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198 Sentences With "peopled"

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

Or any of the others who have peopled our youth.
The churchyard will soon be more peopled than the Abbey.
Yet most haven't relinquished their connections to their peopled past.
A total of 346 peopled died in the two crashes.
History is peopled with millions of corpses left in their wake.
The answer to the question, "how was America peopled?" seems tantalisingly close.
This angle replicates that one, but the view is more animated, less peopled.
They often seemed childish because they were peopled with animals, usually tortoises or hares.
Co-working spaces, peopled by freelancers or workers with different employers, offer a clue.
I have invented my own imaginary world called Nerac peopled by hundreds of imaginary artists.
Yet in the popular imagination it remains a vast wilderness, peopled by a few buffalo-hunters.
But the time will come when New-England will be as thickly peopled as Old England.
The subject could make a compelling background to a drama peopled with flesh-and-blood characters.
Sokh, for instance, although part of Uzbekistan and encircled by Kyrgyzstan, is peopled mostly by Tajiks.
His books are peopled with shadows that have as much, or more, vitality as living beings.
Co-working spaces, those offices peopled by freelancers or workers with different employers, offer a clue.
The town, through Peter's eyes, is a suffocating Nowheresville peopled with losers idling their time away.
The summit has been peopled instead with meme makers, founders of alternative social networks, and conservative activists.
Prostitutes were the first porn stars, and the show is peopled by streetwalkers, pimps, bartenders and mobsters.
This guy is definitely my person, because even when I'm peopled out, I want to see him.
Trump was defying all of this, and peopled loved the fact that he stood up to us.
This creates the perception that the judiciary is peopled with zealots who are indifferent to law and justice.
It's a world of novelty and strange combinations, of roads peopled with ghosts and demons stuffed in wardrobes.
It's a neat, black-and-white story, peopled with stock characters, useful to both sides, and fundamentally untrue.
She said her vision for the country was for it to live up to how peopled viewed it.
A comic written by Pete Toms is peopled with bleak characters in a state of resigned existential crisis.
He caught a break in 22004 when the Supreme Court decided that intellectually disabled peopled can't be executed.
He caught a break in 2002 when the Supreme Court decided that intellectually disabled peopled can't be executed.
There's the Halt Action Group, which has led the Dear Ivanka protest rallies, peopled by art stars and gallerists.
Like "A Replacement Life," Fishman's first novel, the book is peopled by characters so eccentric they feel like family.
But his novels, which are peopled with both emperors and peasants, encompass an explosive range of sensation and emotion.
And yet, unlike many industries, the fashion business is peopled by Americans from across the racial and economic spectrum.
An American scene, peopled by us, despite our differences from the stars of Norman Rockwell canvases and holiday commercials.
If "Shane" is to be believed, the region was peopled with Van Heflins and mysteriously saved by Alan Ladds.
"I was the main part of it, other peopled helped me," Wright said in a televised interview with the BBC.
" The world Sunny grew up in, peopled by folks like "Lip-Lip" Leo, a tiny man with "dwarf-like features. . . .
"I would say, apart from earnings, this in line or slightly better in line than what peopled forecasted," Mackenzie said.
Between 1999 and 2016, for instance, over 1,000 peopled died because of "contact with powered lawnmowers," according to the CDC.
Celibate by principle—they peopled their ranks with orphans and adoptees—they channelled their passions into religion, handicrafts, and music.
Gaza is a densely populated strip of land that is mostly surrounded by Israel and peopled almost exclusively by Palestinians.
The ones she selected—peopled by crooked cops and wicked scientists, healers and teachers—evoke a mood of political protest.
Sylvan parks are a Fragonard specialty, peopled by little figures whose high fashion and high spirits register in quick notation.
Hers is a sensibility well suited to a post-Victorian allegory peopled by restless ghosts and pervaded with a supernatural hush.
The other moved south, splitting yet again roughly 15,000 years ago into two distinct populations that peopled North and South America.
Yeah, this has been sort of an area peopled by a lot of big competitors; Symantec, and others, over the years.
Migos is being sued for allegedly inciting a riot at one of their concerts where several peopled ended up getting stabbed.
They are leading the way to a new world peopled with heroines created by and brought into the world by women.
