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"tellingly" Definitions
  1. in a way that shows effectively what somebody/something is really like, but often without intending to
"tellingly" Synonyms
meaningfully suggestively expressively knowingly purposefully revealingly indicatively relevantly significantly eloquently revelatorily pregnantly meaningly informatively weightily illuminatingly consequentially pointedly importantly denotatively forcibly cogently convincingly persuasively effectively authoritatively impressively movingly compellingly strongly forcefully powerfully validly soundly conclusively influentially plausibly potently decisively trenchantly strikingly devastatingly considerably markedly crucially conspicuously noticeably pronouncedly remarkably prominently dramatically boldly showily emblematically symbolically symptomatically representatively characteristically reflectively exhibitively evocatively typically demonstratively evidentially connotatively prognostically diagnostically irrefutably incontrovertibly indisputably undeniably unquestionably certainly incontestably indubitably definitely positively surely clearly unmistakably evidently definitively unarguably obviously irrefragably unassailably extraordinarily astonishingly amazingly stunningly notably astoundingly incredibly staggeringly phenomenally surprisingly memorably unusually rarely startlingly signally brilliantly singularly pungently cuttingly caustically scathingly sharply bitingly sarcastically sardonically mordantly acerbically acidly satirically corrosively bitterly snarkily acidulously stingingly acrimoniously tartly graphically vividly detailedly explicitly descriptively illustratively livelily pictorially picturesquely uninhibitedly colourfully(UK) lucidly luridly punchily affectingly poignantly touchingly sadly heartbreakingly stirringly distressingly pathetically pitifully upsettingly harrowingly emotionally disturbingly tragically piteously emotively plaintively pitiably instructively educationally helpfully usefully edifyingly educatively informationally didactically doctrinally explanatorily heuristically improvingly informatorily moralistically pedagogically homiletically propaedeutically essentially pivotally quintessentially compulsorily critically imperatively indispensably integrally mandatorily necessarily necessitously obligatorily requisitely paramountly vitally chiefly seriously largely urgently direly especially momentously monumentally acutely earnestly exceptionally extensively gravely heavily historically oracularly predictively fatidically prophetically visionarily ominously More

766 Sentences With "tellingly"

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

Tellingly, there's no resolution to this conflict in the documentary.
Tellingly, none of the AfD's national leaders was among them.
Tellingly, there was no mention of offering legalization to anyone.
Tellingly, the larger the paintings, the more invisible they are.
Tellingly, however, Xinhua did not issue the report in Chinese.
Tellingly, each patient had to pay $5,000 for the procedure.
Tellingly, the desk in front of Mr Trump was bare.
Tellingly, Aoki's father was unimpressed by his son's gentle virtue.
Tellingly, MJ also shows society's relatively low esteem for politicians.
The president begins, tellingly, by making appraisals that no American
Tellingly, he took all three of his sons with him.
And, tellingly, the perception of true diversity is somewhat skewed.
And tellingly, the legal mandate for disclosure has also eroded.
Tellingly, the Idaho Supreme Court in James invoked Pearson v.
Trump, perhaps tellingly, is not much for hearing voters' stories.
Tellingly, FedEx had just raised that forecast three months earlier.
Perhaps tellingly, Drake did not comment on the dust up.
Tellingly, it was a former Trump rival, former Florida Gov.
Tellingly, some senior Republicans now share these expectations for 2019.
And, most tellingly, there was a bag with every look.
Tellingly, they are interested to a great extent in spectacle.
Tellingly, his NYU colleagues never referred their patients to him.
Tellingly, the coup-plotters asked their American contact for encrypted radios.
Tellingly, it's not like Christie put up much of a fight.
Tellingly, the two cops in the image are not truly present.
And here, tellingly, Bannon has very little to say on this.
Tellingly, Domoto was adamant about referring to himself as American Japanese.
But his best scene, tellingly, is unrelated to his own story.
Tellingly, it was not bestowed on Xi's immediate predecessor, Hu Jintao.
Tellingly, both Washington and Delaware elect their governors on presidential years.
And perhaps most tellingly of all, scientists are adopting their methods.
Tellingly, it was another private transaction, this time brokered by Sotheby's.
" White tellingly notes that, "in this they, too, reflected the age.
And tellingly, that is the way Schultz is already positioning himself.
Fitzpatrick, tellingly, has leaned on the national economy -- as has Trump.
Tellingly, Culp declined to answer directly, but promised more details soon.
Hahn tellingly opens his chronicle of greed on the Texas border.
Tellingly, the most successful scene was in effect a live interview.
Tellingly, these posts tend to elicit strong positive reactions from followers.
They demonstrate how he's as tellingly musical as any choreographer alive.
Even more tellingly, it's structured and edited like the original Alien trailer.
Tellingly, however, the world only seems to have taken notice this week.
Tellingly, Tango was barely mentioned at all in the I/O keynote.
Tellingly, a collection titled "health" contains the GynePunks speculum and nothing else.
Tellingly, two hints at answers emerged this week in Asia, not Westminster.
Tellingly, some portions of Facebook's training text copy Wikipedia's own language verbatim.
Tellingly, the chaos of the rollout was evidence of its weak foundation.
Voting intention divides along several lines: income, geography, but most tellingly age.
Tellingly, it promised to maintain order, not stability, in the exchange rate.
Tellingly, the stock market is no longer reflexively bouncing back from declines.
Tellingly, big media groups are refusing to co-operate with this project.
Tellingly, this over-investment isn't directly connected to children and care responsibilities.
Tellingly, Congress has considered proposals to do that, and none have passed.
Tellingly, Champa is named after the champak flower, or frangipani in English.
They don't go for the brains; tellingly, they go for the stomach.
Tellingly, their famously energetic live show transcends the negativity of the record.
And perhaps more tellingly, can they do so in a seamless way?
Tellingly, they closely resemble parliamentary elections — which Poland will hold next fall.
Tellingly, Trump did better than Obama in only two, Russia and Israel.
Tellingly, the event was far more focused on the company's software play.
Tellingly, Court was not given a microphone to speak to the crowd.
Tellingly, the sheep chose the medicated food only when they required it.
Tellingly, the ITC report avoids quantifying the further dismantling of American industry.
More tellingly, 57% strongly disapproved of how Trump was doing the job.
But tellingly, Heritage has to pretend that this is what it wants.
Perhaps most tellingly, the videos inadvertently reflect our over-saturation in media.
" Tellingly, the writer also accused Harris of sometimes coming off as "too programmed.
Even more tellingly, revenue per payphone decreased by half in the same period.
It's a show about heaven and hell, but it's also incredibly, tellingly secular.
But he did so, tellingly, in Latin—and in the early 14th century.
Tellingly, the phone suggests turning on "Life Mode" by default during set up.
Tellingly, Mr Kabila had glad-handed the governors before Mr Tshisekedi met them.
Tellingly, Amazon recently bought a stake in Plug Power, which makes fuel cells.
But tellingly, that company was Kickstarter, and not a small, sex-focused startup.
Tellingly, more than three-quarters of those involved in direct sales are women.
Tellingly, just 50 percent of adults earning less than $30,000 annually use smartphones.
Tellingly, censors have delayed release of one of the other anti-corruption shows.
But, tellingly, his own books were not banned by the Nazis until 1943.
Tellingly, this new civil rights division has no mandate to protect patient rights.
Tellingly, Pelosi has thus far welcomed the challenge from her conference's right flank.
Tellingly, it is Irene's story that saves things from lapsing into aimless retrospect.
Tellingly, he offers absolutely no evidence, no reason to distrust the scientific consensus.
The answer may be as simple as this tellingly honest assessment by Rep.
Tellingly, only one of these new books is actually about the war itself.
Tellingly, men at the company were allegedly not expected to perform these duties.
More tellingly, Kustomer has been on a fundraising tear in the last 12 months.
Both diplomats, tellingly, clustered their activity most heavily in the same place: Western Europe.
Shocking her guardian, Haruka has a baby with her—a baby tellingly named Haruto.
Tellingly, some normally vocal industry players requested a similar timeframe before offering a view.
Tellingly, there were no examples of US climate bipartisanship for Bauman to draw on.
Tellingly, the privacy principles make little mention of the company's multibillion dollar ad business.
Tellingly, much like the word 'slut', it has no equally powerful corresponding masculine term.
Tellingly, the first pulsar was half-jokingly dubbed LGM-1 —for little green men.
Not a bay in Bengal Tellingly, the jihadists' biggest "success" has been in Bangladesh.
Tellingly, the proportion of Americans in the labor force hit a two-year high.
Tellingly, her campaign recently released a commercial in eight swing states aimed at mothers.
Tellingly, it is neoconservatives who have been among the most vocal in opposing Trump.
Tellingly, Prum and Ryan do not discuss each other's work in their recent books.
Tellingly, season four leans the least on flashbacks to the prisoners' pre-prison lives.
Sanders' response to the most recent reports of meddling was tellingly different from Trump's.
Tellingly, the two highest-bid lots in Christie's sale were both offered without guarantees.
Her importance rests with the legacy of fiction and lore she preserved so tellingly.
" Chadwick welcomed her into the American symphonic school, tellingly, as "one of the boys.
Tellingly, the deep poverty rate in 1996, when welfare reform passed, was 4.6 percent.
Even Ms O'Grady, now angling for a longer weekend, is tellingly pessimistic in her timescale.
Also tellingly, the few climate skeptics out there might just not take bets at all.
Tellingly, the same conditions do not apply to the sanctions on North Korea and Iran.
Tellingly, the trailer's emotional climax involves the grandfather relishing the big city with his family.
A wall that, tellingly, every congressman from a district along the U.S.-Mexico border opposes.
The answers were tellingly contradictory: they wanted their parents' full attention, but also sleepover privileges.
Tellingly, none of Steele's old friends seem to remember the first time they met him.
But, tellingly, Mr. Stringer appears to be shopping for a new team of political consultants.
And Trump, tellingly, has never said or done anything to discourage this kind of behavior.
" The pope's video this month, tellingly, was called "Young People and the Example of Mary.
Already, calls for regulating the largest internet platforms are growing louder while remaining tellingly vague.
Tellingly, after his death, Spanish newspaper Sport published a picture likening Cruyff to Che Guevara.
Tellingly, only eight of 33 Republican governors signed a letter of support for the bill.
Tellingly, though, the play's greatest feminist failure is Julie: She is strong, independent and forgettable.
Tellingly "One Night Only" is not so much about rivalry as it is about complicity.
Tellingly, both Sanders and Biden pledged to support the other if he became the nominee.
Tellingly, both China and Russia have brazenly tried to use Interpol to pursue political foes.
Tellingly, they declined to go on the record for fear of alienating a coalition ally.
Tellingly, the Hurricanes earned just two trips to the foul line, making one free throw.
Tellingly, the rig count has continued to shrink in 2019 even as oil prices rise.
Friends said he looked like Jesus; tellingly, she claimed that he looked like a werewolf.
For the anti-Trump networks, the legal analysis is tellingly parallel with the political analysis.
Most tellingly, private entities are not allowed to compete for ownership of the new nonprofit.
Most tellingly, they said, Martin was paid significantly more than Hubers for the exact same work.
The next episode is tellingly titled "Aloha," though, so Fauna and Jay are absolutely leaving California.
Tellingly, in 1987, James Cannon's recommendation remained under consideration for a grand total of one day.
Anxieties about privatising essential services are present in all countries but tellingly are not always consistent.
Nowhere in modern culture does this tenuous relationship play out more tellingly than in hip-hop.
The spree is tellingly reminiscent of the golden years of "big science" in post-war America.
These aren't small businesses; tellingly, the Trump Organization is organized as a group of pass-throughs.
Tellingly, a similar effect happens to them in the real world when the sky becomes overcast.
Tellingly the bot is not yet available on Twitter — where Tay ran into so much trouble.
Tellingly, the third is California Baby, a super-crunchy natural indie line that launched in 2.993.
Most tellingly for the biggest question, though, is who's not in the collage: Chris Sullivan's Toby.
Tellingly, Johns has never been as esteemed in other countries as he is on these shores.
Tellingly, PC Music founder A.G. Cook is a fan of both Cheiron Studios and Max Martin.
