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24 Sentences With "nosebleed section"

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

In the same nosebleed section, a group of high school classmates were debating the game's most elemental details.
But with tix in his section running at least $6,000 each, he's sending his kids to the nosebleed section.
The actor immediately bought season tickets up in the nosebleed section for the New York Knicks, he tells Riley.
Here, scientists hope to consolidate the JINR's lead in synthesizing the unknown SHEs that occupy the nosebleed section of the periodic table.
If you don't want to be in the nosebleed section, you could grab a ticket for around $4,944, but that's still in the upper end of the stadium.
Even after the financial crisis and supposed resulting deleveraging, the household leverage ratio is still in the nosebleed section of history at 22% of wage and salary earnings.
The $30 tickets I had purchased online placed me in the nosebleed section; were I any further removed from the action, I would have been at home, watching on television.
That synchronicity was ultimately the reason Destiny was here, chaperoning two youths in the nosebleed section as they waited for the redeemed to flee the floor area so the bands could come back on.
The lucky fan is 8-year-old Isabella -- who was at the game with her mom, dad and brother who are all Panthers super fans ... and usually sit in the nosebleed section when they attend games.
From there, anyone scrolling through Snapchat can flip between the various streams, so a view of the stage from the mezzanine can get stitched to a view from the pit to what the whole scene looks like from the nosebleed section.
Which is one of Wrinkle's biggest issues: the performances are virtually all loud and strident, pitched with the energy of people in a Broadway musical trying to make sure their smiles still play for the ticketholders in the nosebleed section.
M.C. and I went with our friends, we all piled into this big ass arena downtown which was full of black people and white people and young kids and old burnouts and yuppies in expensive seats and poorer people in the nosebleed section, just completely mobbed.
In the United States and Canada, the nosebleed section are the seats of a public area, usually an athletic stadium or gymnasium, that are highest and, usually, farthest from the desired activity. A common tongue-in-cheek reference to having seats at the upper tiers of a stadium is "sitting in the nosebleed section," or "nosebleed seats." The reference alludes to the tendency for mountain climbers to suffer nosebleeds at high altitudes. The term appeared in print as early as 1953 when it was used to describe the last row in the end zone at Philadelphia's Municipal Stadium (later John F. Kennedy Stadium) during that year's Army-Navy football game.
The song was voted at #21 in the Triple J Hottest 100 of All Time, 2009, where it was the second- highest placed Australian single in the countdown. The only Australian song to place higher was hip-hop song The Nosebleed Section by the Hilltop Hoods, which early in the song, contains a line from These Days, sung in hip-hop style.
"Testimonial Year" is a song on Australian hip hop band Hilltop Hoods' 2003 album, The Calling. It is the first song to be lifted from that album. The song was not as successful as the album's other songs, "Dumb Enough" and "The Nosebleed Section". It contains a vocal sample of Audio Two's "Top Billin'" near the end of the song.
Their tracks received votes from national radio station Triple J's listeners on annual Hottest 100 lists: "These Days", "Already Gone", "Good-Day Ray", and "Passenger" were ranked in 1999, and "My Happiness" and "My Kind of Scene" in 2000. In 2009, "These Days" was voted at No. 21 and "My Happiness" at No. 27 in the Hottest 100 of all time, placing them as second- and fourth-highest Australian tracks after the Hilltop Hoods' "The Nosebleed Section" and Hunters & Collectors' "Throw Your Arms Around Me", respectively.
Uecker pompously remarks, "I must be in the front row", which became another of his catchphrases. The punch line was that Uecker's seat was actually in the nosebleed section. Since then, the farthest seats from the action in some arenas and stadiums have been jokingly called "Uecker seats". There is a section of $1 seating called the "Uecker seats" at Miller Park, which is an obstructed-view area in the upper grandstand above home plate where the stadium's roof pivot comes together (in reference to one of his Miller Lite commercials).