It was peopled by a lot of extras who we had to introduce to the idea of the song very carefully.
Both featured places (in the abbey, the library; in Maycomb, the tumbledown Boo Radley house) peopled by shadows and littered with symbols.
Even the fictional world was peopled with powerhouse women: Murphy Brown, Buffy, and Khadijah James in Living Single, to name a few.
Or Mama, or Papa, or Matthew, or Michael, or Granny, or Carson, or any of the others who have peopled our youth.
Her house there is on a quiet road, peopled by older, mostly white neighbors whose politics run far more conservative than hers.
Stories that break from the celebrity-close-encounter format are just as telling as the ones peopled by rappers, actors, and athletes.
The room, in a stroke of good luck, was peopled with strangers: A frowning girl with her shirt hiked up over her belly.
He did at times—often on a grand scale, in vast canvases peopled with gesticulating, soaring, tumbling figures—but perfection wasn't his game.
Some of them held camps with hundreds of houses, peopled with sections for the Italians, the Russians, the Scots Irish, the African Americans.
It's peopled by Wizards, the Forlorn, The Awkward, the Blinkers, the Spoon-Fingered, Agnostic Lispers, Stutterers of Prayer, the Flatulent, the Closet Weepers.
Hundreds of miles of hardscrabble desert in each direction, peopled as sparsely as northern Nevada where they test nuclear weapons, intensifies this effect.
The voices created the Paynes, the Browns, the Cryers and countless other characters and caricatures that peopled Perry's plays, movies and television series.
It's a cooperative, immersive, tabletop board game in which players struggle to survive in a post-apocalyptic world peopled with sexy pin-up characters.
One panel is a comical lineup of the odd characters who once peopled the streets of Cork; witty paragraphs convey each person's defining eccentricity.
Set in 1935, at a well-appointed country house peopled with well-appointed women, the play seems, on its gleaming surface, to be straightforward.
The extended exhibit is a recreation of the Ghostbusters set, peopled by spooky tech tricks such as a Slimer hologram terrorizing an elevator bank.
It is a landscape peopled by "crystal methodists," BBC economists, radio producers, and former rugby stars, not just those on the fringes of society.
It combines a reference to the world's most populous country, the People's Republic of China, with the name of a sparsely peopled American state.
I went nearly 650 feet underground in a coal mine that I can only describe as antiquated, peopled only by men with sooty faces.
Still, the scattered calls for a boycott have unloosed jitters and a measure of resentment in an industry peopled by both locals and transplants.
In conversations, Mr. Davidovsky remembered the Médanos of his childhood as a place of easy coexistence, peopled with characters seemingly drawn from commedia dell'arte.
In conversations, Mr. Davidovsky remembered the Médanos of his childhood as a place of easy coexistence, peopled with characters seemingly drawn from commedia dell'arte.
Meanwhile, the neighborhoods peopled by the residents who have been holding the city together through its economic turmoil are subject to monumental tax injustice.
The events he describes in "Dictator" were as dramatic as any in European history, and peopled by a cast of characters who remain household names.
Hollinghurst writes long, absorbing, much-peopled novels that display a masterly grasp of psychological processes and a prickling awareness of minute betrayals and inarticulate desires.
Or you could start with Neverwhere, which takes place in the London Tube system and is peopled with all kinds of charismatic fairy tale characters.
The club quickly became an heir apparent to the Village's old coffeehouses, which were peopled by poets and folk songsters in the 1950s and '60s.
In it, Christopher Tyerman , an Oxford historian, looks at the thinking that went into a crusade — how it was justified, supported, peopled, financed and supplied.
Traversed by dirt streets without sidewalks or drains, the town is peopled by children and adults that sometimes walk barefoot, often living in cramped thatched dwellings.
Peopled with more than a dozen characters from around the globe, it poses an acting challenge that the show's star, Erika Rose, met with impressive nimbleness.
Valente creates a detailed comic book world, peopled with analogues to both the Marvel and DC universes — and she gives its dead women their voices back.
Hunt's stories are peopled with women who don't fully trust or understand their bodies or their minds, or the places where their bodies and minds overlap.
During this election season, Moore has sometimes appeared out of place in his own denomination—a Trump detractor leading a church largely peopled by Trump supporters.
