyes and into their own guts.
A few beats later: "The American people think they know me and they know me," again instructing voters not to examine the fine points of his record or the minutiae of his proposals but to look into his eyes and into their own guts.
In order to get into that in full though, to understand the minutiae of an experience many go through but others do not, it's important to get into the backstory that provides the foundation for English Tapas—or, rather, the spirit of Jason Williamson.
As much as we love it when celebrities 'get real' online about how long it takes to achieve a photo, how many stretch marks they really have or how unglamorous the minutiae of their life is, posts like that are merely drops in a FaceTuned ocean.
But at Bitter & Esters, a home-brew shop in Prospect Heights, Brooklyn, hopeful brewers discuss all parts of the process with like-minded beer aficionados, from the minutiae (and there is quite a lot of detail) to the merrymaking when an especially good batch is turned out.
That said, it appears Twitter is looking both for someone to have some more fun with its official handle, which is usually mired in yawn-inducing product update minutiae, and be capable of communicating changes to the product in a way that actually resonates with users.
We get an insight into the minutiae of their relationship in a way that feels even more realistic than Blue: Corsini pays special attention to their body language, their languid summer days, and the intrinsic personality differences that come from being people from two completely different worlds.
He wasn't always featured in the box—sometimes he would be a pharaoh receiving fanning from slave girls, or some other poetic historical reference—but he would always be pontificating about the minutiae of life, and how it always relates back, one way or another, to prison.
I could delve into the minutiae of using each phone on a daily basis, such as which company has the better gesture shortcuts or UI themes or ringtones (HTC, definitely), but the truth is that small advantages in either direction aren't meaningful to determining the final outcome.
As the Gawker trial sludges on, there's no better time to reflect on just how normal it felt to turn to the internet for commentary on bleak minutiae like sex tapes, microcelebrity news, and deep dives into fringe content that traditional media didn't have time for.
If anything, Ms. Zexer is at her best when she daubs in color and minutiae, as in an almost interstitial scene in which Jalila bakes bread on top of an oven, an action that says something about both this specific woman and the world she inhabits.
And the World Cup has brought a shelf of new and updated books treating the subject from every conceivable angle: from social history to tactical minutiae, and from soccer's future as an outpost of Big Data to its ever-growing status as an object of aesthetic wonder.
They tackle topics big and small with a huge variety of approaches to game design, capturing moments of history in a way that never would have occurred to me, without getting bogged-down in the minutiae and micro-management that is at the foundation of PC wargaming.
That's a seismic shift, a move toward making the NFL more corporate, more vanilla, and more like an airport Starbucks kiosk, all at a time when a league obsessed with football deflation, PR puffery, and rulebook minutiae has never needed a silver-and-black outlaw vibe more.
I've read the books, and books about the books, and watched the show, and read recaps of the show, and listened to podcasts about the show and gone deep, deep down Reddit holes, discussion threads that start at the level of trivia and descend into minutiae.
Known as Chupeta — Spanish slang for Lollipop — Mr. Ramírez presented himself on the stand as a man consumed with the minutiae of his business, recalling how he never failed to debrief his pilots after every run and reviewed each line of the scrupulous accounting ledgers he maintained.
Rather than meticulously rehashing the minutiae of evidence for and against Knox, however, Amanda Knox follows in the footsteps of well-known crime documentaries like The Staircase, allowing its subject to tell her side of the story as the narrative unfolds the major developments in the case.
It's possible that I'd have grasped that basic fact and many others much earlier if my head weren't so stuffed with so much minutiae about the Shackleton expedition, so many descriptions of light from James Salter short stories, all these invisible psychosocial landscapes from all these books.
It's possible that I'd have grasped that basic fact and many others much earlier if my head weren't so stuffed with so much minutiae about the Shackleton expedition, so many descriptions of light from James Salter short stories, all these invisible psychosocial landscapes from all these books.
Just take a look at this, and tell me that Steph's moves don't look familiar: You can certainly make this molehill into a mountain—it's the off-season, meaning that it's pretty much your job as a fan to take the minutiae and blow it into grotesque proportions.
The game is hardly subtle (its bland pineapple characters were inspired by the ridiculous "Hare and the Pineapple" reading comprehension question from a New York state exam), and it's exhausting to keep up with the minutiae of planning spells/lessons, the constant rotation of teachers, and student management.