And since her unmasking, Delvey has been dragged on the internet for her tellingly bad hair.
More tellingly, the United States is the lowest-taxed large economy in the world, full stop.
Tellingly, the real nature of the foreigner is less important than its existence as a scapegoat.
Tranter tellingly also tagged songwriter partner Julia Michaels, with whom he wrote songs for Gomez's last album.
Rebecca's reveal to the party bus is, tellingly, not about how much she loves Josh at all.
Tellingly, this was the case around this time of the year in 2013, 2014 and last year.
Tellingly, few in Moscow want to see America leave Afghanistan, fearing that might destabilise Russia's southern flank.
Thiel feels his privacy was invaded, and he's free to file a lawsuit — but, tellingly, he hasn't.
Tellingly, Fifty Shades also spurred the last significant trend in romance book cover aesthetics: The object cover.
The Foreign Legion's motto is, tellingly, not a pledge of allegiance to France, but to one another.
Tellingly, the team that developed UberHop was the same group of engineers behind this redesign of UberPool.
Tellingly, papers by newcomers are cited far more heavily than new work by the celebrity's former collaborators.
However, tellingly, a major exception to that "affordability" standard appears to revolve around housing for – what else?
But thanks to a band obligation, he eventually misses the actual premiere, and tellingly, so do we.
Tellingly, Uber filed court documents July 8th that would compel Meyer to settle his case through arbitration.
Tellingly, House Republicans still had the edge among well-educated white voters, a group that supported Mrs.
Tellingly, the original text of his book, written in Aramaic for a Jewish audience, has not survived.
Tellingly, the ten most corrupt economies in the 2016 IMD World Competitiveness Ranking are indeed democratic countries.
Tellingly, Bayh's positive spots focused on his time as governor, rather than his time in the Senate.
Below are all of the questions that Martin answered — or, in some cases, tellingly declined to answer.
Most tellingly, Anderson's son, alive in the book, is now dead, generating additional stress and marital discord.
Tellingly, the Angolan government has ignored Odebrecht's admission of guilt as well as critics' pressure to investigate.
Perhaps tellingly, Stephen Miller, Mr. Trump's policy adviser, has shifted away from Mr. Bannon, his onetime ally.
Tellingly, the Dow Jones Industrial Average fell after the chairman's testimony before the House Financial Services Committee.
The actors, perhaps tellingly, embraced van Hove's reading and were finding in the song a lacerating energy.
And tellingly, as of late December, Rowling has not returned to Twitter since the initial offending tweet.
His white fellow Democrats at the top of the ticket, tellingly, won by a far greater margin.
But tellingly, it never decriminalised the business of supplying the coffee shops, so the wholesale trade stayed illegal.
But perhaps most tellingly he'd really like to remind you that he wasn't part of the campaign yet.
Alchemy 43 has $23 million in funding, and, tellingly, one of its investors is Drybar founder Alli Webb.
Tellingly, its onscreen functionality — where a circular menu appears right beneath it — will only work with the Studio.
The center of the app is a live view of the camera (tellingly in selfie mode by default).
Tellingly, the price of platinum, which is used in catalytic converters in internal combustion engines, has lagged behind.
And most tellingly, the Upper East Side women who started it all are now kind of over it.
Tellingly, Broad City was not developed by network executives, but was born as a series of web shorts.
More tellingly, Apple acquired sleep tracker Beddit last month, which could help kick off the next gen efforts.
Tellingly, after becoming the official nominee, the Democratic candidate's first speaking engagement was at a Planned Parenthood fundraiser.
And equally tellingly, they are enthusiasms of the center-left and center-right rather than the ideological extremes.
Tellingly, two of the year's best films, "Roma" and "Cold War," come from Netflix and streaming rival Amazon.
Tellingly, one of the first victims of the accelerating truck in Nice was a middle-aged Muslim woman.
Tellingly, her sports hero was Geoffrey Boycott, a solid, stubborn cricketer who specialized in playing the long game.
Tellingly, Kyle Pomerleau, of the right-leaning Tax Foundation, says the group was able to replicate Batchelder's findings: .
Tellingly, both Mr. Rajoy's government and the independence movement refer to their positions as a defense of democracy.
Barangay 5, tellingly, is in the town center — not the mangrove forests where crocodiles once tended to stay.
Perhaps tellingly, Sarbanes and his allies didn't obtain even one signature on their letter from a Republican lawmaker.
And tellingly, low fees are the only way to go — just not necessarily all the way to zero.
Tellingly, much of this closing action is viewed through screens, the way most of us engage with terror.
Tellingly, the third proposed installment, "technical details behind the platform and the app," is nowhere to be found.
Tellingly, the singling out of Jews for special protection in the order left some feeling still more exposed.
Soon, all we'll have are scholarly books and the physical remnants of history — most tellingly, the death camps.
Tellingly, the announcement was set to coincide with the March for Life, the annual protest against Roe v.
Tellingly, I was twice reprimanded by museum staff for getting too close to the artifacts with my camera.
More tellingly, it has at one time or another been kicked out of nearly every country in the region.
Tellingly, this provision technically received the highest level of overall support — only 55 percent of those surveyed opposed it.
Tellingly, she also remembered being bitten by lots of mosquitos, who help spread the worm from victim to victim.
The commission president is now indirectly elected under a process called Spitzenkandidaten (tellingly, a German word), introduced in 2014.
Tellingly, only those in power speak of the possibility of a new round of violence, perhaps out of habit.
Tellingly, though, just about the only perspective not represented in some way is one that maintains Cosby's total innocence.
Tellingly, those EMI gains represent 55 percent of the additional revenue Sony is forecasting to hit this financial year.
Tellingly, Pompeo changed the name of his campaign committee in May, from Pompeo for Congress to Pompeo for Kansas.
More tellingly, Fine Gael's slogan, "Let's keep the recovery going", which it borrowed from the Conservatives, failed to resonate.
But perhaps more tellingly, he seemed exhausted by what was, in ordinary political terms, an incredibly fast legislative process.
On instrumental highlights "Phase Out" and the tellingly titled "Ten Miles High," sweaty euphoria practically seeps from the speakers.
Their objectives and ambitions exist on entirely different wavelengths, but the way they employ musical numbers is tellingly similar.
Facebook's preferred choice of phrase to describe its users — "global community" — is a tellingly flat one in this regard.
Tellingly, they draw crucial aspects of their self-image not from African culture but from American and French media.
Tellingly, Pyongyang launched its cyber strike in the midst of major joint exercises by U.S. and South Korean forces.
Tellingly, Congress even refused to fund the concessions the Clinton administration had made to coax Pyongyang into the deal.
Tellingly, these price hikes and delays occur regardless of whether they obtain their steel from imported or domestic sources.
Tellingly, AWS Educate is launching first in the U.S. as well as India, Singapore, South Korea, Japan, and China.
Tellingly, there are no planned screenings of "Detainment" in the UK. The outrage "Extremely Wicked" has sparked is understandable.
Tellingly, Sanders didn't pick up a single endorsement from members of Congress or governors after his dominating Nevada victory.
Tellingly, Mr. Kurz made appearances at C.S.U. campaign events last year, while Ms. Merkel was nowhere to be seen.
Tellingly, she ends the show on a wordless scene in which Maria (Alessandra Fazzino) dances like a dislocated marionette.
Tellingly, many middle and high school students have attended the San Francisco exhibition, said Lori Starr, the museum's director.
Tellingly, the guards we've known from previous seasons know the situation is thoroughly fucked, but still barely push back.
Tellingly, one of Esperanza's big songs is called "My Second Love," which encourages people to trade in their first.
Tellingly, her books were published in 25 languages, including Estonian, before they were translated into Canadian French in 2010.
More tellingly, that is a jump of more than 50 percent since 2017, President Trump's first year in office.
Tellingly, they are women who, so far, have not played into the tabloidy pop dramas that dominated the 2010s.
The supposed "pro-life" Republican Party, tellingly, backs Trump's budget, and shrugs at the reality of kids going hungry.
Tellingly, the centerpiece of the long G.O.P. jihad against Obamacare was the false claim that it would hurt Medicare.
Tellingly, it loses steam when sentimentality creeps in, and eventually concludes with an earnest singalong of a Yule classic.
" And perhaps most tellingly, "It is encouraged for all butlers to develop their own personal touch to this service.
Tellingly, there were no screenings of "Detainment" in the United Kingdom following its November premiere at the Winchester Film Festival.
States such as West Virginia have tellingly reported some of the highest rates of opioid overdose deaths in recent years.
Tellingly, Armstrong cheats a little on the only one I'd call paradisaical, which is also the longest and latest: L'Orch.
The United States Constitution's preamble begins quite tellingly with the words "We the people," making clear that it's a democracy.
Breath is always a continuance, never a stoppage (tellingly, in the altered texts, periods are eliminated along with the words).
"Tellingly, not one other reputable media outlet has seen fit to air this false claim," Fairfax said in his statement.
Tellingly, what ultimately made news was Hilton's unscripted confrontation with ABC anchor Dan Harris, in an interview about the show.
Tellingly, the fast-growing Berlin fintech says it plans to use the new capital for "strategic acquisitions" and further internationalisation.
But tellingly, this year (so far), several fast-growing private tech firms in the U.S. have seen their valuations plummet.
It is the first Marvel film to have a black protagonist and, just as tellingly, an almost entirely black cast.
Tellingly, the proportion of Americans who are happy with their jobs dropped from 61% in 1987 to 51% in 2016.
Tellingly, the word "love" was the most used hashtag, while Instagram's most used face filter for Stories was the puppy.
Tellingly, the managers of those rainy-day funds seem a mite concerned that they are crammed into the same spot.
More tellingly, perhaps, he won among those who described themselves as "very conservative," beating Cruz 38 percent to 34 percent.
Tellingly, more people have been executed in King Salman's first year in office than in any of the previous 20.
Tellingly, it was primarily women and children afflicted by kuru, and primarily women and their children who consumed the deceased.
Tellingly, when the IDF sealed these cross-border tunnels, cement gushed out from unsearched private properties in nearby Lebanese villages.
" Tellingly, the first book Ms. Rips was able to read on her own wasn't "Charlotte's Web" but Jerry Seinfeld's "Halloween.
That leg makes fascinatingly heavy weather of its gradual ascent, and that heaviness tellingly matches the tension in the music.
More tellingly, the decision to reinstate the ban comes days after South Korean President Moon Jae-in's visit to China.
Tellingly, the level of opposition to impeachment has stayed constant among respondents on the whole, even while favor has risen.
The one thematic element Ness seems truly interested in is one that, tellingly, has little to do with teen angst.
Mr. Krastev has written tellingly about Europe's migration crisis, calling it as big a shock as the fall of Communism.
Yes, he is still chasing a 15th major championship, but tellingly, he seems less frantic about that pursuit than ever.
In contrast to others — most tellingly the president himself — López-Gatell conveys public health recommendations through language that makes sense.
Tellingly, swings in the President's overall approval rating have not been well correlated with shifts in his economic approval rating.
Tellingly, in Trump's speech, his definition of "victory" featured five components — and three of them explicitly focused on counterterrorism goals.
But tellingly, the post-Shelby voter ID laws are silent on remote balloting, which is used predominantly by white voters.
And yet, even knowing the opposition and its core customers -- so-called real America -- Walmart, tellingly, has moved forward anyway.
" Tellingly, Moore observes, even when these same words are used to describe male artists, "they are seemingly never labeled 'difficult.
"History of Woman Suffrage" draws heavily on the proceedings of the 1866 meeting but tellingly leaves out Harper's momentous speech.
Most tellingly, Obama's speech described our closest allies against ISIS to be other Western countries: France, Germany, and United Kingdom.
Intersectionality means different things to different people, but, tellingly, it's embraced by both Women's March and many of its critics.
"Tellingly, not one other reputable media outlet has seen fit to air this false claim," the statement from Fairfax's office said.
Tellingly, the director admitted at the Sundance Film Festival that he limited his interviews only to these accusers and their families.
Tellingly, when asked Thursday whether he worried that Trump could hurt down-ballot candidates in the House and Senate, Ryan demurred.
Most Indian firms don't break out this figure, somewhat tellingly, but it is thought to be in the 73-17% range.