His paintings are peopled by waif-like barefoot seamstresses and peasant-woman workers; out of the windows of his immaculate workshops, brightly-coloured cows benevolently wander by.
Francis has had more trouble when it comes to unifying, let alone reforming, an increasingly ideologically diverse church: one peopled by hardline conservatives as well as progressives.
The letters between them, written across continents and at snatched moments between dinners and plays and dates, are peopled with poets and playwrights, composers and other artists.
Instead they confronted a faded resort, past both its first and second primes, and peopled by officials completely unprepared to meet the demands of modern media professionals.
Many were made by the Moche and Chimú cultures, which peopled Peru's northern coast for 1,400 years before the arrival of the Incas in the 15th century.
Goaded by an inner voice—which she referred to as "the person sitting within"—she wrote over 100 novellas and short stories peopled by the poorest Indians.
That palpable sense of connection freed the Mapplethorpe works from the static confines of a gallery retrospective, just as Mr. Simons's own archive, unpedestaled, peopled the crowd.
That's the running time of "Das Rheingold," the prelude peopled with gods, dwarves and giants fighting over the gold that will cast its curse over the story.
The bridge is peopled with other recognizable figures that endlessly cross it on dual tracks, which make the figures seem like targets in a carnival shooting gallery.
He died at 67 in 1910, leaving a wife, five grown daughters — and a gallery peopled with the likes of Funeral Wells, Poodle Murphy and Lord Courtney.
Those who peopled a nationwide epidemic fueled by two aligning factors: sky high unemployment and a flood of high quality brown smokable heroin from Iran and Pakistan.
Today logic dictates whether Sino-Russian projects happen because relations are more normal, he suggests: build a fast train to sparsely peopled Siberia and who would take it?
The organizing conceit is that a narrator is writing the book we are reading, located within "a house of two or, perhaps, three stories," peopled by fictional writers.
He briefly attended the New School, but his home base was Bradley's, the Greenwich Village club and jam-session hub peopled by many of jazz's most esteemed elders.
Few paintings are peopled, with exceptions like "Boulevard des Capucines" (1873-74) and "The Canoe on the Epte" (1890) casting the emptiness of other works in sharp relief.
His cartoons were peopled by ladies and gentlemen of the Park Avenue variety, speaking confidently about their place in the upper crust, even as that crust was crumbling.
By the end of 1984, Apple executives celebrated their triumph over the mainframe with 19 holiday parties, one featuring a Dickensian village peopled by performers in period garb.
Lower Broadway was peopled with garment workers, and the city below Canal seemed hung over from the seventies, as if the buildings were surprised to find themselves still standing.
Evan's past — peopled by his vigilant mother (Andrea Jones-Sojola), worried father (David DeWitt) and loving, resentful brother, Michael (Trent Saunders) — overlaps with his present in this warmhearted show.
Take, for example, the opioid crisis, which we learn from a recent Washington Post article is a result of a corrupt system peopled with "rogue doctors" and "complicit" pharmacists.
Despite the dispute over whether the jaw should be called human, the find is another key piece in the puzzle of how human ancestors and their relatives peopled the globe.
And the novelist Amit Chaudhuri complained that the Western focus on Mother Teresa had reduced Kolkata, in the imagination of outsiders, to a "black hole" peopled by the mute poor.
Spiotta — like Didion, DeLillo, Nicholson Baker and Bret Easton Ellis — understands that the interaction between her art form and the popular isn't an agony but an amity: a peopled life.
The boys' narrow world is peopled with lost and obsessive men who project — as so many men do — visions of their own redemption onto the raw potential of young athletes.
Earl, then, is a three-dimensional character moving through a world that's peopled by caricatures and cardboard cutouts, which means he is almost by default The Mule's most sympathetic figure.
Then, the room would be lowered into the ground, and you would, among other things, travel through a hell peopled with monopolists frying in pans and see talking and smoking skeletons.
This world was peopled by serial killers, cannibals, conspiracy theorists, and cryptids — creatures like Nessie and Bigfoot and la chupacabra that defy taxonomy and always show up as blurry in photos.
