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"panhandler" Definitions
  1. a person who asks other people for money in the street
"panhandler" Antonyms

76 Sentences With "panhandler"

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

" They added: "The unchecked panhandler is, in effect, the first broken window.
It's like paying a squeegee-wielding panhandler not to touch your car.
She celebrated anyway, marching over to Broadway Panhandler to buy a Dutch oven.
Some recognized him, but most apparently assumed he was just another homeless panhandler.
"I would call him an aggressive panhandler," the bar owner told the Democrat & Chronicle.
Because Mr. Lutchman, a mentally ill panhandler, had no money, the informant covered the $113 cost.
At first, I perfected the local art of eye contact avoidance and the panhandler side-step.
Mastrovincenzo and another member, who later became a confidential informant, found the panhandler and beat him.
As Jacquelyn started handing over a $10 bill to the woman with the sign, another panhandler suddenly appeared.
The husband and stepdaughter of the woman who was allegedly killed while helping a panhandler have been charged with her murder.
When she exhibited the results as "The Panhandler Project," she took serious critical heat, with many viewers calling the work exploitive.
I went inside the Walgreens and when I came out, I walked past a panhandler and tried not to do a double-take.
On June 18, 2013, Jason Joel Wolstone, a homeless panhandler, fatally stabbed Christine Calderon because she didn't pay to shoot a photo of him.
Baltimore Good Samaritan killing It was a shocking, outrageous story: A woman stabbed to death at an intersection while trying to help a panhandler.
A panhandler enters a subway car, and every eye turns to the floor as smoothly as the slats of a venetian blind sliding shut.
Mr. Smith told the police that a female panhandler had asked for money to help her feed her young child, according to a police report.
TEXAS POLICE SEARCHING FOR PANHANDLER ACCUSED OF ROBBING, BEATING 77-YEAR-OLD MAN Officers met the suspect at the dock where he was arrested, police said.
Mariah Carey got free entertainment from a rapper/panhandler -- but it was only free because she stiffed the guy's request for money afterward ... in classic Mariah fashion.
The panhandler, described by police as a black man in his 50s wearing jeans and a maroon and white jacket, then offered the victim a ride home.
His wife was threatened by a panhandler, and his neighbor was surrounded in his car with a young child when users swarmed his block for free samples.
"It was not a panhandler," the commissioner said at a news conference attended by Mayor Catherine E. Pugh and Marilyn J. Mosby, the state's attorney for Baltimore.
DMX tried to play master negotiator with a panhandler in NYC ... after the guy tried to upsell him on how big of a donation the rapper should make.
The new counter was once the knife-sharpening station at Broadway Panhandler, a beloved Greenwich Village kitchen store that closed this year, yet another victim of a changing neighborhood.
That second panhandler went up to the open window, thanked the couple for their kindness, and then began stabbing Jacquelyn before snatching a necklace off of her wounded body.
Fort Worth police say a 77-year-old man was robbed after being given a ride in a car by a panhandler who approached him at this Texaco gas station.
Sefolosha said he was about to get into a livery cab on 10th Avenue and had stopped to hand a panhandler a $20 bill when the officers knocked him down.
His recent statements on refugees and immigrants are the global version of his panhandler remarks — a rebuke aimed directly at the rich nations of Europe and at the United States.
"Something is wrong with my brain," said Hoffman, a former offensive lineman at the University of North Carolina who ended up a panhandler, homeless, penniless and dependent on drugs and alcohol.
He meets with Darlene (on a subway where a panhandler is singing a beautiful Italian song, a quiet nod to the Dusty moment earlier), and Trenton, to debate who is after them.
The gentrification debate As the streetcar passes through Centennial Olympic Park, a panhandler who tried to offer us a national historic site pamphlet for the King Center tries his luck on Smith.
Two Mobile police officers with the self-described "panhandler patrol" were accused of mocking homeless people when they posted a photo of a "quilt" they crafted out of their signs around the holidays.
When a panhandler announced he was collecting funds to build a time machine, riders chuckled at the odd request—until another man boarded the train and announced he was the inventor's future self.
It did nothing to mentally prepare me for what was to come, namely the experience of being escorted out of a building like I was a boundary-less panhandler at a bougie restaurant.