Tellingly, the people who chose product names for these devices often defaulted to calling them "hubs" or some other ambiguous term.
Tellingly, in national polls the party's rating lingers stubbornly around the 7% to which it fell early in the last Parliament.
But tellingly, Sanders failed to win over many converts on the second round of voting, which is how Buttigieg moved ahead.
Tellingly, this response is most commonly spouted out of the shit-spewing mouths of men with their own iffy sexual histories.
More tellingly, volatility futures point to equity investors beginning to focus on the downside potential for stocks in the months ahead.
On Wednesday, the Game of Thrones author answered — or tellingly declined to answer— fan questions in a New York Times interview.
Tellingly, her approval rating dropped by the year's end in a state that President Trump won by a 20-point margin.
And all three, tellingly, were included on Trump's Supreme Court shortlist, which was compiled by the conservative Federalist Society's Leonard Leo.
Tellingly, the track that should be Painting With's emotional anchor, "Bagels In Kiev," is also betrayed by this overly busy mix.
When the credits finally roll, they include outtakes in which the actors flub lines, and, tellingly, even those aren't particularly funny.
Tellingly, she did not discuss what a Trump or Clinton (or Sanders) election would mean for her company or her industry.
Tellingly, Obama has never given a speech to D.C. about D.C. in D.C. How uplifting and supportive that would have been!
I mean William Taylor, America's top diplomat in Ukraine, who is, tellingly, the first impeachment witness to testify on live television.
Tellingly, however, prosecutors in that New York case say Apple has agreed to unlock phones 70 time for authorities since 2008.
Tellingly, many illegal aliens who pass the credible fear screening never actually apply for asylum once they enter the United States.
Most tellingly of all, Clinton had the legal authority to classify as private and delete whichever emails she felt was appropriate.
Tellingly, the first number is about West Virginia's most famous folk hero: "John Henry was a steel drivin' man," Earle sings.
Tellingly, even moderates like former Vice President Joe Biden explicitly recognize the need for a new direction for Democrats on trade.
Tellingly, Ms. Gardner is presenting another brief effort, "Cowboy," in the Exponential Festival, which gathers experimental works by New York writers.
Ms. Radvanovsky's slightly piercing sound tellingly exposed the subtext of Norma's intentions, yet rose to sensitive, high pianissimos in tender phrases.
But it tellingly does not lay out that case, instead merely claiming that such a request is "relevant" to the investigation.
Tellingly, a year after Sandy made landfall, 74 percent of the bill's funding remained unspent, leaving disaster victims desperate for help.
Tellingly, job losses coincided with the experience of open European borders: Unemployment nearly doubled in the East between 1989 and 1999.
His 2016 album, "Skeleton Tree," dealt obliquely but tellingly with personal mourning after the accidental death of his son in 2015.
Madrid's bid to roll back car restrictions, the most notable exception to this trend, was tellingly reversed in July following protests.
Mr. Verhoeven's early films and his science fiction outings — including the tellingly titled "Hollow Man" (Friday and Sunday) — are also present.
The three-channel color video is tellingly composed as a Rorschach test, with mirroring images above and below a central horizontal.
Tellingly, the United States wants Britain to stay in the union; Russia, on the other hand, would be delighted if it left.
Tellingly, the White House announcement last month on Trump's Iran crackdown emphasized a commitment from Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates.
Even more tellingly, the developer's homepage defaults to the same image for 10 seconds before loading into the rest of the website.
Tellingly, Goldman Sachs argued that financial conditions could tighten even if the Fed cuts rates, but by less than investors hoped for.
Tellingly, their model numbers align with previous Pixel phones, and one of the filings reveals that they'll be running Android 9 Pie.
Tellingly, not even IBM thinks the simulation would be especially easy — nor, as of this writing, has IBM actually carried it out.
Tellingly, the final communiqué, seeking to bolster the ceasefire, was issued by the external powers, while Syria's belligerents registered protests and reservations.
But when celebrities are given the opportunity to apologize, tellingly it's mainly white celebrities who are given the benefit of the doubt.
And, tellingly, she cites the profound sexism in the industry as a primary reason for stepping away from the underground comics world.
Though, tellingly, poor Stu stays at the bottom of the pack; Ugne, a mom and bodybuilder originally from Lithuania, takes top spot.
I think that this is the mechanism underlying the use of "welfare queens" on the right (although, tellingly, I can't prove it).
It is evident in the demand for breeds such as the French bulldog, which, tellingly, looks a bit like a human baby.
Tellingly, the accumulation of abnormal amounts of senescent cells tends to happen where disease occurs, including in our lungs, joints, and arteries.
He keeps a bedroom wall with postcards of the world's lost cities and wonders but, tellingly, they're mostly pictures of western cities.
Tellingly, left-wing governments in Bolivia and Ecuador have backed mining and hydrocarbons projects, in the latter case riding roughshod over opposition.
Second — and tellingly — Collyer charges that the FSOC failed to apply the standards of formal regulatory cost-benefit analysis to the designation.
Tellingly, Canning's remarks brought together the novel's depiction of the creature as a baby and the culture's figuring of Africans as children.
But perhaps tellingly, the woman who came forward with the allegations, Leeann Tweeden, is not a member of the Capitol Hill community.
Tellingly, the vast majority of self-reported Democratic voters don't have faith in Buttigieg to lead the party to victory in 2020.
"Very tellingly, he used to be the most popular politician in Texas, and his standing has fallen very far," the secretary said.
But tellingly, while he argues that Republicans are violating political precedent, he also argues it makes sense for them to do so.
Most tellingly, the report said that the city's Department of Correction has been unwilling and unable to take the needed remedial steps.
Tellingly, AlphaZero won by thinking smarter, not faster; it examined only 60 thousand positions a second, compared to 60 million for Stockfish.
Tellingly, the soprano was at her most moving when interacting with her young son, depicted in this production through Bunraku-style puppetry.
But, tellingly, the State Department's "Rewards for Justice" Twitter account retweeted Dubowitz's call for them to sanction 10 specific Iranians he listed.
The Oracles asked 10 executives how they respond when employees mess up, and tellingly, no one mentioned scolding or punishing for mistakes.
Comcast tellingly did not make its new Xfinity Flex service available to customers who also have cable TV plans with the company.
Tellingly, on Friday Mr. Trump did not refer to China as an ally in the push to curb North Korea's nuclear efforts.
Tellingly, the previous two times GE had to cut its dividend were the Great Depression and in 2009 during the financial crisis.
He wants to add to some of his overweight Central America and Caribbean positions but tellingly, no one has bonds to offer.
Tellingly, she is quick to boast not so much about her own role but about the team spirit that animates the trio.
Perhaps tellingly, a quarter of all voters in one poll said they cast their vote because they disliked the other candidate more.
Most tellingly, Kara, is that nobody in our tribe in our old jobs spoke up in favor, who are currently in government.
The ignored downsides of background checks, such as the vilification of mental illness, and Muslims, reveal tellingly narrow perspectives among its proponents.
Tellingly, for all the color and glitz they wore in the images on the walls, every single one of them was wearing black.
Tellingly, German Chancellor Angela Merkel - not the president-elect - felt it necessary to reiterate those shared values on the morning after the election.
In the past few months, scientists have found the virus in the placenta, amniotic fluid, and—most tellingly—brain tissue of microcephalic fetuses.
Tellingly, although Clinton was Madison's running mate on the Democratic-Republican ticket, he saw himself as a viable president in the Electoral College.
Perhaps most tellingly, they saw these young recruits were more interested in finding a sense of belonging than they were in religious ideology.
And more tellingly, where do they hail from and what do their districts tell us about why they might be holding their fire?
Tellingly, other candidates for betterment in the early part of Mr Trump's presidency are also beaten-down economies with the potential to rebound.
Tellingly, only after crackdowns on corruption in provinces such as Liaoning and Inner Mongolia did authorities admit that their data had been inflated.
Perhaps more tellingly, an annual survey of education results for 2110- to 2000-year-olds, published in January, found differences in educational attainment.
But perhaps most tellingly, the members of the group post pictures of the luxury apartment blocks that have now replaced their old haunts.
Tellingly, even Trump's own aides don't think so: Some sources in WH are frankly surprised at how pundits are warming to the speech.
Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump are preparing for the first presidential debate, due in less than four weeks, in tellingly different ways. Mrs.
Just as tellingly, the poll revealed a greater level of comfort among likely caucusgoers with Buttigieg and Biden than with Warren or Sanders.
Tellingly, those journalists who specifically reported on an earlier Gulenist power grab were targeted by the authorities; some were even imprisoned for years.
Climate change, a phrase Pruitt tellingly skirts in his response, has been pushed to the margins since the day he became EPA administrator.
Another listed an alien registration number — which tellingly begins with an "A" — instead of a Social Security number on the voter registration form.
Tellingly, Stoller saddles his prose with tone-deaf subordinate clauses when he uses odious events and characters as positive reinforcements of his thesis.
When Jackson addresses the anger of masculine conflict, he does so, tellingly, with the detachment of years and a dry scrim of regret.
Tellingly, the event was far more focused on the company's software play, with the big hardware announcement feeling almost rushed at the end.
Perhaps most tellingly, the documents show Boeing employees repeatedly questioning the competence of their own colleagues, and the quality of the company's engineering.
More tellingly, he uses the state as a showcase of what the U.S. could become if he loses his reelection bid next year.
Tellingly, though, Instagram, the social network preferred by the beautiful people, will not have an official presence at the 255 Vanity Fair party.
Tellingly, after the 45Q modification an American lobby group called the National Oil Enhanced Recovery Initiative changed its name to the Carbon Capture Coalition.
Detour follows 2010's tellingly titled blues departure Memphis Blues and Kinky Boots, the 2012 Broadway musical she earned a Tony Award for scoring.
Most tellingly, Mr Larsen's samples contained iron and nickel alloys common in micrometeorites, but rare in Earth-bound rocks because these metals oxidise rapidly.
Tellingly, during that same period, Amazon, Google, and Facebook grew revenues over 2500 times faster than Fortune 295 companies in total: 295% versus 953%.
Tellingly, when Xi Jinping, China's president, visited the city last month, news reports showed him at JL MAG, a magnet company, not a mine.
And tellingly, the white markings on their back did not change, which is what usually happens when a manta ray meets a new individual.
Tellingly, the youth hostel was fully booked this summer, mainly with 20-35 years old but also with older and younger guests, she said.
Tellingly, there is no country where the electorate is dominated by the Free Folk who believe the nation is fine but Europe is broken.
But even more tellingly, the documentary was directed by Andrew Wakefield, the former doctor who incited today's anti-vaccine hysteria in the first place.
Tellingly, the iPod listing doesn't include Face ID or Touch ID, which could be an attempt to keep the device at a reasonable price.
Most tellingly, service-sector inflation, as measured by the consumer-price index for services excluding energy, rose 3.1 percent in the year to February.
The statistics are tellingly bleak — Girls Who Code reports that about 74 percent of young girls express interest in STEM fields and computer science.
Tellingly, Scott shifted his strategy in the closing days to stop keeping his distance from Trump and instead join him at his Florida rallies.
Tellingly, the crowd of Democratic primary voters in Iowa burst into applause when she said that she wants to do away with private insurance.
Tellingly, it doesn't take much oxygen to create the red iron oxides—but it does take a lot of oxygen to form manganese oxides.
Tellingly, the ads connected the GOP agenda not to Trump but to House Speaker Paul Ryan as the embodiment of the congressional Republican majority.
Which brings us back to the subject of Garland, a singer with whom Ms. Streisand has been tellingly compared and contrasted over the years.
Tellingly, the emphasis here is less on being attractive to potential mates and more about dominance over other males, and their less-lustrous brush.
Tellingly, the new CAP government healthcare plan would essentially eliminate the popular Medicare Advantage program, replacing it with "Medicare Choice," which is Orwellian doublespeak.
More tellingly, Schmidt owns a company called Civis Analytics that does an enormous amount of behind-the-scenes data work for Democratic Party campaigns.
They've inched tellingly in this direction but going all the way would involve unflattering disclosure — the sort that would need to be legally compelled.
The Gateses recount a series of disappointing investments on HIV/AIDS that, tellingly, broke from this strategy of convening governments and leveraging their funds.