The grass-roots level of the collection industry is unregulated, thinly separated from organized crime and peopled mainly by cashiered police officers, former secret police agents and prison or security guards.
This year it's the area around Yosemite National Park, the peopled canyons of the northern part of the state, and this last best open space on the shoulders above Los Angeles.
It looks out onto the Zócalo, the teeming heart of Mexico City, peopled by the dark-skinned Mexico that travels by bus or metro rather than in big SUVs with darkened windows.
Anthea Hamilton, who was nominated for last year's Turner Prize, decked the hall with white tiles, filled it with sculptures from Tate's collection and peopled it with mysterious, mobile, squash-headed beings.
Ryden has peopled Ratmansky's stage with furry animals that look like fairground prizes, a gum-ball lady resembling a blastula, and various creatures that slither on the floor and wag their ears.
Peopled by kookily sad denizens of Florida's Space Coast, whose dreams rarely achieve liftoff without crashing and burning, Ryan's stories are filled with a wan tenderness and a spectacular lack of condescension.
He has conjured underworlds peopled by tattooed amnesiacs and broody superheroes; he has plunged audiences into Escherian dreams within dreams within dreams; he has tested their grasp of wormholes and gravitational singularity.
That would make the world, to the left, comprehensible, instead of peopled by a whole bunch of voters whose consumer choices on the political marketplace appear not only incomprehensible, but, more importantly, reprehensible.
Given his history, it's perhaps no surprise that Trump's presidency is now entwined in legal theater peopled by outsize characters, including a porn star, a Playboy model, hustling lawyers and a mystery celebrity.
Mr Campanella's book is richly peopled with the likes of Floyd Bennett himself, a heroic and handsome aviator who flew to the North Pole in 1926, perishing two years later on another adventure.
Though the scene was created in 2005 by a group of parishioners and artisans, it is peopled (as most historically inspired scenes are) with a broad cast of characters from 17th-century Rome.
The scene depicted on the memorial is of a serene classical temple, peopled with allegorical figures in Grecian attire and Christian saints and martyrs, flanked by soldiers, women and children in contemporary dress.
If Russians think about it at all, he and other analysts said, they typically wonder why the Kremlin is spending money in a region long peopled by savages bent on killing one another.
That said, the framing delivers an unusually forceful and imaginative depiction of a child's-eye vision of the grown-up world: a fearsome urban jungle peopled by expressionless, robotic beings weighed down by responsibility.
Cadmus, a prince of Phoenicia, was the legendary founder of Thebes, a city peopled by warriors who sprang up after he sowed the earth with the teeth of a dragon, on instructions from Athena.
Shot in the least picturesque parts of Paris and peopled with morbid eccentrics and grotesques, this picture, Zulawski's third feature and his first made in France, is in certain respects among his most restrained.
Her memoir captures both the intellectual world she had to leave behind — one peopled by the likes of Kafka, Musil and Einstein — and the home and refuge she made for herself in Los Angeles.
Should May's parliamentary majority be reduced and should she find that the Conservative Party's backbenches become increasingly peopled by Eurosceptic members, far from being strengthened, her Brexit negotiating position in Europe would be meaningfully weakened.
Let's assume that Rob Reiner made a movie peopled with disagreeable characters to transcend the feel-good clichés of the nostalgic family entertainments for which he's known with a more realistic film about contemporary issues.
" Baldwin, reflecting on his stay in the white-peopled Swiss village of Leukerbad, was moved to write that "the most illiterate among them is related, in a way I am not, to Dante, Shakespeare, Michelangelo. . . .
This painting is about authorship and authenticity, when one faction takes on the trappings of another without actually making real contact, "Sunday Afternoon at the Grande Jatte" peopled with black folks dressed in white clothes.
The handsome two-bedroom apartment functions as a shrine to a different New York, a different Hollywood: when movies were about silver screens, not touch-screens; when those who peopled them were stars, not celebrities.
Inside a box whose illustration never matched the makeshift mess I would set up were the parts of a brown plastic fort to be peopled by soldiers on the inside and Apaches on the outside.
First, we take a smoke break (naturally), and then we head on to the Warsaw Bridge, which is peopled by party tourists at night and serves as a good vantage point over Berghain's past and future.