Among other alleged incidents, he once allegedly ordered Anthony "Anthony Boy" Zinzi and the late Ronald "The Beast" Mastrovincenzo to assault a panhandler who'd been approaching customers in a parking lot of his restaurant.
Act like a panhandler and come up with a really de-motivational speech, or be extra truthful and tell fellow passengers that you need their help because you spent all your money on a ticket to Coachella.
The story of a bloodthirsty panhandler was so fantastical, and its public telling and re-telling by Keith Smith so heart-wrenching, that the size of the gap between it and reality seemed impossible to fill, or explain.
He encouraged Michael Caine to cradle rifles, framed Mick Jagger in a frosty fur hood, turned Dustin Hofmann into a pleading panhandler, and shot Elton John in his sequinned get-up against a huge audience that also sparkled.
The Good Samaritan who was stabbed to death in Baltimore after rolling down her car window to give money to a panhandler asking for help for her infant had no idea the baby was fake, her husband says in news interviews.
Police say a Baltimore woman whose death made national headlines after she was allegedly killed while trying to help a panhandler was actually killed by her husband and stepdaughter, who then made up the story of the attack to cover their crime.
A few months later, Mr. Parrello ordered Mr. Zinzi and another man to attack a panhandler who had bothered a woman in a parking lot near the restaurant Pasquale's Rigoletto, which Mr. Parrello operated on Arthur Avenue in the Bronx, prosecutors said.
Letter To the Editor: "The Pope and the Panhandler" (editorial, March 4) asks the question that we face every day as we travel the streets of any American city: How shall I respond to the needy person whose hand reaches out to me?
Other incidents, including at least three police shootings of homeless men since 2011 and one in January 2014 involving a cop threatening to tie an obviously non compos mentis panhandler to a pole in Arctic-like weather, serve as reminders that tensions can still be acutely felt.
And we're already overreacting, as when Los Angeles shut down its public schools in response to a dubious bomb threat, or when Rochester, New York, canceled its New Year's Eve celebrations after the FBI arrested a mentally ill panhandler on terrorism charges—a man the feds paid informants some $20,000 to set up, and Walmart $40 to outfit.
But these are also people whose desire, rage, and ambition are underestimated or misunderstood — the 8-year-old trauma victim who takes a job as a black market organ courier, the lonely janitor who turns garbage into a miniature city, the panhandler in a drive-thru line at McDonald's and the driver terrified of him — and Yuknavitch shines a light on them in bite-size, evocative, and often uncomfortable stories. —A.
Broadway Rose gained notoriety in the 1940s as a panhandler in the Broadway Theater District of New York City.
Bongi Perez, a hustler, panhandler and lesbian prostitute, encounters various characters on the street as she goes about her day.
Occupy Windsor was an Occupy movement encampment in Windsor, Ontario, Canada. There were 25 residents as of November 11, 2011. The residents included a panhandler, who served as a security person, and a former city council member. Meetings were held twice a day.
Skell, as a stereotypical or archetypal designation, refers to a person who is homeless, vagrant or derelict. It is often used to connote such a person who is habitually engaged in small-time criminal activity, especially by one working as a con artist or panhandler.
Seconds later, they receive news that a butler has been murdered. On his way to see Bane, Melville is about to give a female panhandler some money when he is distracted by a car accident. The woman takes the opportunity to steal his wallet. He follows her to a beauty salon.
Capouya is married to Suzanne Williamson, an artist and photographer. They split their time between Tampa and New York City and have been contributed together to Panhandler Magazine. Capouya graduated with B.A. degrees in English and French from Grinnell College in 1978. He received an M.S. from Columbia University in 1981.
2004 "Next Door Lived a Girl" (novel) Low Fidelity Press. 2012 "Your House Is on Fire, Your Children All Gone" (novel) Penguin Books. 2014 "Messer, Gabel, Schere, Licht (Knives, Forks, Scissors, Flames)" (novel) Klett-Cotta Verlag / Tropen 2015 "Fluchtpunkt Los Angeles" (novel) ars vivendi Verlag 2015 "The Staked Plains" (novel) Saddle Road Press. 2016 "Knives, Forks, Scissors, Flames" (novel) Panhandler Books.