Tellingly, the authors found no effects on college graduates, adding credibility to the inference that the minimum wage itself caused the decline in suicides.
Tellingly, the most famous section, "Funérailles," is also the closest "Harmonies" gets to the pyrotechnic showiness that has made Liszt a favorite for encores.
More tellingly, tensions escalated between OPEC members Saudi Arabia and Iran, which analysts said did more to rattle the market than the prince's purge.
Tellingly, when asked whether the Republican staff who wrote the memo had coordinated its drafting with the White House, the Chairman refused to answer.
"Tellingly, a 2014 email references a Target Tracker capable of "a link analysis to show who the target is affiliated with on all Social Media.
Perhaps tellingly, Daniel Craig, one of the actors who has played James Bond, ran into a mishap when he tried to support the insurgent candidate.
True, downtown San Francisco is kind of a shitshow, but Citizen — which was originally and tellingly named Vigilante — isn't really trying to make that case.
Perhaps most tellingly, there is a subplot in Van Johnson about Russians who are trying to control the weather and infiltrate the US movie system.
Tellingly, few websites venture beyond English, a language in which perhaps only one in ten are conversant and which is preferred by the economic elite.
Tellingly, after a long discussion, sanctions were not discussed by foreign ministers, partly because the debate was chaired by Mogherini to avoid exacerbating the divisions.
At both events the politicians are tellingly half-hearted when talking about the sort of things they might normally be expected to harp on about.
Tellingly, Frum just waves aside the continued existence of Donald Trump: "once safely excluded from the presidency, Donald Trump will no longer matter," Frum says.
Tellingly, the idea of legislating with Democrats in veto-proof fashion (now or next year) to tie President Trump's hands did not occur to him.
More tellingly, the president's first budget emphasizes the importance of USDA-led research related to food safety, nutrition, productivity, sustainability, and preserving our natural resources.
Tellingly, fear of a new October Revolution is driving many of these rich paranoiacs to purchase swank subterranean bunkers or beachfront property in New Zealand.
The novel execution aside, things captured by the fictional Street View car are tellingly not always as positive as the track's three-letter title implies.
This is, tellingly, how the Trump Organization is structured: as a collection of pass-through entities, rather than a "C corporation" subject to corporate taxes.
Tellingly, though, over that same period (not including 2017), the National Flood Insurance Program paid out over $52 billion in flood claims, according to FEMA.
More tellingly, the hackers linked this domain to an IP address they had used in previous breaches, giving investigators a way to look for patterns.
Perhaps tellingly, the only standout performance comes courtesy of Michael Fassbender, reprising his role as the synthetic David as well as a newer model, Walter.
Tellingly, the Trump administration has moved from arguing that the president did not obstruct justice to arguing that by definition, the president cannot obstruct justice.
Tellingly, this month, Christie's started its sale with Robert Mapplethorpe (1946-1989), Sotheby's with Christopher Wool (born 1955), and Phillips with Jack Whitten (1939-2018).
Tellingly, some think tanks that publicize all-female panels also bar junior fellows from speaking to the news media, silencing the women in that role.
Tellingly, Mr. Yu posted his latest appeal in Chinese on Twitter and Facebook, both of which are banned inside China's internet filter, the Great Firewall.
Tellingly, Russia's hopes rest on its captain, the coolheaded goalkeeper Igor Akinfeev, who presumably will be tasked with blocking an endless barrage of opponents' shots.
Tellingly, Trump has a dismal record on fighting corruption, and has repeatedly tried to cut spending on anti-corruption programs in Ukraine and other countries.
Third, and most tellingly, Lincoln's letter says that the soldiers need only vote in the state elections in October, and not for himself in November.
Tellingly, while art is often about the individual, much of the art that has come out of the Trump era is about championing the collective.
Maybe it's because they are closest to Ms. Teng's folk-pop wheelhouse; tellingly, she took on the role in a 2015 album of the show.
Tellingly, most believe Russia does not get the respect it deserves, with about 60 percent saying Russia should get more respect internationally than it does.
A remarkable 21 percent of the galleries were founded since 22012, according to the report, which — tellingly — does not estimate total sales in the sector.
Tellingly, though, he wants the government inquiry into the homes to look at "society generally" rather than focus on the religious orders that ran them.
The journalistic avidity that fills this novel with captivating stories and tellingly observed details can also become an invented slickness that might be called novelism.
Anton thinks of his parents as the husband and wife in the "Thin Man" movies: witty, glamorous and, tellingly (though he doesn't say it), childless.
Several companion volumes have been released since then, including one tellingly titled Live Like a Jesus Freak: Spend Today As If It Were Your Last.
The ensuing cheers from the crowd were, tellingly, louder than those for almost anything he'd said at his closing campaign rally in Nuremberg the previous day.
Tellingly, none are humanoid: The top two are animal-like bots, and nearly all the rest in the top ten bear no resemblance to living things.
Tellingly, many of the experts who champion the future of personalized nutrition have not been genetically tested themselves, nor have they had their own microbiota analyzed.
And by 2012, it was back fairly close to its 1993 level: Tellingly, the deep poverty rate in 1996, when welfare reform passed, was 4.6 percent.
Tellingly, Apple has re-focused its marketing and positioning of the Apple Watch away from fashion and more towards health and fitness with its new models.
Tellingly, both Uber and Lyft spent money advocating for a recent budget measure in New York City that will introduce congestion-charging in parts of Manhattan.
Most tellingly, both his campaign and one of his super PACs on Thursday launched new television advertisements against Rubio, a candidate they already saw on defeated.
More tellingly, Rand's analysis also noted that the capabilities of China and Russia have advanced so far they could potentially beat American forces in certain situations.
Tellingly, de León, who spearheaded a legislative agenda in Sacramento virtually defined by resistance to the Trump administration, did not mention Feinstein in his campaign announcement.
More tellingly, tensions escalated between OPEC members Saudi Arabia and Iran and it was this, more than the purge, that rattled the oil market, analysts said.
Tellingly, Kemp has said repeatedly that he would sign a "religious freedom" bill protecting business owners who refuse to serve gay customers; the current Republican Gov.
Tellingly, counties where respondents were most dissatisfied with the place where they lived were the counties that swung the most from Mr. Obama to Mr. Trump.
Tellingly, the European Union ministry, which worked on Turkey's membership negotiations with the union, was abolished and its elusive mandate folded within the foreign affairs ministry.
Many women sign up for next year as soon as the camp is over — tellingly, I was one of just six newcomers out of 29 participants.
Another showed that women (and particularly women of color) are given more valueless tasks like organizing parties and taking meeting notes (tellingly, this is called "housework").
Tellingly, the Trump supporter might confess that she didn't think Trump really intended to do this mass-deportation thing anyway—it was all just campaign talk.
Tellingly, Eyal has begun to challenge tech-product designers to adopt a new code of ethics to protect users from potential downsides of habit-forming software.
Tellingly, CDC data shows that, as children, boys are more likely to develop asthma than girls while, in adulthood, asthma is far more common in women.
Tellingly, before Marina took her breather, her single (off Froot), "Happy," depicted a reclusive celebrity, alone and in search of happiness but unsure where to find it.
Tellingly, Pai has brushed off any concerns about fraud, basically saying that he never intended to let the comments affect his decision-making in the first place.
And tellingly, it suggests that passengers will be able to "e-mail, tweet and post all the way using any Wi-Fi enabled phone, tablet or laptop".
And tellingly enough, one of the best examples of a service like that, FilmStruck, which specialized in classic cinema, announced plans to shut down just days later.
Or tellingly, maybe I just personally had zero ability to figure out how to play the game in a way that ended successfully with my demonic dates.
And tellingly, his numbers align quite well with Vladimir Putin's: "[P]eople who have confidence in Putin are more likely to express confidence in Trump," Pew writes.
Tellingly, he compared Sanders to Jeremy Corbyn, the left-wing leader of Britain's Labour Party, who in December lost an election to the Conservative Party's Boris Johnson.
"Tellingly, MillerCoors did not dispute the USTPO's determination that its "STONES" mark would infringe STONE when used in connection with Keystone Light," Stone wrote in its filing.
But tellingly, it's also a set of issues for which the ''deal'' — that is, Trump's unique ability to make deals — can be presented as his crucial promise.
Tellingly, although GBL provides dealers with the biggest profit margins—they can make $900 selling a liter that cost them $50—most end up giving it away.
There have been around 22016 books written about Bowie: some of them good, some of them awful, but tellingly none with the Brixton-born singer's co-operation.
In a conversation with Mashable, one partner jokingly — but tellingly — called the new-ish Facebook video platform "Un-Watch-able," seemingly a reference to poor viewership figures.
Tellingly, Rouhani was able to get around hard-liner opposition in part by ceding to them on other matters, namely "political and socio-cultural reforms," Vaez writes.
Tellingly, the court adds that for purposes of the absentee voting act and Illinois law, Puerto Rico, Guam and Virgin Islands are part of the United States.
Most tellingly, special prosecutors, as part of the executive branch, can be dismissed by the president, while congressional committees are protected by the constitutional separation of powers.
Most tellingly, Michigan was statistically elite last year, and probably should have had a better record, as the Wolverines finished eighth nationally in the statistical F/+ ratings.
Tellingly, both Hammond and Fey performed these impressions on SNL long after they'd left the regular cast, which says something about how much the show prizes precision.
Tellingly, Flake's retirement speech on the Senate floor devoted much more attention to the veneration of conservative principles than to conservative accomplishments during his years in office.
And, tellingly, Mueller declined to indict Manafort for a number of offenses that are also crimes in New York, suggesting he wants to make such prosecutions possible.
Tellingly, Mattel's most successful brand in China is a maker of educational baby toys, Fisher-Price, with a market share of 1.1%, according to Euromonitor, a data provider.
But while they were both loath to discuss any spoilers for Infinity War, they did quite tellingly emphasize that the movie is one half of a larger story.
Our Idaho Division of Financial Management forecasts that: Yet tellingly, our inflation-adjusted personal income growth is expected to be just 2.6 percent, compared with 3.1 percent nationally.
Playing people whose job is to maintain facades, these performers endow their characters with a canny self-awareness and a tellingly varied gift for balancing shell and substance.
Tellingly, one moment when Pence did not have anything to say was when Kaine brought up Trump's attacks on Judge Gonzalo Curiel because of his Mexican-American heritage.
Tellingly, perhaps, the most prominent signs of vigour among small firms come via the tech giants: Amazon has over 20183m small firms using its third-party sales platforms.
Tellingly, Texans celebrate 1836 as their founding year, when the state became independent from Mexico after an armed insurrection, not 1845, when Texas officially became an American state.
Tellingly, there are multiple other and far less viral free filters on the controversial AI face editor app: one for smiles, hair color, beards, bangs, and even youth.
And even in its title, the book puns tellingly on the distinction between Beowulf the warrior, or aglæca, and the mother of Grendel, the monster, the aglæca-wif.
Tellingly, in his recusal announcement, Nunes failed to address any substance of the accusations mounted against him, including those outlined in a federal ethics complaint filed by MoveOn.
Tellingly, neutral sentiment spiked to 41.9 percent, which is well above the long-run average of 31 percent and indicative of a general ambivalence among the retail crowd.
Perhaps tellingly, he mused while standing on the Great Wall during his visit, ""It gives you a good perspective on a lot of the day-to-day things.
In a study called, tellingly, "It Was the Straw that Broke the Camel's Back," she described interviews with fifty-two adult children who were estranged from their parents.
Tellingly, one party insider sympathetic to this view suggests that MPs would only move against Mr Corbyn if they faced losing their seats to deselection or election defeat.
Tellingly, Americans, who remain riveted by the tragedy of the event so far have donated $8.5 million to a GoFundMe campaign started by Las Vegas local Steve Sisolak.
Tellingly, Schrage is arguing that it wouldn't work for Facebook because it would "invite criticism"—because it would, in other words, create a PR headache for the company.
Moms and dads stood shoulder to shoulder with health experts, faith groups, tribal leaders — and perhaps most tellingly, even the regulated industry itself — in opposition to this proposal.
Most tellingly, Xi recently abolished term limits for the presidency, which most China watchers took as a sign that he is attempting to stay in power for life.