The refrain: "IIIII'm skint / Not even a little bit, I'm talking flat on my face, geezer / Man, IIIII'm skint / Until my phone rings I'll be praying for a saving grace, fella" makes deceptively upbeat instrumentation knock against a tale of mundane struggle, of the minutiae of adult life.
But if you're a parent with a need to capture boring Saturday soccer games and dance recitals, or a pet owner, or a nerdy YouTuber who needs to record the every minutiae of daily existence, then this super cheap gimbal feels like it should probably be on your wishlist.
Is it because having your hair done is an opportunity to finally relax and get taken care of instead of fussing over annoying life minutiae, or a natural biological response to facing yourself in the mirror for an extended period of time that results in some forced self-reflection?
But there's also a lot of anxiety that comes with being an enthusiast video game player that manifests in the form of incredibly angry debates about the merits of 60 frames per second, high resolutions, and other graphical fidelity minutiae that is rarely analyzed from a reflexive perspective.
I had been convinced that all red wine tasted basically like red wine, all white wine tasted basically like white wine, and the minutiae provided in verbose tasting notes ("Hints of cassis and the vintner's beard, with lilac on the nose") were just illusory emperor-has-no-clothes gibberish.
Obsessing over tactical minutiae; planning major life events around the fixture list; refusing to speak to their nearest and dearest for much of the weekend when their side loses; these things are par for the course for dedicated football fans, and mundane facts of life for everyone else.
She is a smart, hard-working reporter who knows she has a great tale to tell, and if the narrative gets lost in bureaucratic minutiae at times (who knew that Genesee County had a drain commissioner?), it's easy to forgive because you admire her passion and her sweat.
But it's all there in the minutiae; in her colorful suits, her nods to Canada, her choice of guest (Mindy Kaling) that gives us the rare sight of two South Asian women side-by-side on NBC (rare but not unheard of, thanks in large part to Kaling herself).
Blade Runner's director's cut took a tortured path to the screen, the minutiae of which is probably only interesting to die-hard Blade Runner fans; in short, the new cut was "supervised" by Scott, though the actual edits were performed by film preservationist Michael Arick based on Scott's notes.
Fraser's presentation of this story is free of both footnote skirmishes and extravagant claims, but she devotes too much attention to the many minor players' biographical minutiae at the expense of commentary and analysis of the complex, even self-contradictory situations that emerge in the course of her narrative.
During a week in the capital, Riyadh, and the Red Sea port of Jeddah, I found a dizzying nation where ultrachic malls are full of stores that close five times a day for prayer and modern restaurants are still enmeshed in the regulatory minutiae of segregating men from women.
Following Mr. Xi's high-profile crackdown on corrupt officials and thorough silencing of liberal intellectuals, the president's most ambitious project with the wider public is underway: an attempt to govern not only citizens' political outlook but, more than any leader since Mao, also the minutiae of their moral life.
You can do your best to plan out the minutiae of a day, never anticipating that you'll overhear a surgeon's conversation about cauterizing brains, or see a subway magician pull a live rabbit out of a hat, or unwittingly find yourself in the midst of a stranger's marriage proposal.
The co-hosts, Cynthia Graber and Nicola Twilley, tackle a compellingly unpredictable range of subjects: one week you'll find a discussion of the ways restaurant menus are designed to manipulate diners, the next an oral history of the avocado, and the next an examination into the minutiae of cannibalism.
I visit it in my dreams, and in the photo feeds from its current owners; when I see them at museum conferences, I demand to know all the minutiae of the island's upkeep, which trees survived the winter storms and what color they're painting the porch this year.
Far more than arcane arguments over historical minutiae, the Arafat-Abbas tradition of denying a longstanding Jewish link to Jerusalem is the Palestinian's inimitable way of saying that the Jews are simply the latest wave of Crusaders, that Israel is nothing but a colonialist presence in the Middle East.
Lily Walman Blank New York To the Editor: After the second round of back-to-back Democratic debates, I am forced to wonder why the United States treats electing a president as if it were Major League Baseball: interminable season, nitty-gritty analysis of minutiae, fan-based, etc.