California also has one of the worst student-teacher ratios in the country, and Los Angeles—a huge district overwhelmingly peopled by underprivileged students of color—has experienced a 287% growth in charter schools since 2008.
Set in an abandoned two-story building that once housed Naval officers, The Enchanted Realm of René Magritte is an immersive play peopled by his mother, his lover, his wife, his wife's lover, and a fish.
It begins in 1979, in a Berlin rife with shady bars and attic windows, but that's something of a red herring: Though peopled by spies of every shade, it's not a Cold War thriller as such.
You can gaze at a landscape and see it peopled by things — trees, clouds, hills and valleys — that have no voice except the ones you give them in your imagination; none can challenge who you are.
The essay mentions the above events, but leaps off primarily from the fact that the vast majority of physical spaces that they and their colleagues visit to hear and share work are peopled largely by white poets.
Nonlinear narratives, peopled with an exotic array of characters and situations culled from myriad sources (including Ganesh's own illustrations, watercolors and drawings) somersault seamlessly in a dazzling display of gender politics, with a sprinkling of feminist rage.
For many it is their first personal encounter with death, and they return to finish the school day more aware of what it would mean to die with no connection to anyone who has peopled their lives.
It has included more than 55 members of all ages, backgrounds, and identifications, been through legal turmoil and internal strife, and gained two sister organizations peopled by former members: Guerrilla Girls BroadBand and Guerrilla Girls on Tour!
Given this lineage, the house Neckeles' figure carries with her is not only peopled with kin, but also with guests who have stayed for a considerable time and made a place for themselves at the dinner table.
Tumbling through the interdimensional rip, Tristan finds himself in a magical land peopled by characters from African-American folklore (John Henry, Brer Rabbit and Brer Fox, High John) and West African deities (Nyame, Mmoatia, Anansi the Weaver).
In large, panoramic images of courtrooms, peopled by reporters and cameramen, where legislation shaping our lives and futures plays out, Krashes's oil paint often congeals into a hazy glare or a stuffy, clouded morass suggestive of bureaucratic inertia.
Shirley Hazzard, the Australian-born author of an acclaimed if small portfolio of fiction peopled with characters whose lives, much like her own, toss them up far from home, died on Monday night at her home in Manhattan.
The "Lemonade" film is set, at times, in New Orleans and is peopled with figures who are real, if distanced from reality by their fame, including the tennis star Serena Williams and the actresses Zendaya and Quvenzhané Wallis.
Proto-kino wizard Georges Méliès is still best-known for his 1902 short A Trip to the Moon, which ships a group of explorers to a distant planet peopled by insect-faced cretins who burst into smoke when attacked.
In the 18 to 49 age group, more peopled watched cornhole on that day than the competing game coverage of Major League Baseball, the WNBA or the final stage of the Tour de France, according to Sports Media Watch.
"Deep red" Idaho is peopled with pockets of deep conservatism, but it's no monolith: Trump won only 60% of the vote in Bonneville County, for example, in part because 20% of the vote went to anti-Trump, Mormon independent Evan McMullin.
Only one of the seven can be called unwatchable: Duncan Jones' Mute, an overlong and sexually confused nightclub noir that trips over itself to imagine a neon-colored vision of future Berlin peopled by the likes of a mustachioed Paul Rudd.
Even this revelation paves the road to additional questions, like ... if Jay Leno and Mario Andretti were pod-peopled by their own cars, does that mean Lightning McQueen did in Owen Wilson, but took on a different name and identity?
Never a fan of dissension, he ordered the suppression of rebels in the region of Matabeleland—peopled by the Ndebele, the second largest tribe in the country after his own, the Shona—resulting in some 222,22014 deaths, mostly of civilians.
If our movies and TV shows have it right, the future will take place in Los Angeles during a steady drizzle (as if!), and will be peopled by cyberbeings who are slightly cooler than we are, seniors to our freshmen.
" For Pip, the church is where life gives way to death, but also where the peopled world cedes to the marshes — "a dark flat wilderness beyond the churchyard, intersected with dikes and mounds and gates, with scattered cattle feeding on it.
Made for just a few million dollars, "The Florida Project" will also test audience appetites for a low-budget film largely peopled by first-time actors, whom Mr. Baker recruited from, among other places, a Target store in Kissimmee, Fla.