Tellingly, Chappelle described moral injury as "intentionally doing something that you felt was against what you thought was right," like the wanton abuse of prisoners at Abu Ghraib.
The Patrolmen's Benevolent Association, the city's largest police union, declined to endorse the mayor for re-election, but, tellingly, it did not endorse any of his opponents, either.
Oh, and along the way, he became a husband and a father to two boys; tellingly, this is the first accomplishment he lists on his website's biography page.
Tellingly, rainfall data over the past decade shows that a town like Uralla has been receiving below average rainfall most years, even taking into account the recent deluge.
Its definition is tellingly vague: "an opportunity for plying criminal talents," suggesting not so much the pursuit of illicit profit as general delight in the act of deceit.
But she also pioneered the now commonplace practice of distilling the essence of a drama or musical by posing the performers tellingly and shooting them in close-up.
" But perhaps more tellingly, all the images on his campaign website look like poorly staged stock photos that one could find by searching "white man pretending to do stuff.
In each case, and most tellingly in his veto of accession talks for North Macedonia, he has acted after little or no consultation among other leaders, vexing the rest.
Tellingly, the phrase "Am Ende aller Dinge werd ich lachen" ("At the end of everything, I will laugh") is a recurring feature on the group's posters and t-shirts.
Tellingly, Kilmeade tried to walk back the comments during a podcast later on Friday, insisting that he didn't mean what it sounds like he meant — at least, not exactly.
Tellingly, growth in output per worker now tends to fall in booms and rise during busts, precisely the opposite of the pattern 40 years ago, when inflation was high.
Tellingly Mr Trump's China tariff escalation on May 10th was accompanied by defensive tweets asserting that China yearns for a "very weak" Democrat to win the 2020 election instead.
Tellingly, the album is credited to "Yusuf/Cat Stevens," marking the first time his famous alter ego has appeared on a new release since 1978's Back to Earth.
Adding another shows just how much we love to customize our tech, or maybe more tellingly, how picky we can be when it comes to our other technological half.
Tellingly, instead of touching the iron throne, Daenerys turns away from it last minute to instead follow the sounds of her dragons — which takes her north in the vision.
Investigators at the crime scene also found clumps of Plunkett's scalp and hair near his body — and, tellingly, a chair flecked with blood spatter, perhaps used to beat him.
But it was a fraught identity because he never actually fell for a woman, though he did sing explicitly about one in the tellingly conflicted "Everything She Wants" (1984).
It comes, tellingly, as DeLauro, the Connecticut House Democrat who's traditionally led the party in pushing for increased child benefits, has begun meeting with Ivanka Trump on the issue.
" Variety's review tellingly described Heigl as "so icily sociopathic that it's too bad the borderline-campy movie wasn't willing to go full tilt into B-movie 'psycho-Barbie' territory.
The two thinkers she focuses on—Simon Dubnow, the great Jewish historian, and the Yiddish writer, David Bergelson—also, tellingly, happened to end up with bullets in their heads.
Fox News, tellingly, has in part already moved on to justifying collusion, showing little faith from Trumpworld that the denials of collusion will hold up over the long run.
Tellingly, most of the big Marvel successes in the 1970s (Conan, Tomb of Dracula, Star Wars) were based on properties created by other firms or in the public domain.
Tellingly, Raonic also changed his approach as the match wore on — striking more aggressively from the baseline to throw off Goffin's rhythm and picking his moments to go in.
Clinton admitted he was wrong but stayed tellingly cagey as to what exactly was wrong about it, before implicitly sliding to the stance that the problem was marital infidelity.
Perhaps most tellingly, the budget would eliminate EPA's Greenhouse Gas Reporting Program, a relatively inexpensive ($8 million) program that tracks carbon emissions from the nation's 8,000 largest industrial polluters.
Choe's mural has been the center of controversy over the past week, as he has a disturbing history of sexual assault that evidently, and tellingly, hasn't crippled his career.
Tellingly, the most memorable song is the crassest commercial ploy: "Banana Papaya," a trap duet with Calle 13's Residente, percolating over high electro-squeals that seize your attention.
Tellingly, though a majority of senators voted 76-22 to advance the Combating BDS Act, not a single yes vote came from a presidential candidate in the Democratic Party.
Cennarium ($9.97 a month; $95.64 a year) is especially strong in genres that are more popular outside the United States — tellingly, its menu lists categories for circus and magic.
Tellingly, both "X-Files" and "Homeland" have come to feature a conspiracy-theory-spouting blowhard (here played by Joel McHale) whose inflammatory rantings, improbably, are actually tinged with truth.
Tellingly, reviews from the theater press for the Steinman and Queen shows have not been kind — although Alexis Soloski captured the wonderfully loony appeal of "Bat" in the Times.
Tellingly, it was one of the earliest of his pieces to be performed by other companies—and they were ballet companies, which generally don't like their presentations too cold.
The OPEC+ agreement will be under scrutiny in early December when the group of oil-producing nations (which tellingly, doesn't include U.S. shale producers) meets to discuss the policy.
Tellingly, the show's Wikipedia page now requires a chart that plots the cast's ongoing collective exploits in a manner that's usually reserved for superheroes that appear in Marvel crossovers.
The Borough Park program is a testament to the value that observant Jews place on the concept of tzedaka, a Hebrew term defined as either charity or, tellingly, justice.
More tellingly, it only had 22 co-sponsors in the House, and even though it passed the Judiciary Committee, it was never brought to the floor for a vote.
He wrote and produced her debut album, tellingly titled Age Ain't Nothing but a Number, and records show that when Aaliyah was 2.13 years old, in 1994, he married her.
With that said, in a statement Alex Lazovsky, General Partner of Scale-Up VC, is talking up Zeek's unicorn potential, although I tellingly failed to get the startup's current valuation.
Most tellingly, Peter makes a decision to leave his spidey  suit at home while he travels with his school to Europe, claiming that he doesn't anticipate anyone needing Spider-Man.
During the euro crisis, Mrs Merkel tellingly began talking of a "union method" based on national capitals and parliaments instead of the classic Monnet method built around the EU institutions.
Perhaps tellingly, most of those interviewed at Biden's own events said his greatest appeal was his status as the most electable candidate — a status seriously called into question this week.
Tellingly, their poshest items, such as Aldi's Aberdeen Angus steak, were bestsellers, demonstrating how they are increasingly capturing middle-class families, traditionally the preserve of Tesco, Sainsbury's and the like.
Tellingly, Theresa May ripped up the government's spending plans this summer to announce a big birthday present for the health service – a five-year funding boost – on its seventieth anniversary.
Tellingly, though, it is not asked to sustain the current world order or assume responsibility for its renewal — at least not to nearly the same extent as the United States.
Today, Apple tellingly called the iPad Pro the "world's best device for AR" in their event keynote, signifying that the best augmented reality is the biggest window into that world.
Mr. Trump's lengthy litigation history also reveals a rocky road strewn with many lawyers and, more tellingly, few lawyers who have represented him or his businesses on an ongoing basis.
And tellingly, to help address one of the many ways that the Indian market is fragmented, the app has support for English, Hindi, Bengali, Gujarati, Kannada, Marathi, Tamil, and Telugu.
Tellingly, though Mr. Trump drew outrage when he said in the March interview that he would not rule out using nuclear weapons in Europe, his comments reflected current nuclear doctrine.
It would seem that Luther's thought should be considered in light of acknowledged influences, and that these books would be of particular interest because they had, tellingly, an underground life.
But in their sketch following West's initial MAGA controversy, the joke was, tellingly, that no one can stop talking about the latest development of his meltdown to save their life.
The Fist of Dread immediately relaxed its grip as I cut away the pages that follow, and the hole they made in the fabric of the book was tellingly small.
Woods, 44, admitted to feeling back stiffness three weeks ago at the Genesis Invitational in Southern California, and more tellingly, he played progressively worse through the conclusion of the event.
Tellingly, the UMTA was founded under the Welfare Clause of the Constitution, not the Commerce Clause that authorized highway construction, because it is good for cities to have good transportation.
Tellingly, one person who likely would have not made the cut under the Trump administration's guidelines is Justice Scalia, who for most of his career embraced the Chevron deference doctrine.
The waiter and the restaurant's manager — who, tellingly, are given no names, just occupations — are a middle-aged lesbian couple hanging onto a "speck" of a home amid rampant overdevelopment.
Tellingly, he announced his fake news measure, in a tone of admonition, to mainstream journalists who had gathered in January for the traditional presidential New Year's greeting to the press.
Perhaps most tellingly, Kasich for America, his former presidential campaign committee, is still raising money — not a lot, just $6900,2628 last year — but more than other candidates who dropped out.
Some caucusgoers said, tellingly, that they were eager to knock doors for candidates they supported but preferred to do so in nearby towns or counties lest they alienate their neighbors.
Former CPC leaders Mao, Deng and once-General Secretary Jiang Zemin were all labeled "the core" during their times in power, but tellingly Xi's immediate predecessor, Hu Jintao, was not.
Tellingly, she makes no reference to the findings—in peer-reviewed, refereed publications—that fully support, and expand on, the models created by Carl and the other nuclear-winter scientists.
Tellingly, Buttigieg's example of a low-dollar donor was "a grad student digging deep" to "chip in 10 bucks," imagining that even his grass-roots supporters were seeking advanced degrees.
Remarkably, the filming makes City Ballet's account of "La Valse" (led by Sterling Hyltin, Jared Angle and Amar Ramasar) register far more tellingly than it has onstage in New York.
As they recollect the past, an uncomfortable emotional intertwining seems to occur; the scenes that leave Ms. Mara and Mr. Mendelsohn alone are, tellingly, the most interesting and effective ones.
Perhaps most tellingly of all, in an aside on a ruling related to the Affordable Care Act, Kavanaugh suggests that a president could simply choose not to enforce the law's provisions.
Tellingly, the Court after reading stacks of paper noted multiple times that Kesha's abuse allegations are vague, lack factual detail and are devoid of any evidence from doctors or anyone else.
But, tellingly, it is also trying to crack the sales and distribution funnel, noting that most people in the U.K. don't take out a life insurance policy or have sufficient cover.
Two of those shows, tellingly, have "American Crime" in the title, getting at an idea that in talking about this stuff we're also talking about an original sin specific to us.
Perhaps most tellingly, according to a CBS/YouGov poll, 91% of Trump's Ohio voters and 90% of his Pennsylvania voters said the tape didn't change at all how they viewed Trump.
" Tellingly, Trudeau will give a speech at the foundation established in honor of former Republican President Ronald Reagan, a proponent of free trade, "to underscore the interconnectedness of the Canada-U.
Tellingly, it was French diplomatic muscle that was deployed in the (vain) attempt to squeeze concessions from the Iranian government that would convince Mr Trump not to abandon the nuclear deal.
Tellingly, Ms Johnson Sirleaf, a winner of the Nobel peace prize, did not campaign with her deputy and even inaugurated a road along with Mr Weah just days before the election.
It could also be a prelude to a video streaming service that Apple is currently rumored to be working on — which is tellingly also reported to be coming to 100 countries.
Tellingly, one of the most popular briefs published by the EEF found there was little evidence to support most marking schemes employed by schools, which often infuriate teachers with their pernicketiness.
Her narratives are rigorous, partial to the present tense, and untempted by the small change of contemporary realism (abundant and superfluous dialogue in quotation marks, sharply individuated characters, tellingly selected detail).
Perth isn't a city that pays tribute to anything other than a colonial past—a massive public foreshore development completed only last year, Elizabeth Quay, was tellingly named after the Queen.
More tellingly, a portfolio split 2776-22017 between the S&P 500 and a mixture of government and corporate bonds (an oft-used benchmark for institutional portfolios) would have returned 14.8%.
Most tellingly, the overwhelming majority of top super PAC donors contribute directly, within legal campaign finance limits, to the very same candidates they support indirectly through unlimited contributions to super PACs.
Tellingly, Frauke Petry and other Alternative for Germany leaders did not applaud with everyone else during Mr. Lammert's speech when he attacked isolationism or what he termed a "We first" attitude.
Tellingly, the JCPOA sought to delay such breakthroughs for more than a decade by increasing these activities very gradually, past the point when most other meaningful restrictions already would have terminated.