Lily Walman Blank New York To the Editor: After the second round of back-to-back Democratic debates, I am forced to wonder why the United States treats electing a president as if it were Major League Baseball: interminable season, nitty-gritty analysis of minutiae, fan-based, etc.
LiveJournal was the place where I wrote not just about feeling sad, but also about the absolute minutiae of being a teenager, like defending pop-punk bands or describing crushes and the back-and-forth ways I felt about them or recounting in extreme detail the concerts I attended.
Administrators were good with creating scholastic plans that best benefited each age range of children, good at organizing the minutiae of a school — the paperwork, the state laws to follow, the hiring, the schedule management — but exhibited the long-acknowledged difference between being brilliant in comprehension and brilliant in action.
But when he talks about the minutiae of moderately successful records from 16 years ago, he smiles, then he engages his whole upper body, delivering Cam'ron's lines ("I ain't a rapper, b, I skeet Uzis / And I can't act—turned down three movies") as if he were still draped in Avirex.
Other Linklater films explore the comedic minutiae of specific milieus: 20-year-olds loitering at convenience stores in the underrated SubUrbia, East Texas adulthood during the same mid-90s period in Bernie, and Dazed and Confused's last day of high school, circa 1976, which came from the director's own memories.
Yet he's in no hurry, as he ambles and chats with locals, and notices the minutiae that most of us overlook, from the metal bristles left behind by street cleaners, to DIY 9/11 memorials, to the love of using the letter "Z" in words like "cutz" on barber shop signs.
The convoluted scheme never attracted the same level of outrage as Martin Shkreli or the price hikes for EpiPens and insulin, perhaps because it dealt with the minutiae of US patent law, an area essential for pharmaceutical firms but far more impenetrable to the average American than tripling a drug's price.
But compression can also crush subtleties like timbre, the auditory minutiae that let listeners tell the sound of a trumpet from that of a trombone, and tempo rubato ("stolen time"), which is the slight speed-up or slow-down of notes used by soloists or conductors taking liberties with a composition.
"The regulation model has to be responsive to the risks associated with the particular drug," says Steve Rolles, senior policy analyst at drugs policy reform charity Transform, and co-author of "After the War on drugs: Blueprint for Regulation," which predicts and details the minutiae of a regulated drugs market.
These are the fans who save up all year, who plan the minutiae of their lives months in advance, who are caught between growing up in a culture of instant gratification, and coming to terms with the reality that their real lives will inevitably become more boring, and that maybe that's okay.
Rockstar Games is back with a fresh, extended look at its upcoming Wild West adventure, Red Dead Redemption II. Where the previous video release from Rockstar focused on lots of gameplay minutiae — specific elements that shake up Rockstar's proven formula for exploration-heavy action games — this new one is more about the ride.
It's not really important what you do or don't do, what people bring you or even who turns up: it's not your last night of freedom before a ten-stretch, so just arrange to have a nice time with some nice people without worrying about the minutiae and it'll be a blast.
To the Editor: I live in a local historic district that operates much as Binyamin Appelbaum describes, with a historic district commission of architects and aesthetic purists obsessing over minutiae, brushing off the urgent need for affordable housing and mobilization against the climate crisis, and safeguarding a sterile, static version of the past.
The film captures the minutiae of the Sondheim's process, the grueling series of choices and tweaks that eventually coalesce into a finished, finished product—and the climactic final scene of singer Elaine Stritch's emotional recording of "The Ladies Who Lunch" is easily some of the best footage Pennebaker ever put to film.
At no point in history has the instant-by-instant minutiae that makes up a basketball game been more cataloged than it is at this moment; most of that cataloging, as it pertains to Durant, suggests that he's been working quite a bit harder than he needs to in order to get his shots.
Sure, they can offer moral support and a glass of champagne when needed, but more importantly they're there to help with all the silly minutiae, like lacing you into the corset that may or may not be a size too small and lifting up your twenty-foot train so you can finally use the restroom.
The Swedish photographer Martin Adolfsson and Canadian scientist Daniel J. Wilson, inventors of Minutiae, a newish app, plug their product as an "anti-social media app," and while that's not untrue — there are no friends or followers, and you can't share a single thing whenever you'd like — it's best compared in opposition to nothing.