The story wobbles into existence when Mia and Mel sell a stake in their struggling artisanal makeup company to Claire Luna (Salma Hayek), a mercenary beauty titan whose company seems to be located in a vast mall peopled by zombies.
Cromer impressed me with his ability to rub the glitz away from that show's shine by again making the hall dark and the costumes ragged; his was not a New York of fun-filled lofts but one peopled with true outsiders.
"There's a sepia-tone lens through which we often see the civil rights movement: It doesn't seem like it happened in places familiar to us, and it doesn't seem like it was peopled by people we know," Theoharis told me.
The book is remarkably spare, peopled as much by absent strangers (the ghosts of the "brave boys" killed in the war) as it is by the principal characters—Jane Fairchild, a maid, and her upper-class neighbor and lover Paul Sheringham.
But much of it has also been driven by conversion: In 2014, the Pew Research Center found that 1.7 peopled converted away from mainline Protestant groups for every one convert in, while evangelical Protestants had 220 people convert in for every leaver.
From the barquentine tall ship that doubled as a residence for artists working at the intersection of science, I spent my days in observation, wondering at the mysterious connections between the uninhabited poles and the place I came from, peopled and polluted.
Pat de Groot, a painter who embodied an era when the beaches and dunes at the tip of Cape Cod were peopled with artistic geniuses and incorrigible eccentrics — often in the form of the same person — died on July 2100 in Brewster, Mass.
The refined world of fine art may seem at odds with the folksy charm of puppetry, however artist Marnie Weber's fantastical, dream-like films, sculptures, and photographs peopled with monsters and myths seem like the perfect fit for Baker's wide-eyed wonder.
If you imagine a road trip through France as a beautiful idyll, this is not the guidebook you want: a landscape of bad cafes, lonely hotels, awful pizza, demolished homes and derelict factories, peopled by the hitchhikers, desperate immigrants and homeless vagrants.
The continental United States on the whole has about 210 people per square mile (excluding Alaska, an outlier), making the US less than one-third as densely peopled as the EU. Yet the European Union, too, has roughly balanced or even slightly positive agricultural trade.
It is important to notice how notions of trans- and post-humanism ooze out of this work, in which the vision of distant futures is emptied of humans, peopled only by machines, shapes, and forms (also exploring the relationship between futurism, utopia, technology, and fascism).
To my mind, though, it's symptomatic of a larger issue — a seeming carelessness throughout that extends to a reliance on clubby shorthand that speaks only to certain people (literary-minded baby boomers) instead of creating a compelling narrative peopled with diverse, vivid and interesting characters.
Dutch colonialists collected these islands peopled by hundreds of ethnic groups and united them for their abundance of natural resources, including spices and sugar, rubber and tobacco, coffee and an island of nutmeg trees considered so valuable it was traded in 1667 for Manhattan.
Writers from W. B. Yeats (who summered in County Sligo) to J. M. Synge (whose "The Playboy of the Western World" was presented by Druid in their inaugural season) have written about the region, but few have peopled their creations with characters like McDonagh's.
When Bhuvaneswar is at her best, her writing in these 17 stories is a cartography of loss, betrayal, and oftentimes a hard-won beauty that takes an unapologetically feminist approach to a world peopled with women characters who span the extremes of deep empathy and terrible behavior.
Reading this novel has all the pleasures of reading one of Anne Tyler's compelling family portraits — but transported from Baltimore to Brooklyn, peopled with aging hipsters (instead of perennially middle-aged folks) and doused with a Lorrie Moore-like sense of the absurdities of contemporary life.
The President's fixation with the myth of millions of fraudulent votes manifested itself in the creation of the ill-conceived Presidential Commission on Election Integrity, run and peopled with the leading purveyors of the canard of voter fraud as a means to further voter suppressive laws.
" Timothy Charles Davis, in his cookbook, points out that poor people don't tend to document their lives the way well-off people do, and that American journalists of the early twentieth century covered only "high-end, white-tablecloth places, not workingman joints peopled by African-Americans.