As it happens, both TrackR and its closest competitor Tile have reportedly had disappointing sales in key periods like the holidays, and tellingly Tile has also seen a series of recent changes.
Tellingly, the cohort that most exhibits these symptoms are not millennials but "iGen"—people born from the late 1990s, who grew up with Facebook and Twitter and began to matriculate in 2013.
Most tellingly of all, the study took into account factors like credit scores, income and down payments that would have been known to brokers and lenders when these abusive loans were made.
The CME alumina price, tellingly, never reacted to the May spike in the Chinese price but rather kept grinding lower to today's $305 per tonne, a level last visited in June 2017.
Notably, each order from the Ilian Tape website over 30 euros is complimented by a pack of branded extra length rolling papers, tellingly one of the few pieces of merchandise made available.
This they interpreted as the liquid surface, and tellingly the height of the surface in the main channels was the same as that of the sea, even more than 100 miles away.
Tellingly, as public defender caseloads have soared amid shrinking budgets, prosecutor caseloads appear to have held relatively steady, as funding and hiring of prosecutors generally rose over roughly the last 20 years.
But, tellingly, the public debate over Iraq, both before and after the invasion, did not turn on the neoconservative ideology, ideas, and policy aims that had helped lead the US to war.
Tellingly, even though Venezuela's oil production has dropped sharply, the country still shipped 506,000 barrels per day to the United States in October, according to the most recent Energy Information Administration statistics.
Perhaps more tellingly, Mr. Holder said his wife, Sharon Malone, a prominent Washington obstetrician whose sister was the first black graduate of the University of Alabama, intended to campaign for Mr. Jones.
Tellingly perhaps, the last Ferrari driver to take back-to-back wins in Belgium and Italy, Formula One's two fastest tracks, was Schumacher in his debut season with the team in 1996.
But the entire Mississippi Democratic caucus, a deep minority in the state legislature, has endorsed Biden, and tellingly, over the weekend Lumumba was in Michigan, not Mississippi, to rally voters for Sanders.
Last year Xiaomi's market share slid notably in its native China, as the smartphone maker moved from first to fifth place (and tellingly avoided publishing its own sales figures for the first time).
The track is a Dennis Hopper monologue read over a simmering, hummed instrumental, telling the fable of a small mountain community who are besieged upon by strange folk who tellingly, "came in camouflage".
Tellingly, perhaps, though Mr Kinnear has featured in television dramas and as a spy chief in recent James Bond films, he is most recognised for his stage acting, and is fervent about it.
Tellingly, this vote was unanimous -- with not only from longtime North Korean foes such as the United States and Japan, but also Russia and China, who have been less adversarial to the regime.
Indeed, Georgia tellingly ranks among the worst states to be a kid in 2016, according to the Anne E. Casey Foundation, a philanthropic organization focused on improving the well-being of American children.
Shin-kicking (Speachóireacht) remains a part of the Irish martial arts and is, rather tellingly, referred to as Irish Shin-Kicking or English Shin-Kicking, depending on one's perspective and, no doubt, nationality.
When Woods's name came up arbitrarily during preparations for this week's P.G.A. Championship, Jordan Spieth, for example, seized on it as an opportunity to herald Woods, tellingly separating him from today's best golfers.
" She recalled conversations in 2008 about the role she might play in an Obama presidency — and noted, tellingly, that the garden emerged after "Barack actually won," to which she added: "He won twice.
Tellingly, shares of brokerages and property firms - formerly darlings of Abe's reflation policies - have returned to levels when BOJ Governor Haruhiko Kuroda set in motion a burst of massive stimulus in April 2013.
At the low end of the compensation spectrum, the increasingly high-profile job of social media manager (described by AAMD, tellingly, as "New Media Manager") comes with a mean annual salary of $20173,072.
" But it was communicating the words that came first; after his death, Mr. Adams tellingly paid tribute to the way Sandy "made our American language a thing of beauty whenever he sang it.
Perhaps tellingly, in response to a question asked both in 2016 and this weekend, NTP scientist Bucher said the available data hasn't prompted him to change anything about the way he currently uses cellphones.
Tellingly omitted from the blog post is any mention of IFTTT support, which is likely to remain one of the things that will no longer work once Works with Nest is fully closed down.
Peel split the Tories over the Corn Laws because he thought that free trade was in the national interest (tellingly, Jacob Rees-Mogg, a leading Brexiteer, has taken to condemning Peel for this decision).
Tellingly, the album's finest moments come when Mr West retreats from centre stage, in particular 070 Shake's cameo on "Ghost Town", the only track here likely to rank among fans' favourite Kanye West songs.
Tellingly, Zuckerberg didn't set a time for when he would like 1 billion people to use virtual reality — the medium has been slow to catch on, with some players (like Nokia) pulling out entirely.
Trump derails his own gains by interrupting Hillary and making catty comments, and more tellingly, is not able to return to the more sober, statesmanlike demeanor people hope to see from a presidential candidate.
Tellingly, the working patterns of a woman's parents-in-law made no difference to her child penalty, suggesting that women's decisions are not influenced by preferences that their partners may have formed during childhood.
Michael Bloomberg, the politician who best embodies Harris's ideal, is poised to enter the Democratic primary and almost everyone agrees he has no chance of winning—except, tellingly, the mandarins in elite Washington media.
The play is on more fertile ground in its depiction of how the mission dwellers and the Africans coexist — at least up until a cataclysmic ending that places Ms. Atim tellingly at center stage.
Tellingly, during a talk at the Munich Security Conference last month, Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif deflected a question about the environmentalists, instead changing the subject to the murder of Saudi writer Jamal Khashoggi.
Tellingly, two of the longest lines were for the junkyard and soldering stations where kids could break computers apart to see a motherboard for the first time and then (maybe) put them back together.
In August, officials from 44 states (and a few election companies) beamed into Washington for three days of role-playing exercises on spearphishing attacks, social media manipulation, and, tellingly, DDOS attacks on state websites.
Tellingly, the court has accepted far more cases involving challenges to regulations of conservative speech than previous courts, with a win rate of 69 percent, compared with 21 percent for cases involving liberal speech.
Tellingly, just a few weeks ago — before dangling the possibility of an evangelical Supreme Court justice today — Bolsonaro indicated he would nominate celebrity judge Sergio Moro, a Catholic, for the next Supreme Court vacancy.
Tellingly, it is Amma who attempts to reclaim the story of Millie Calhoun, which glorifies women as sexual victims, by rewriting it to incorporate the violence she's taken to as a twisted form of empowerment.
But it examines none of the issues as tellingly as, for example, the British television series "Black Mirror" – required viewing for anyone who finds "The Circle" and its bland tech hell not quite dystopian enough.
Tellingly, however, a number of native smartphone makers are up in the country, including, notably, Huawei, which saw a 23.3 percent uptick for the quarter, suggesting that the ascendant company ate into Apple's market share.
Perhaps most tellingly, when WHCA President Carol Lee asked the audience to recognize members of the White House press corps, only 30-some people in the entire ballroom of more than 3,000 guests stood up.
There aren't sales statistics available for 2019—tellingly, the company that used to track them no longer seems to exist—but these days, you can't even buy a blank CD at your local record store.
America's national character has been diluted by the enormous political power of Latino immigrants who have, tellingly, changed the automated phone systems so that you have to dial one for Spanish and two for English.
Tellingly, Facebook grew more proactive in Myanmar only after the United Nations and Western organizations accused it of having played a role in spreading the hate and misinformation that contributed to acts of ethnic cleansing.
While theoretically Amazon might have established a fund to help the world of small businesses it has managed to destabilize, the company did not offer and, perhaps more tellingly, the city made no such demand.
And tellingly for a pontiff with a tense relationship with conservative opponents in the United States, he has again passed over America's traditional feeder schools for the College of Cardinals, especially those occupied by conservatives.
Those might be considered long-established traditional British strengths, but just as tellingly for the EU, the UK has been a pioneer in emerging areas of policy, such as information technology, energy and climate change.
MacLean tellingly observes that the Americans were not trying to bring governance to a place that had none, but rather were trying to replace an existing unwritten constitution they didn't understand and indeed barely perceived.
When Waters led a letter to the Federal Reserve in September asking the central bank to refrain from lowering big bank capital requirements, it tellingly contained signatures from only about half the committee's Democrats. Rep.
Most tellingly, the opening dossier of information – in particular, the president's own words in his telephone call – demonstrate that the president directed the president of a foreign country to work with our president's personal lawyer.
The culture got political (and global) in a way that seemed to move beyond her interests or purview, and Wurtzel's tone-deaf comments about 9/11 tellingly got the movie version of Prozac Nation shelved.
The former host of France's most famous literary television program struggled to explain why he and other guests — except, tellingly, the only non-French invitee — laughed with good humor at Mr. Matzneff's preferences for minors.
Tellingly, support for gender equality has continued to rise among all age groups in Europe, where substantial public investments in affordable, high-quality child care and paid leave for fathers and mothers are the norm.
Tellingly, his mentions of Cosby are pretty limited in 2015's Deep in the Heart of Texas; he mostly uses the topic as a throwaway laugh line on the way to other, more substantial bits.
Schiele thrived on conflict, much of it internal, tearing through his anxieties and rages with a visceral abandon — nowhere more tellingly than in "Nude Self-Portrait, Grimacing" from 1910, the earliest stage of his career.
Maybe most tellingly, we learn in an early episode that Frank and Claire watch the same black-and-white noir film ( Double Indemnity, about love and murder) every time one of them runs for office.
And perhaps most tellingly, Facebook is testing a new post composer for its News Feed that actually shows an active camera and camera roll preview to coerce you into sharing Stories instead of a text status.
Tellingly, the two articles found tagged as "disputed" by Facebook in Gizmodo's tests on Friday shared some important characteristics: They're critical of the Trump administration and originate from sites that openly admit to posting fictitious stories.
THE RETURN OF ALUNORTE The CME alumina price, tellingly, never reacted to the May spike in the Chinese price but rather kept grinding lower to today's $305 per tonne, a level last visited in June 2017.
More tellingly, he issued the pardon on Friday night, when he should have been doing what the rest of the nation was doing -- focusing on the menace Hurricane Harvey posed to lives and property in Texas.
The Higg Index has standardized how apparel companies can measure environmental impacts throughout their supply chain, but many companies do not publicly disclose their environmental impacts (or perhaps more tellingly, the volume of clothing they produce).
Tellingly, the majority opinion skips over this self-destroying argument to address a more salient one about the nature of an important Supreme Court decision granting the FCC power to classify broadband providers how it chooses.
Most tellingly, there's the father (Pierre-François Martin-Laval), who's essentially rational, despite his violent outbursts and obsessive behavior, and the mother (Alix Poisson), who's ruled by her emotions and at one point hires a clairvoyant.
French, 19th century painter Louise-Joséphine Sarazin de Belmont — the rare female artist who created open-air landscapes — is represented by four paintings (and is, tellingly of the period, the only female artist besides Rosa Bonheur).
Loudoun County is the lone exception, and tellingly so: It is the wealthiest county in America, one of the fastest-growing, and one of the best-educated; 2202 percent of its residents have a college degree.
More tellingly, the gap between volatility on bearish puts and bullish calls expiring just after June 22 has grown in the last few weeks, as expectations for OPEC to keep its supply strategy unchanged have waned.
In Lawrence, Kennedy tellingly did not use equal protection reasoning but instead found that any bans on consensual sexual behavior between adults, regardless of the genders involved, violate the due process clause's guarantee of personal liberty.
Siobhan Roy (Sarah Snook), tellingly nicknamed "Shiv," is the most appealing (or least odious?) of the bunch, largely because she's the only Roy child who seems to have secured any significant measure of independence from Logan.
Tellingly, Italy is the most assiduous state in claiming EU "geographical indications" (GI), be they the stringent Protected Designation of Origin (eg, Chianti Classico), the looser Protected Geographical Indication (eg, Cantucci Toscani) or the weakest appellation, TSG.
State Senator Michael Gianaris and City Council Member Jimmy Van Bramer, both of whom represent the district, are at odds with the tax breaks, but tellingly mentioned "our subways are crumbling" as the first issue at hand.