Such repetition and ubiquity tends to trigger an existential crisis spiral where you begin to question how everything can be so different and yet all the same, like two mirrors that reflect an image ad infinitum, and really what IS anything when you get down to the nitty gritty minutiae of existence, ya know?
This year it was brought upon to me to experience the whole shebang first-hand, to bring you, dear readers, the minutiae of what it feels like to attend an award show (albeit one that involves an iPhone with a depleting battery, rather than sitting backstage and rolling dangerously long L-plates with Skepta).
In one hall they saw the step-by-step minutiae that goes into fashioning of one of Fendi's signature Peekaboo handbags, a multiweek production from pelt selection to final assembly and quality control, which helps to account for price tags that can easily reach 20,000 euros (about $23,000) per bag, depending on the materials used.
MANCHESTER, England — Strip away the jargon and the euphemisms and the disorientating forest of acronyms, tune out the noise from claim and counterclaim and strident denial, pick a way through the laborious detail and the tangled minutiae, and a simple truth emerges: At the very apex of European soccer, a moment of reckoning is coming.
In a country where we can pay for goods and services and bank by flashing our phones, a candidate today has to stand on the corner to get on the ballot Could presidential challengers outside the two-party system starting now be willing and able to navigate the minutiae of 403 sets of rules (plus DC)?
Readers interested in uniform minutiae perhaps a touch too obscure for ESPN—say, Japanese baseball uniforms, or minor league hockey novelty sweaters—find themselves sated daily on the Uni Watch blog, which also includes historical anecdotes, a collection of sport-sorted quick news and images links called the ticker, and guest posts from readers and journalists.
Its relentless focus on the minutiae of Trump world scandals—which Trump world obligingly delivers in endless variety and quantity—and its impressive ability to turn late-breaking, mad-making Trump pronouncements into a whole evening of dedicated programming, are especially well adapted to a political moment driven by the wickedly fast churn of online media.
This article originally appeared on Noisey UK. It is the year 2017: our phones are also tellies, Wetherspoons does table service, and Rylan Clark is one of the most beloved celebrities in the UK. For all intents and purposes, we are in the future, and the minutiae—the everyday bits and pieces—of life in the future is Good.
The reverence that is paid to the minutiae of refugee life, a brilliant choice, is sometimes undermined by too much fixation on detail — the protagonist repeatedly turns his head to observe too closely his own feces; his wife; the clippings of his filthy hair; the smooth stump of an amputee; a dying bird; a dying gecko, etc.
Her technique — already displayed in earlier books on the history of curry, the importance of diet and physique in the running of Imperial India and the role of food in wars involving both Germany and Japan — is to examine the minutiae of daily kitchen life and to extrapolate from them a greater image of historical sweep.
There are lovingly detailed passages on the mechanics of going to the toilet and cleaning your teeth in orbit, the dangers of muscle wastage and other minutiae of life in zero gravity, but all the whizzy space business is harnessed to the basic question of what it means to leave and whether it's possible to come back.
However, unlike the precision of Garry Winogrand's or Lee Friedlander's street photography in which we see the relationship between the photographer and the subject, Hara's indiscriminate method allows her subjects to reveal themselves — making her an invisible flaneur who understands the minutiae of life — such as an insect on a window or a child peeking from a tent.
Although she has quickly adapted to many of the minutiae of royal dos and don'ts, she "has found certain rules in the royal household difficult to understand, like the fact that the Queen prefers women in dresses or skirts rather than trouser suits, and is often asking Harry why things have to be done in a certain way," a source previously told PEOPLE.
Although Meghan has quickly adapted to many of the minutiae of royal dos and don'ts, she "has found certain rules in the royal household difficult to understand, like the fact that the Queen prefers women in dresses or skirts rather than trouser suits, and is often asking Harry why things have to be done in a certain way," a source recently told PEOPLE.
"When I testified, I had already been in court all week and had to watch this man's attorney bully, badger and harass my team including my mother over inane details and ridiculous minutiae, accusing them, and me, of lying," she explained, going on to note that her mom was "physically too ill" to appear in court during her daughter's testimony.