Of these, Polynesia — a triangle drawn from New Zealand to Hawaii to the remote Chilean territory of Rapa Nui — has most compelled the world's attention, typically as a projection of repressed Western desire: an ahistorical haven peopled by flower-bedecked voluptuaries from a Paul Gauguin canvas.
It was infamously involved in the 1993 siege at a Branch Davidian compound in Texas in which 75 peopled were killed, and during the "Fast and Furious" scandal two decades later, the bureau lost guns across the Mexican border, which were later recovered at crime scenes.
Critic's Notebook "Emojiland" takes place inside a smartphone, in a digital mini-world peopled with emojis, and its hero looks about the way you'd think: like an undiluted dweeb — though, since this is a pop musical, the chartreuse frames on his glasses are kind of fabulous.
Both shows weave rich mythologies across multiple timelines, with Westworld being set in a simulated Wild West peopled with robots that may or may not have consciousness and Legion set in a world filled with super-powerful mutants that may or may not all exist in the lead's head.
The first indication that 365 is aimed squarely at millennials sits just outside the entrance: an empty rack offering "free air guitars" and directing customers to a specially curated Spotify playlist, peopled with such fashionable-yet-inoffensive artists as LCD Soundsystem, Bon Iver and TV on the Radio.
Koo's work is, for me, the most playfully mischievous work in the entire biennial, featuring a maze peopled with quaint objects such as large balls, mirrored walls, geometric concrete blocks, miniature tableaus, staircases that lead only to air, sand-covered "snow men," and a serene pool of water.
The surrounding smaller islands of Soay, Dun and Boreray, and the several sea stacks in the straits between the islands, were never peopled, although they were used to graze sheep (soay means "island of sheep" in Old Norse) and provided the islanders with seabirds (and their eggs) for food.
His shots are peopled with workers at the camp, a coterie of tourists and visitors, survivors at a reunion gathering, and the artist himself — who was making the risky decision to travel while Jewish at a time when Eastern Europe was still mostly stripped of any trace of that population.
Advertise on Hyperallergic with Nectar Ads HUDSON, New York — Startlingly engaging, the dozen paintings in Colin Brant: People of the Forest are peopled not by humans but by a variety of birds, marsupials, orangutans, and a lazy leopard, and the teeming density of these canvases is often downright jungle-like.
As the sweeping health care reform bill took shape in early 2009, Pelosi confronted a landscape peopled with intransigent House Republicans, reluctant Blue Dogs, liberals demanding nothing less than a single-payer system, skittish White House advisers and Senate Democrats willing to waste months in quixotic pursuit of bipartisan cover.
"A Hundred Indecisions," a short dance film that he conceived and directed, had its world premiere on Thursday night; neatly, it showed locations on the Montclair State campus peopled by four of his company's dancers and six guests (one of whom was Parisa Khobdeh of the Paul Taylor Dance Company).
The British author M.R. Carey's captivating and often comical dystopian 2014 novel, "The Girl With All the Gifts," depicts a future in which the Cordyceps has infected most of humanity, leaving a handful of plucky but flawed characters to fight their way through a landscape peopled (fungaled?) with flesh-eating zombies called hungries.
The world of Beach Club feels like Jersey Shore transposed to Greece, peopled by the same-old "gym, tan, laundry" loving 20-somethings, except they're honestly not as interesting as Snooki or Pauly D. Lohan's refuge in Mykonos is like an LA nightclub or a Las Vegas pool party, just with more sand.
Grant's world is, in certain respects, painfully familiar, peopled by such figures as the military man whose managerial skill is assumed to indicate integrity; the tycoon who is assumed to have none; and a press that is engaged in bouts of unfocussed self-righteousness, damaging the well-meaning and the malevolent alike.
If the Macdougal-Sullivan Gardens Historic District conjures images of "Rear Window," with its charming Village courtyard peopled with composers, photographers, married couples and Miss Lonelyhearts, it's with good reason: Production designers for that 213 Alfred Hitchcock film reportedly visited the place before creating the grand Hollywood set where it was filmed.
"'Deep red' Idaho is peopled with pockets of deep conservatism, but it's no monolith: Trump won only 60% of the vote in Bonneville County, for example, in part because 20% of the vote went to anti-Trump, Mormon independent Evan McMullin," Anne Helen Petersen recently explained in a BuzzFeed piece on Reclaim Idaho.