Tellingly, Amedeo Modigliani's more obviously alluring 8.33 three-quarter-length portrait "Jeanne Hébuterne (au foulard)" attracted five telephone bidders at Sotheby's, pushing the price to £38.5 million, or about $56.6 million, against an estimate of £28 million.
But the theme of the election was identity — anti-immigration and anti-Islamization — with the charismatic winner, Sebastian Kurz, just 31, tellingly absorbing much of the far-right's agenda to transform his once-mainstream conservative People's Party.
Most tellingly, he argues that since an elected government represents the will of the people — and since civil society should strive to fulfill the people's will — then civil society exists to carry out a ruling party's manifesto.
Most tellingly, the headdress proved so hurtful in the context of the PS1 performance because, as Laâbissi's chosen representation of indigeneity, it stood for what is so often the very inability of indigenous peoples to represent themselves.
Tellingly, fans and broadcasters of male leagues find themselves lauding the feminine-like grace of players such as Stephen Curry and Lionel Messi — whooping at how their studied elegance can outwit their bigger, more flat-footed opponents.
But, tellingly, the bigger New Hampshire surprise was the rise of Klobuchar, something the Iowa results didn't even hint at and that was perhaps driven instead by her highly regarded debate performance between Iowa and New Hampshire.
Although the central pas de deux has been beautifully danced by some casts at New York City Ballet in recent seasons, it's fascinating to see the tellingly different inflections it receives from Patricia Delgado and Mr. Cerdeiro.
And yet, tellingly, it was House Intelligence Chairman Adam Schiff, the face of the impeachment inquiry, who closed out the debate -- with Pelosi reappearing only to preside over the vote, from the podium high above the floor.
The task of avoiding another shutdown is now in the hands of a bipartisan panel that includes some of Congress's most senior lawmakers — and, perhaps more tellingly, lacks the most vocal immigration hard-liners on Capitol Hill.
Tellingly, Kesha never reported any purported abuse or rape to any law enforcement authority, or even to Sony Music, and further swore under oath in another matter, while accompanied by her team of lawyers, that it never occurred.
Tellingly, when Beauchamp accurately described these comments, he was besieged, first by those claiming he'd misquoted Wax (he didn't) and then from those arguing that Wax's racist comments weren't racist because she was focused on culture, not race.
Tellingly, Sanders refused to go anywhere near the many ethical issues that have dogged Clinton, from questions about the Clinton Foundation to the ongoing saga of her decision to keep State Department emails on a personal computer server.
Tellingly, Tencent is also a partner of the NBA, which is in crisis after the Houston Rockets' general manager, Daryl Morey, faced a major backlash in China for tweeting in support of the Hong Kong protesters on Friday.
According to a CNN exit poll, the results were fueled by large numbers of GOP voters who said they were dissatisfied with the government and who, perhaps more tellingly, felt they'd been "betrayed" by the their own party.
The second seed produced more winners (94-083), won more break points (7-3), had a higher first serve percentage (63-62), served more aces (25-10) and, most tellingly, won more points during the contest (218-204).
The author of "A Game of Thrones" — and one of the six cover subjects of T's 2018 Greats issue — gamely answered (or tellingly declined to respond to) a selection of queries from New York Times employees, on film.
He did his job extremely well — Messi did not have a shot until the 64th minute, and made just 15 passes in the first hour — but, more tellingly, none of Messi's teammates was able to take the reins.
Tellingly, the Palestinian leader's urgent trip to Riyadh came less than two weeks after Jared Kushner, President Trump's son-in-law and advisor on the Middle East, visited the Saudi capital to discuss the plan with bin Salman.
Tellingly, President Xi made a stop in Spain on his way to Argentina and then again in Portugal for a two-day stint on his way back from the G-20 meeting, his first state visits to both countries.
Tellingly, Chung won 34 of the 54 rallies that exceeded nine strokes, most memorably when he slid at full-stretch to hook a forehand winner past his opponent to take a 5-3 lead in the third set tiebreak.
Tellingly, President Trump said in his Atlantic interview that he was warded off from a U.N. nomination for Ivanka because of the potential criticism of nepotism — the very thing that has most dogged her White House role since 2017.
It's important to distinguish between these factors, because though the interplay between them has locked out a bunch of Sanders supporters, they're different rules that serve different purposes, and many Sanders supporters are, tellingly, crusading against the wrong one.
Various ideas were proposed by Republicans before the 2016 election, but nothing unified the party—tellingly, the man who became the Republican presidential nominee basically ignored the specifics of the issue, and the base was completely fine with that.
Perhaps most tellingly, a whopping 90 percent of those who reported emotional distress felt that the toll of this election was worse than any other election in the past, offering perspective into the general American psyche right about now.
Tellingly, the Uncle Sam who pops up in her painting "Tea Party" (2012) is a shrunken figure with a hole in his red-striped pants, sipping on his tea as two right-wingers seated beside him assemble a bomb.
Tellingly, the system is designed to work with both a traditional steering arrangement, wherein the wheel is physically linked to the steering mechanisms, and with a so-called steer-by-wire system, wherein steering wheel input is electronically relayed.
Tellingly, the pleas for recounts have gained no support from the Clinton campaign, which has concluded, along with outside experts, that it is highly unlikely the outcome would change even after an expensive and time-consuming review of ballots.
WASHINGTON — A year ago, few "on the outside" — a phrase perhaps tellingly favored in the Trump White House — would have guessed that Kellyanne Conway would be the one hanging on as other high-profile aides pull their rip cords.
Tellingly, Yang, who is never in one place for very long, often makes use of the kinds of household items people only acquire when they have settled somewhere: cans of artichoke hearts, umbrella stands, fridge magnets, towels, tomato paste.
Now independent commentators and opposition figures alike are sure the changes to the security services are also happening — and even more tellingly, Putin's spokesperson refused to rule out the idea when given the perfect opportunity to kill the story.
Though The Apprentice was always sold as being the Trump show, and though the series provided for a revival of his pop culture fortunes, the show's highest-rated seasons (its first three), tellingly, didn't have as much Trump as what followed.
Vettel and Raikkonen, who will line up fourth, had ample time in the third and final qualifying phase to attempt a quicker lap but tellingly stayed in their garage, meaning the session's final minutes wound down without a driver on track.
" Luke's attorney, Christine Lepera, said in a statement regarding the Facebook post: "Tellingly, Kesha continues to evade the under oath sworn testimony of no abuse from her and her mother – and the video of their testimony speaks a thousand words.
Perhaps more tellingly, police estimates of the number of active insurgents in the area have also risen, despite the killing of more than 800 of them over the past five years, and despite the fact that infiltration from Pakistan has slowed.
Tellingly, several of the states that sued to block the Clean Power Plan's implementation—arguing that the rules were too stringent—are nonetheless still meeting their emissions reduction goals, because they've increased their reliance on natural gas and green energy.
Tellingly, Levandowski's setup did not include the spinning LIDAR sensor on the roof that has become the most defining characteristic of self-driving cars, nor did it include the extremely detailed digital maps that other autonomous vehicle operators rely on.
" Rosen recently and tellingly argued that the transformations if Roe is overruled or gutted "may be less dramatic, in practice, than liberals fear" because "the main effect would be restricting the access of poor women who have little access today.
Maybe more tellingly, a subtype of perfectionism known as "socially prescribed perfectionism"—which the study authors describe as feeling like the people around you have excessive, uncontrollable, and unfair expectations of you—jumped by 32 percent during that same time period.
Tellingly absent from either the Gillespie or Guadagno campaigns is any of the "rigged economy" rhetoric Trump used to build support among working class voters, much less any concrete solutions to make our out-of-whack economy work for working families.
Tellingly, Trump first made a name for himself by advocating the death penalty for defendants in the Central Park Five jogger trial, a case with bitter echoes of the Scottsboro Boys, complete with exonerations bestowed only after collective decades in prison.
Tellingly, Justice Breyer said that adopting the Second Circuit's approach in the Newman case "is really more likely to change the law that people have come to rely upon" than to keep it as it has been since the Dirks ruling.
Perhaps most tellingly of all, "grown-ups" seem totally incapable of influencing Trump's behavior with regard to North Korea, where the president has veered wildly between irresponsible threats, bizarre credulity about the country's dictator, and boasts about totally nonexistent diplomatic breakthroughs.
Tellingly, the study found that while many right-wing populist parties have prominent female figures among their leadership — such as Marine Le Pen in France, Beata Szydlo in Poland and Alice Weidel in Germany — women are conspicuous in their absence elsewhere.
Tellingly, one of the book's most poignant moments comes after he dies, when the photographer Diane Arbus knocks on the door of Weegee's friend Wilma Wilcox and finds herself ankle-deep in 8,000 prints, diving in to save the best.
There are several television channels in North Korea, but all are state-owned and cover different subject matters, from news (the only source of news comes from state news agency KCNA) to educational material and, tellingly, a dedicated sports channel.
Tellingly, this same kind of baffling exclusion also happened with Target's box set for Star Wars Rebels, an animated Lucasfilm show that stars two integral female characters; the box set omitted them in favor of a Stormtrooper and a clone trooper captain.
Most tellingly, when Chuck tells Jimmy he's quitting law, Jimmy is so consumed by love and his commitment to his brother that he confesses to tampering with the Mesa Verde documents, just to bolster Chuck's confidence and get him back in the office.
Jeanne M. Christensen, a partner at Wigdor LLP—the firm representing the women who first filed a class-action lawsuit against Uber in November that the ridesharing company failed to recognize—sees Uber's announcement on Tuesday as a positive step, but tellingly insufficient.
Most tellingly, this happened in the case of the Boston Marathon bombing, when investigators, analysts, and journalists spent months combing through the Tsarnaev brothers' Dagestani origins, rather than looking at what ultimately radicalized them as they failed to acclimate to the United States.
More tellingly still, the share of it devoted to capital expenditure has slipped dramatically: for the navy this dropped from 13% in 2014 to below 8% last year; for the air force from nearly 18% a decade ago to below 12% in 2017.
But Smith has been working with Kano and Dave—and perhaps even more tellingly, he produced Tinchy Stryder's two number 1 singles, back in 2009, a reminder that grime didn't just drop into the mainstream out of the clear blue sky yesterday.
Tellingly the Google-owned company also now has a section of its Health website labeled 'For Patients', where it describes its intention to create "meaningful patient involvement" and claims it is "incorporating patient and public involvement (PPI) at every stage of our projects".
" Reporter Mark Landler added, tellingly, "The vibe, to be sure, is less Manhattan than tristate..." Washington Post reporter Robert Costa made a similar point Thursday, tweeting that "Trump has long history of keeping around aides w/ a sharp edge, who channel him.
Tellingly—indeed, encouragingly—the results suggest that these dented the Tory vote not just among the Muslims whose compatibility with British democracy Mr Goldsmith implicitly questioned, but also the Hindu voters at whom, among others, such insinuations appeared to be recklessly targeted.
There will be defectors—some from high-tax states concerned about the bill's changes to state and local tax deductions; some concerned about other deductions; none, tellingly, concerned about its effect on the budget—but there has been little arm-twisting this week.
It should perhaps come as no surprise that these comments were made at an international investment conference -- tellingly dubbed "Davos in the Desert" -- with a glittering VIP guest list and a large delegation of foreign journalists, who would normally struggle to obtain visas.
Tellingly, most offered a political response: Hillary Clinton singled out Republicans; Martin O'Malley, a former Maryland governor, mentioned the National Rifle Association; Senator Bernie Sanders turned his ire on Wall Street; and Lincoln Chafee, a former Rhode Island governor, discussed the coal lobby.
Tellingly, the premiere of the film, scheduled to take place on a big screen at Bohemians 1905's stadium, was forced to be cancelled after right-wing supporters of other Prague clubs made threats towards the organisers if they dared show it.
Keir Starmer, the overwhelming favorite to win the leadership race who has based his campaign around "unity" above all else, tellingly attempted to bridge the divide: He offered rhetorical support for trans and nonbinary people while declining to sign on to the pledges.
Tellingly, in something akin to what linguists call a mondegreen, Bach at several passages apparently misconstrued what the children — in this reconstruction of the scene — had said, and emended a scriptural verse's legitimate Lutheran rendering to a similar-sounding but unattested wording.