Although she has quickly adapted to many of the minutiae of royal dos and don'ts, she "has found certain rules in the royal household difficult to understand, like the fact that the Queen prefers women in dresses or skirts rather than trouser suits, and is often asking Harry why things have to be done in a certain way," a source previously told PEOPLE.
It was only late on in the production that we managed to get full translations of the rest of these tapes and only then did we realize that quite a lot of material between Kim and Choi was sometimes trivial business, production and minutiae, and sometimes very interesting aspects of Kim Jong-il's character and the game playing between Shin and Kim.
At a recent two-day workshop on connectivity hosted by modem and radio chipmaker Qualcomm, I was bombarded with technical minutiae on everything from the role of filters in the RF front end of a modern modem to the key elements of 22020GPP Release 25 and the usage of carrier aggregation-like functions in upcoming technologies that leverage unlicensed 250 GHz spectrum.
How to set a proper table; how to be an excellent host or a guest; networking efficiently but not aggressively; and minutiae like the proper way to hold a drink and a canapé in one hand so that you can shake with the other — all are covered, with accompanying photographs reminiscent of Glamour magazine's old Dos and Don'ts pages, without the black bars.
By then, the president, for whom chains of command and policy minutiae rarely meant much, was demanding that Mr. Priebus begin to put in effect a much more conventional White House protocol that had been taken for granted in previous administrations: From now on, Mr. Trump would be looped in on the drafting of executive orders much earlier in the process.
Most of the book is given over to luxuriating in Janet's college experience: following her from class to class and book to book, and obsessing over the minutiae of her various dorm rooms, the unjustness of the fates that stuck her with an incompatible roommate, and the beauty of the various Shakespeare-quoting boys with whom Janet and her roommates take up.
Apple unveils its $9.99 per month news subscription service, Apple News+ Though the minutiae of "full access" is somewhat unclear, Apple is better than most at distilling complicated deal terms into something snappy, and I think it's fair to say that non-print subscribers signing up for News+ will cancel existing subscriptions unless the reasons not to are thrown directly in their face by the publications.
Although she has quickly adapted to many of the minutiae of royal dos and don'ts, she "has found certain rules in the royal household difficult to understand, like the fact that the Queen prefers women in dresses or skirts rather than trouser suits, and is often asking Harry why things have to be done in a certain way," a source tells PEOPLE in this week's cover story.
In recent months experts have been restoring the Blaschkas' glass minutiae in preparation for "Fragile Legacy: The Marine Invertebrate Glass Models of Leopold and Rudolf Blaschka," an exhibition opening on May 14 at the Corning Museum of Glass in Corning, N.Y. It will explore the Blaschkas' methods of reinforcing models with wires and glue, the their shipping crates and the surviving glass creations worldwide.
Hence the minutiae that you will bear away from "The Handmaiden," whether you like it or not: Kouzouki's blackened tongue, which he uses to moisten a paintbrush; a naked figure, inked onto paper so thin that it can be rolled and smoked; and, best of all, Sookee reaching softly into her mistress's mouth, with a thimbled finger, to file down the sharpness of a tooth.
To read more from Chesney, Lambert, and Hunt, pick up the new issue of Entertainment Weekly, on newsstands Friday, or buy it here – and subscribe now for more exclusive interviews and photos, only in EW. Lambert – who occasionally shares photos on tour and with her pets and boyfriend Anderson East on Instagram, but generally stays relatively private – added that she doesn't care to know the minutiae of others lives, either.
As the top Democrat on the Financial Services Committee, the 78-year-old liberal has focused much of her energy in recent years on the policy minutiae that came with defending former President Barack ObamaBarack Hussein Obama3 real problems Republicans need to address to win in 2020 Obama's high school basketball jersey sells for 85033,000 at auction Dirty little wars and the law: Did Osama bin Laden win?
Despite the fact that obsessing over relationship minutiae seems like a holdover from a simpler time (2007 was also a year when people blogged about minutia for fun!), a quick survey among acquaintances revealed that yes, sudden repulsion still happens to people, including "good people" who don't usually have dirtbag knee-jerky reactions to things that happen around them (and who wouldn't "next" someone unless they had a good reason).