After the triumphant performance, Charles donates the topcoat to charity. Joe (James Gleason), who runs a mission for the poor, delivers a letter to alcoholic panhandler Larry Browne (Edward G. Robinson). It is an invitation to his 25th anniversary college reunion, held at the Waldorf Astoria Hotel. Joe convinces Larry to attend, hoping it will help him rebuild his life.
Most of the old cast from The Red Skelton Show moved with Skelton to CBS. Actor Dick Ryan and actress Martha Wentworth joined the cast. Wentworth, who had worked with fellow cast member Verna Felton on the radio program The Cinnamon Bear in 1937, portrayed the role of Polly the Panhandler. Skelton also introduced the character of San Fernando Red, a windy politician, among with several other characters on CBS.
After leaving Chemawa Indian School, he began to live in Portland, Oregon as an alcoholic panhandler. He was drafted during World War II and was sent to federal prison for drinking on duty. He survived a bout of tuberculosis, and experienced the 1942 death of his sister and 1950 death of his mother. The United States Congress also voted to terminate the Klamath Nation in 1954, striking another blow against Smith.
The irate tourist at last upbraids the panhandler, dismissing him with a half-peso tip. At the Hotel Oso Negro (the Black Bear Hotel), a vermin-infested flophouse, Dobbs pays for a cot and a cold shower at 50 centavos per night. The hotel clientele comprises both employed and unemployed international workers, as well as a number of gamblers, thieves and tramps. The Oso Negro, nevertheless, is operated efficiently by its sharp-eyed front desk clerks.
Foster encounters a panhandler and gives him the briefcase, which only contains his lunch. At a fast food restaurant, Foster attempts to order breakfast, but they have switched to the lunch menu. After an argument with the manager, Foster pulls a Tec-9 and accidentally fires into the ceiling. After trying to reassure the frightened employees and customers, he orders lunch, but is annoyed when the burger looks nothing like the one shown on the menu.
Her second album The Prophet, The Panhandler and The Moon came out in February 2007 on 1% For The Planet, Threepin Records. Raina's fourth full-length album, called "When May Came" was released in early 2010. It was largely self-produced, with assistance from bassist, Andrew Pressman and engineer, Stephen Orsak. It features members of the band Some Say Leland, from Austin, TX. It was recorded mostly live in a small house in South Austin over four days in September 2009.
In Heritage, he writes: "We swim together / where mirrors meet / and even the fish are cold." Malcolm Glass, the judge who selected Griffin's Western Flyers for the Panhandler Chapbook Series, compares Griffin's darkness and focus on death to Yeats. Glass says that Griffin's darkness "is not depressing" because his "delight in language well-crafted infuses [his poems] with life." Glass also notes that narrators of Griffin's poems try to hold onto the past only to discover that it is always elusive.
Many people do not know he actively chose and enjoyed his lifestyle. He often played his guitar and penny whistle, peppering his dialogue with the phrase “in a kind way”. Many saw Butch as a sage, or a prophet, and he was known to commune on the sidewalks with college students, other homeless people, and those seeking his advice and friendship; Butch was kind-spirited and not known to be an "aggressive panhandler", choosing instead to have a smiling Rastafarian demeanor.
Becky Ransom and the Big Texan Steak Ranch ("free 72-ounce steak if consumed in 60 minutes") are acknowledged in the film's credits. In the Season 3 episode of King of the Hill "And They Call It Bobby Love", the Steak Ranch was parodied with a similar restaurant called the "Panhandler Steakhouse." Bobby Hill accepts the challenge only to spite the girl that spurned his affections (who was also a vegetarian). He completes the challenge but upon returning home subsequently vomits.
It Don't Cost Nothin' to Say Good Morning 1994 is an award-winning documentary film directed by Kenny Hotz and Spencer Rice. The film is about the life of a homeless man, known only as "'Shorty' Gordy", who was a beloved but drunken, potty-mouthed panhandler, which was filmed over three years, covering Gordy's life and death. The movie premiered at Palm Springs Film Festival, Cinéfest, the Worldwide Short Film Festival and won best short at the Hot Docs Film Festival.
An aggressive panhandler harasses him for being so rich and not giving him anything. In a fit of rage, Graham pushes him hard enough that he falls on the subway tracks and gets runover by an oncoming train. Marshall is able to leave unobserved, which gives him a whole new set of ideas as far as his future life is concerned. Deciding to take revenge on the people who have caused him problems in his life, Marshall starts meticulously planning their deaths.