"I have found a continent more densely peopled and abounding in animals than our Europe or Asia or Africa, and, in addition, a climate milder and more delightful than in any other region known to us," Amerigo Vespucci wrote, in extravagant letters describing his voyages across the Atlantic, published in 1503 as "Mundus Novus_,"_ a new world.
Because the underlying thrust of this great new cycle of paintings, Weinstein cunningly mused, would be helpfully kept from overmuch public scrutiny by pesky, grievance-fueled and, generally speaking, over-opinionated young women, if it were to be presented as a spasmodic sequence of scenes from a poem that doesn't seem to be peopled by human beings at all.
In 0003, he started the National Front and peopled it with Nazi sympathizers — some just fascists at heart and some former SS officers and other collaborators with the pro-Hitler Vichy government of World War II. His political achievements amounted largely to provocation: He's been convicted, multiple times, of racism and Holocaust denial, and prosecuted for assaulting a female politician.
A wordless tour of the titular west German city of less than 200,000, it is a symphony of a small city, flickering through signs of looming industrialization to alight on moments of workaday beauty: a young girl dancing with fantastic abandon in a street; building interiors peopled with card players and folks drinking beer; smokestacks loitering in the background of cityscape views.
" He continues: "Peopled with memorable characters large and small, it's a show that having watched once — not hard to do straight through and hard not to do straight through — you may want to watch again, to admire its machinery and joinery and find the clues you might have missed, but also because it feels just as good the second time around.
It was 1967 — after the Pierre had become a co-op, with full-time residents purchasing their apartments and hiring the first in a series of hospitality companies to manage the restaurants, ballrooms and transient-room operations — when the artist Edward Melcarth gave the Rotunda Room its trademark mural: a Renaissance loggia peopled with mythological characters and, seemingly, whomever else he fancied throwing in.
Moping about his career, for example, he wrote in 1967: what I need I mean is a champion or even a host of champions,a phalanx of enthusiasts, driving a spearheador one or two of those big amphibian trucksthrough the peopled ocean of my neglect:I mean I don't want to sound fancy butwhat I could use at the moment isa little destruction perpetrated in my favor.
Margery Sharp is sometimes compared to Barbara Pym and to Elizabeth Taylor, and there are certainly overlaps (the retreat for Anglican gentlewomen in "Summer Visits," her last novel, published in 1977, seems like it could be peopled with Barbara Pym characters), but Sharp has a touch all her own when it comes to taking on social class, sex and its consequences, and the changes that the 20th century brought to both those arenas, most especially for women.
The club of Lautner owners is peopled with the rich and famous, among them the designer Jeremy Scott; the actress Kelly Lynch and her husband, the screenwriter Mitch Glazer; the art-book publisher Benedikt Taschen, who restored the architect's most famous design, Chemosphere, a disc-shaped U.F.O. floating above a canyon; and the actress Gwyneth Paltrow, who in 22012, with her husband at the time, the Coldplay frontman Chris Martin, paid $22015 million for what Curbed described as a "lesser Lautner" in Malibu.
In "Mount Pleasant," Patrice Nganang, another well-received Cameroonian writer, who teaches at Stony Brook University, brings to life the magical community of artists and intellectuals that peopled his nation before colonialism; the enigmatic storyteller Petina Gappah, a lawyer who was born in Zambia and raised in Zimbabwe, is retelling David Livingstone's epic journey to the interior of Africa as seen by the porters he took with him, who after his death, cut out his heart and buried it and then returned his body to the coast, where his final quest had started.
ENGLAND in 1819  An old, mad, blind, despised, and dying king,__ Princes, the dregs of their dull race, who flow Through public scorn,—mud from a muddy spring,— Rulers who neither see, nor feel, nor know, But leech-like to their fainting country cling, Till they drop, blind in blood, without a blow,— A peopled starve and stabbed in the untilled field,— An army, which liberticide and prey Makes as a two-edged sword to all who wield,— Golden and sanguine laws which tempt and slay ; Religion Christless, Godless—a book sealed ; A Senate,—Time's worst statute unrepealed,— Are graves, from which a glorious Phantom may Burst, to illumine our tempestuous day.

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