This has been one of my enduring wishes for the last decade, and I kept thinking the day was right around the corner, when finally one of my favorites of all time would make it to streaming, and then I could enjoy 9,000 articles dissecting its minutiae and everyone getting super into it and arguing about the best episodes and burying myself in a hundred Frank Pembleton GIFs.
Responses flit in and out of pure nerddom ("Scalia are green-skinned, shape-shifting antagonists in the Marvel comic universe"), pop culture ("Scalia is the electronic music producer and DJ who just won a grammy"), scientific minutiae ("Scalias are Australian legless lizards, of the genus Pygopus, with prehensile tails and scaly flaps in place of hindlimbs"), and five-point SAT vocab words ("Scalia are subjective internal experiences") — the only constant is absurdity.
Preoccupied by the apocalyptic horizon of climate change, the dark pulsing terror at the center of the novel, and by the "feeling of daily life," Lizzie understands — or at least, enacts — the truth that we inhabit multiple scales of experience at the same time: from the minutiae of school drop-offs and P.T.A. activism to the frictions of our personal relationships all the way to the geological immensity of our (not so slowly) corroding planet.
As we yank and tug at arteries clotted with blood and stringy nerves, as we cringe at oozing clumps of fat that splash everywhere when we flip the body to dissect the back, as we reduce a human being to the minutiae of their parts, there is a sense of obligation — not just to be respectful of the body and to dedicate ourselves to learning the material, but to recognize that medicine is built on sacrifice.
And based on my experience with my little brother, I can say there is a surprising authenticity in a lot of the the minutiae: the countdown to starting T; the pronoun slips that persist long after coming out to the family; the androgynous haircut and hiding of feminine curves under a binder and baggy flannel; the decision to opt out of using public bathrooms; the heated conversations between the overly cautious mom and the frustrated child.
This year, however, we may get the best winner since the girl group Little Mix in 2011 (themselves the best since the Series 3 and 5 glory years of Leona Lewis and Alexandra Burke respectively) in the shape of Rak-Su, a London group with the ability to write hooks like Jason Derulo's but without the suits or cringe, and who take the minutiae of grime—AKA the most successful British-born genre of the past decade—and push it to fun, uplifting reaches.
What we shared was the notion that there is no upper limit to the number of times you can bake a cake or the amount of thought that can go into the components of a tart in order to get it just right; that you can discuss the minutiae of a chocolate ice cream or a nut brittle as if the fate of the entire universe rests on the conversation, without worrying for a second that this may be, just maybe, a tiny bit over the top.
Ask your analytics management about their everyday work and you'll get a depressing list of technical minutiae, clustered around the data platforms ("we can't connect to the CRM database" or "we're waiting for the security on the cluster to be upgraded"), the math ("we need our own version of hierarchical models that can handle a million variables" or "we think we can get greater accuracy if we use neural networks") and the deployment ("we have a separate team of engineers who manually convert the R scripts into SQL").
" Rounding out the MIT list are: the development of new nuclear energy reactor designs that will make nuclear power "safer  and cheaper"; a blood test that can predict if a baby is likely to be born prematurely and thereby increase chance of survival; a pill-sized probe that can be swallowed to take detailed pictures of the gut without anesthesia; and souped-up artificial intelligence assistants with which you can have a conversation and that can "deal with daily minutiae like taking meeting notes, finding information, or shopping online.
At first glance, coming in at just over a hundred pages, Who Killed My Father seems slighter, less momentous than his previous work—clearly a companion of sorts to The End of Eddy and History of Violence, but without the first novel's wealth of ethnographic minutiae (Louis has spoken of his debt to the sociologist Pierre Bourdieu) or the latter's formal inventiveness (whereby, for example, an account of Louis's rape and near murder at the hands of a stranger is mostly narrated by his sister, whom Louis overhears talking to her husband in the next room).
If that didn't remind you that MMA's silly season pops up any time there's more than a week between UFC events, consider what else has been sucking up oxygen: more conversation about Michael Bisping versus Georges St. Pierre, the symbolic death knell for merit-based fighting in the UFC; more fighters calling each other out across weight classes because it actually works; and the insufferable, daily minutiae driving a conversation about whether boxing's undefeated and un-retired pay-per-view king will fight the UFC's Irish poster boy for the sole pursuit of making money in exchange for as little entertainment in return.

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