It went into general release on September 13 and within a very short time earned $600,000, twice its budget and a substantial sum for the period. According to the contract he had negotiated prior to making the film, Capra received 10% of the net profits. The film's success prompted the making of the 1934 film Lady by Choice, directed by David Burton and starring Carole Lombard. The only thing the two films have in common is Robson playing an alcoholic panhandler who has seen better days.
A demo tape from the sessions that produced this album, recorded in 1989, exists. The tape was acquired by a Mentors fan from a friend of the band in 1993, before being uploaded to the Internet ten years later. It contains unmixed versions of "Constantly Jackin'", "Chicks with Dicks", "Panhandler", and "Cardboard Condo", as well as 3 otherwise unreleased tracks: "Million Dollar High", "Eddie Anaconda", and "Airhead Stare". The tape also contains studio chatter, of which remnants can be heard in the released album.
Mr. Valentine is an urbane panhandler with a wealth of friends and an amazing best friend, a performing dog named Flip. Things change dramatically for Mr. Valentine when his fellow tenant Helen Baxter's boyfriend, a chauffeur for a millionaire, suggests Valentine and Flip put on a show for the birthday party of the millionaire's spoiled son. The show entertains all the children and the millionaire and Mr. Valentine become friends. The former rewards the latter with not only money and drinks, but a large leftover dinner and cake with several bottles of spirits.
Valdosta was named as one of 2003's "Top 100 U.S. Small Towns" by Site Selection magazine. In 2010 Valdosta was named one of the "Best Small Places For Business and Careers" by Forbes. On February 8, 2020, an African-American man named Antonio Arnelo Smith was stopped by Valdosta police responding to a 911 call about a panhandler, who body slammed him and broke his wrist. Police officers stopped Smith, erroneously believing he was a different man with active warrants, although Smith provided his identification and had no active warrants.
The shifting intellectual discourse in much of the western world during the 1960s influenced Uruguayan culture quickly and extensively. Among film makers, was evidenced by the production of muck-raking titles aimed at encouraging social awareness. Mario Handler's Carlos: Portrait of a Montevideo Panhandler represented a local form of cinéma vérité that drew on Uruguayan film makers' tradition as documentarians. Increasingly the target of harassment, Handler followed this with studies on student protests such as the unequivocal I Like Students (1968), Líber Arce: Liberation (1969) and an ode to a massive local meatpacker strike entitled The Uruguayan Beef Shortage of 1969.
Perhaps due to idolizing the gangsta rap lifestyle he seems to have a level of street smarts possibly as great as his brother, often able to manipulate situations through lying and reverse psychology, which he refers to as getting into someone's "mental mind". Despite his crude thuggish lifestyle on rare occasions he has displayed acts of compassion (giving $100 to a panhandler he previously ignored and spat at). Riley is quite brash and abrasive and often gets into undesirable situations without considering the consequences. He is rebellious and does not listen to anyone, especially Huey and Robert.
The movie plot differs somewhat from the novel. The details of the deaths are a little different. In the novel, Graham kills the panhandler by clobbering him to death with a golf cart he got as a gift and throwing his body off a bridge into a river below. Then when he tries to kill his wife, he begins with a failed attempt involving him awkwardly buying some poison from a florist after acting very suspicious and lacing a whiskey bottle that his wife drinks constantly from with it so she will drink it and die.
His collection Night Music (1974) won both the International Small Press Book Award and Georgia Poet of the Year Award from the Southeastern Regional Council of Authors and Journalists. Western Flyers (1990) was co-winner of the University of West Florida's Panhandler Chapbook Series competition. After a stint as adjunct instructor in poetry for Emory University's Evening Classes program, Griffin founded and led the Atlanta Poets Workshop for 27 years. While Griffin's success as a poet has been largely outside of the academy, he spent 11 years teaching in the poetry-in-the-schools programs, visiting more than 110 schools, colleges, prisons, and youth detention centers in three states.