In the visual language of Japanese manga and anime, a sudden, violent nosebleed indicates that the bleeding person is sexually aroused. In Western fiction, nosebleeds often signify intense mental focus or effort, particularly during the use of psychic powers. In American and Canadian usage, "nosebleed section" or "nosebleed seats" are common slang for seating at sporting or other spectator events that are the highest up and farthest away from the event. The reference alludes to the propensity for nasal hemorrhage at high altitudes, usually owing to lower barometric pressure.
The 14,500-seat Nippon Budokan arena was sold out. Ticket prices started from ($17) for the nosebleed section, while ringside seats for the public cost ($1,000) and "royal ringside" seats for sponsors cost $3,000. The fight was watched by an estimated 1.4 billion viewers worldwide, including more than 54 million viewers in Japan. In the United States, the fight sold at least 2 million or more pay-per-view buys on closed-circuit theater TV. At a ticket price of $10, the fight grossed at least (inflation-adjusted ) or more from closed-circuit theater TV revenue in the United States.
The New York Knicks are also-rans in the NBA, their roster filled with players who either lack talent or are too distracted by off-the-court issues. Nonetheless, limousine driver and rabid fan Edwina "Eddie" Franklin (Whoopi Goldberg) attends every Knicks game in the nosebleed section of Madison Square Garden. During halftime of a game, Eddie is one of three fans picked to win a chance to be the honorary assistant coach of the Knicks for the second half by sinking a free throw, which she does. She quickly gets on the nerves of head coach John Bailey (Dennis Farina), whom she had heckled earlier.
Hilltop Hoods received nominations for the 'Best Hip Hop Act' in 2001 and 2002 at the 3D World Dance Music Awards, they won the Australasian Performing Right Association (APRA) Award for 'Best Up-coming Group' as well as receiving number-one positions in independent charts all around Australia. The 2003 release The Calling achieved platinum certification from ARIA. Two tracks, "The Nosebleed Section" and "Dumb Enough", were listed in the Triple J Hottest 100, 2003, at ninth and 44th, respectively. Their lead single from The Hard Road, "Clown Prince" was released in February 2006, and became their first top 40 hit on the ARIA Singles Chart.
In 2009 "The Nosebleed Section" was voted number 17 in the Triple J Hottest 100 of all time, the highest placed Australian song. For the APRA Music Awards of 2010, the Hilltop Hoods won the 'Urban Work of the Year' award for "Still Standing", which was written by Francis, Lambert, Smith and Henry Lawes. The band received three nominations at the 2013 APRA Awards: 'Most Played Australian Work' for "I Love It", and two nominations in the 'Urban Work of the Year' category for "I Love It" and "Speaking in Tongues". They won Urban Work of the Year for "I Love It" (featuring Sia).
In an interview after the release of their fourth album, Suffa revealed that The Calling was recorded on his mother's computer and the simplicity of their 'studio' is the reason why some of the music on the album is in monaural ('mono') sound. Two songs from the album placed in the 2003 Triple J Hottest 100 chart: "The Nosebleed Section" was voted into ninth place, while "Dumb Enough" was voted into position 44. Both were released as singles in 2004, after the initial single, "Testimonial Year", did not fulfil expectations sales-wise. On 26 July 2006, Obese Records announced that the album became the first Australian hip hop release to achieve a platinum certification.
Two weeks later on June 4, 2012, Dish relocated AMC, WE tv, and IFC to higher channel positions with AMC being split into two separate standard definition and high definition channel feeds; the former channel lineup spaces occupied by the three channels were respectively replaced with HDNet, Style and MoviePlex multiplex channel Indieplex. The move is believed to be in response to an ad run during a June 3 airing of an episode of Mad Men urging Dish Network customers to inform the company to keep the three AMC Networks channels on the satellite provider with Dish stating that the relocated channel positions better reflect the channels' ratings.Dish Network Kicks AMC Networks Channels To Nosebleed Section Of The Dial, Deadline Hollywood, June 4, 2012. On June 30, 2012, Dish dropped the three AMC Networks properties, replacing AMC with HDNet movies, IFC with HDNet, and WE tv with Style.

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