In a 2008 retrospective, NPR described it as "the anthem of the Great Depression". According to Meyerson and Ernest Harburg, the challenge that Yip Harburg faced in crafting the lyrics was "much like the challenge confronting the street-corner panhandler: to establish the character's individuality and the moral and political basis for his claim". They write that the latter achieved this by gradually building intimacy with the listener, starting in third person and moving into first, second, and then both first and second combined ("I'm your pal"). The internal rhymes help the listener remember that the singer was working towards a dream, which is now shattered.
She retrieves the lighter from the car rental company and plans to meet Lt Laker on the same subway platform where Graham earlier killed the panhandler to hand it over. Graham gets to her first and they have a very tense conversation where it looks like Graham may push her onto the same tracks to make sure his crimes never get exposed. However, after verbally telling Graham how disappointed she is in him, Stella calmly hands him the lighter and then boards the train and leaves without further incident. As Graham exits the subway station, he runs into Lt Laker and victoriously lights a cigar with his retrieved lighter right in his face.
Crumb is about the experiences and characters of Robert Crumb and his family, particularly his brothers, Maxon and Charles, as well as Robert's wife Aline Kominsky-Crumb and his children (Crumb's sisters declined to be interviewed). The movie chronicles Crumb's career, highlighting his creations "Keep on Truckin'" and Fritz the Cat, and his pioneering role in the genesis of underground comix. Interviews with his family members and ex-girlfriends (such as Kathy Goodell), and commentary from critics like Robert Hughes and Trina Robbins, as well as selections from Crumb's vast artist output, shed light on Crumb's psychology and darkly cynical perspective on life. Portraits emerge as well of older brother Charles, who committed suicide before the film was released, and youngest brother Maxon, a panhandler who painted to assuage his inner demons.
Before he could be brought to trial, Aymes was found dead in his jail cell, a death that authorities characterized as a suicide and remains refuted by several panel members.Signatures of the Past: Cultural Memory in Contemporary Anglophone North American Drama, edited by Marc Maufort, Caroline De Wagter; p. 83, Race and Cultural Memory in Carl Hancock Rux's Talk by Michele Elam Disrupting the panel, Apollodoros suggests Aymes never went to Columbia University, nor was he a member of the Beat Generation; instead insisting Aymes actually decided to write experimental literature after meeting the poet turned homeless panhandler Maxwell Bodenheim. Once known as the King of Greenwich Village Bohemians during the Jazz Age of the 1920s, Bodenheim allowed Aymes to engage in a sexual affair with his wife Ruth (28 years her husband's junior) who shared her husband's derelict lifestyle and often worked as a prostitute, and it was Bodenheim who first introduced him to poetry.
Some accolade. But hers is a brilliant assessment of the novel.” Philip Coleman had this to say in Litro Magazine: “one of the most candid literary autobiographies ever written […] it is undoubtedly one of the funniest narratives to be written in recent years about growing up and coming-of-age in the south of Ireland […] By the time the reader gets to this point in Martiny’s highly entertaining and fast-paced narrative, one realises that it is, for all of its comic high jinks, an intellectually engaged and engaging work […] a novel that seems destined to become some kind of cult classic.” In World Literature Today, Edward Ouesslin summarized Ne soyez pas timide in the following terms: “The writer and director Jean Cocteau takes center stage during much of the oversized subplot, initiating a young and very shy narrator into a world of drugs (mostly opium), sex, and bizarre social experiments (including living as a panhandler), all of which is presumably designed to shatter the narrator’s bourgeois inhibitions and guide him, however harshly and awkwardly, toward his emergence as a full-fledged writer.
The protagonist, Paprika, is a self-described sociophobe who lives in an "anonymous" apartment building in Daimler City on Potsdamer Platz that is "wall-to-wall autistics", celebrates her birthday with the one person with whom she is close--herself--and operates a successful advertising agency almost entirely by means of SMS exchanges with her assistant. She is characterized by "exaggerated techno-consumerism":Foell, p. 284. she constantly channel surfs, conducts business in the bathtub and on the toilet using a headset, orders in almost all her food, buys ten jars of asparagus just because she finds a parking spot in front of the grocery store, then gives them to a panhandler, fantasizes about running barefoot through chocolate truffles, orders them delivered, then says she does not recall ordering them because she has "short-term memory loss due to excessive cellphone use". She shoots her expensive widescreen TV through the screen in a fit of pique and complains that "the world is unfair" because her TV is wrecked but Roger Willemsen is still alive.

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