Tellingly, several of these new shows have focused on adolescence, a time when a girl's body is simultaneously ally (it has newfound abilities) and foe (it changes in uncontrollable ways, triggers unpredictable moods and draws attention that may or may not be welcome).
Letter To the Editor: "Tribes Surviving on Coal Funds Hold Tight to Trump's Pledges" (front page, April 2) tellingly illustrates the risks of dependency, in this case the dependence of some Native American tribes on revenue from coal mining on their reservations.
Mr. Dean deserves credit for chronicling the fraught byways of Will's moral reckoning, and he is ably supported by a large company that includes Major "Moogy" Sumner as a Dharug patriarch and Jeremy Sims as a disruptive English expat tellingly named Smasher.
She delivered the speech, tellingly, not in the House of Commons, but to an audience of reporters and European ambassadors, at the very lectern where Margaret Thatcher, back in 1988, trumpeted Britain's new membership of the same single market from which Mrs.
Mr. Dean deserves credit for chronicling the fraught byways of Will's moral reckoning, and he is ably supported by a large company that includes Major "Moogy" Sumner as a Dharug patriarch and Jeremy Sims as a disruptive English expat tellingly named Smasher.
The "prediction" is that there is no prediction to be made at this point because there is no consensus about either what problem is (or what problems are) most important to solve or — more tellingly — how "the GOP's principles" suggest solving such problems.
As a point of pride, he added the letter "f" for "fra" ("brother") before his name at the bottom center of the canvas — tellingly, the only signature of his career — painted as if it were formed by the pool of the Baptist's blood.
This option largely comes down to a woman named Lisa Friel, whose league office is adorned with portraits of giants: the former Giants quarterback Phil Simms, the current Giants quarterback Eli Manning — and, most tellingly, Robert M. Morgenthau, the august former Manhattan district attorney.
When approached by reporters and asked if the FCC intends to filter out the slew of blatantly counterfeit comments—many reportedly penned by the likes of "Wonder Woman" and "Joseph Stalin"—both Chairman Pai and his spokesperson tellingly refused to provide an answer straight up.
Tellingly, North Korean dictator Kim Jong Un – who rules with an iron fist and is the only one with the power to approve substantive concessions to the U.S. – did not even meet with Pompeo Friday or Saturday, although he has met with Pompeo before.
Tellingly, the White House and other leading Republicans responded to the announcement of the vote not with satisfaction that their calls for a full vote and more process have been heeded, but rather with anger, seemingly more at losing yet another political talking point.
Tellingly, D'Agostino uses a palette knife to lay down his colors, which more reliably retains the body, vibrancy, and translucence of oil paint than the flattening tendencies of a brush; it is also more difficult to control in the making of such precise shapes.
Most tellingly, more women than men reported changing their running routines over concerns about harassment; 63% of women said they chose their running route because they feel it's a route where they'd be less likely to face someone who might want to harm them.
Tellingly, there are also heartfelt messages from the local Methodist Church, a "Christian brother" and a "Jewish couple", for Asad Shah was a Muslim, a member of the Ahmadiya sect, and a man who by all accounts believed firmly in embracing people of all faiths.
Tellingly, U.S. shale producers have not been a part of the agreement to cut output to support prices which have hovered around the $60 per barrel mark; on Monday, benchmark Brent crude was trading at $61.97 per barrel and West Texas Intermediate (WTI) at $56.71.
A few beats later, the killer is on the loose and holding a fork (an appalling, tellingly quotidian detail) to the throat of a woman; by the time the scene ends, he and the hostage are dead and Takakura is bleeding, having been grievously wounded.
In addition, and tellingly, two other anti-abortion measures advanced in the Florida House that same week—HB 233 and HB 1411—both of which are similar to harsh abortion restrictions passed in Texas in 2013 and currently being reviewed by the Supreme Court.
Tellingly, just as May was setting out her pitch for an internationalist Britain built on cooperation, her finance minister Philip Hammond told parliament that Britain could get tough if a comprehensive FTA with the EU is not forthcoming, and slash business taxes in retaliation.
The show tries to comment on the ways Suzanne is manipulated because of her fragility and childlike nature, but the writers tellingly never give Suzanne a diagnosis, which lets the writers have free reign to pick and choose the ways her mental illness manifests.
Perhaps tellingly, though, he did include this bit in his "addendum," updating his initial closed-door testimony: Finally, as of this writing, I cannot specifically recall if I had one or two phone calls with President Trump in the September 6-9 time frame.
Tellingly, Mr. de Blasio began his week out of town, the tail end of a long weekend of appearances in Maryland, Texas and Washington and the latest in his ongoing — and as yet futile — attempt to establish himself as a player on the national stage.
Calling his latest feature "a critique of any extremist kind of movement — both on the left and right," the director feigns a take-no-prisoners mindset while kowtowing to cis-gender male visions of non-stop sapphic snogging (his cinematographer, tellingly, is also male).
But, tellingly, Mr. Le Maire told French radio that he planned to discuss an economic stimulus plan with other European officials at a meeting a week later, on March 16 — a seeming eternity in the face of a rapidly spreading outbreak with no discernible boundaries.
Castro called Trump's approach to trade "erratic" and "haphazard," while Harris compared the president's trade policy to the man behind the curtain in "The Wizard of Oz."    More tellingly, though, none of the candidates said they would immediately scrap Trump's tariffs if they took office.
National Review was once staunchly anti-Trump, and many of its writers remain so, but, tellingly, N.R. editor Rich Lowry just had a column in Politico called "The Never Trump Delusion" arguing that Trump is not that big a departure from the Republican mainstream.
Tellingly, Time's youngest Person of the Year before Thunberg was Charles Lindbergh, selected in 1927 at the age of 25 (the first Woman of the Year, Wallis Simpson, was named in 1936, one of only four women given the title as individuals before 1999).
That matched his season-low four-game average, from December 23, 2015, to January 2, 2016; tellingly, Curry battled calf and shin injuries during that period, which suggests that there may be a link between Curry's more recent leg injuries and his shooting slump.
Tellingly, most of the money went unclaimed: In the end, the DOJ awarded less than $3 billion of the $10 billion it had at its disposal, and most states that took the money admitted that they were already inclined to adopt the policies the grants encouraged.
Almost as soon as Blake began to get attention for his lively deconstructions of dance music (his breakout EP and single were tellingly titled "CMYK," as in the full-color printing scheme), he seemed inclined to turn away toward the grayer expanse of melancholy singer-songwriter balladry.
Alas, the British public was never made privy to the results of Charles' six O-levels — including English language and English literature — although we know he had to retake maths (perhaps tellingly, his creditable 'B' in History and 'C' in French A-level were made public).
At the Tuesday hearing, Judge Ann Aiken listened to oral arguments from Julia Olson, the kids' attorney, as well as those from lawyers for the US Department of Justice and the fossil fuel industry -- who, tellingly and somewhat tragically, argued in virtual lockstep on this issue.
Tellingly, the producers (a posse that again includes Ryan Seacrest) appear a tad flummoxed by how to build a show around Kylie's life -- how to make "Life of Kylie" (rhymes with "Riley," a reference the target audience isn't apt to remember) function as an actual series.
Perhaps more likely is general dissatisfaction with lower rates of pay from Uber pool rides and Uber's lack of an in-app tipping feature (versus Lyft having in-app tipping) — tellingly, this week Uber finally said it will start allowing riders to tip drivers via the app.
Tellingly, it was Russia's Vladimir Putin who was among the first world leaders to call and offer his support to Erdogan in the days after the botched coup, a fact Erdogan couldn't help but compare to the lack of response from the US and much of Europe.
Tellingly, he has even embraced the longstanding supply-side dogma against tax credits, which is why the pro-family policy he unveiled this week only offers a tax deduction for child care — one that disproportionately benefits working mothers in what we might call the Ivanka bracket.
In fact, there's already an app on the market that has the potential to do far more good for cause of affirmative consent than any pre-sex contract—though tellingly, it's marketed as an app for intimacy and exploration, not one about "proving" the presence of consent.
And his territorial gains are shown in bright red — I promise it's there, but, tellingly, you have to squint to see it, in small areas near Latakia, Aleppo, and Daraa: "The areas captured by the regime are small in this zoomed-out map," Horowitz tells me.
These networks end up setting public agendas and shaping legislative choices: Tellingly, each of these networks extends across dozens of US states and plays a slightly different role in advancing shared goals — weakening unions, retrenching regulations and labor market protections, lowering taxes, and reducing government spending.
Tellingly, despite the vast diversity of content found on Pornhub, consumers are more likely to turn to tamer content: For the past three years, lesbian porn — a category generally considered to be less hardcore than its heterosexual counterpart — has been viewed more frequently than any other genre.
Sally Yates, then the acting attorney general, told the White House that Flynn had in fact spoken about sanctions, but it wasn't until 18 days after her warning that the national security adviser was asked to step down—tellingly, after the Washington Post published a story about the incident.
Tellingly, Trump now seems to be gravitating toward trying to declare a state of emergency, which wouldn't get him the money for his wall and would probably tie the project up in court till long after Trump's presidency, but at least Trump could declare victory without giving anything up.
The purchase, Gauci went on to explain, stood out in his mind because the customer—whom Gauci tellingly identified as speaking the "Libyan language"—had entered the store on November 23, 1988, and gathered items without seeming to care about the size, gender, or color of any of it.
The first Magicians book came out in 2009, but the relationship in Grossman's books that most clearly echoes Brideshead Revisited, the friendship between mostly straight protagonist Quentin Coldwater and the queer and tellingly named Eliot Waugh, follows Evelyn Waugh's lead in keeping any potential romantic angles mostly subtextual.
" Tellingly, as it concerns Lynch's decision to seek the death penalty for Roof, forcing a trial, Rivero wrote: "Whereas former Attorney General Eric HolderEric Himpton HolderJuan Williams: Democrats finally hit Trump where it hurts GOP governor vetoes New Hampshire bill to create independent redistricting commission Why target Tucker Carlson?
A generation of interpreters began to integrate the two trends: Simon Rattle, tellingly, rose to prominence in Britain with three groups: a traditional orchestra, the City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra; a new-music group, the London Sinfonietta; and a period-instrument ensemble, the Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment.
The document (which condensed into a tellingly apt essence — "people data… Facebook information" — above, when we ran it through Word It Out's word cloud tool) would probably come in handy if you needed to put a small child to sleep, given Facebook repeats itself a distressing amount of times.
Millie, tellingly, is named for Millamant, the heroine of Congreve's "The Way of the World," whose most famous scene has her and her suitor negotiating in detail the terms and conditions of their love match—demonstrating the charm and importance of a social contract over unfettered Hobbesian individualism.
But perhaps most tellingly, it was announced with no consultation with America's closest allies, following the same pattern of unilateral action he favored when he announced in 2017 that the United States would pull out of the Paris climate accord and then the Iran nuclear deal the following year.
But tellingly, in a grumbling letter about the failure of his 1933 expedition, Wager told his friend and fellow geologist John Auden that Auden had some kind of nervous tic but declined to say what it was, leaving Auden "beside himself with worry" as he fretted about it.
WASHINGTON — The fate of President Trump's $5.7 billion demand for a border wall is now in the hands of a 17-member bipartisan panel that includes some of the most senior members of Congress and, perhaps more tellingly, lacks the most vocal immigration hard-liners on Capitol Hill.
The word "fuck" is tacked to every other line of dialogue, whether it belongs there or not, and the set-piece gross-out is focussed, tellingly, on the onanistic male; here, in short, is a degraded " Beauty and the Beast ," with jerk-off jokes instead of a singing teapot.
Even more tellingly, Anonymous addresses speechwriters' specialties—the process of briefing public officials on complex issues and the impact of presidents' words on Americans' attitudes—while reverently describing a visit to a speechwriters' shrine: the shelves in the White House library reserved for bound volumes of presidential papers.
Indeed, the rival Brexiteers hated each other even more than they did their opponents—or the EU. On one side stood Mr Farage and his millionaire backer, Arron Banks (whose diary of the campaign is tellingly called "The Bad Boys of Brexit"), bent on talking about immigration and little else.
But perhaps most tellingly, liver cirrhosis death rates in 2012 were significantly higher in several European countries than in America: The US's age-adjusted rate for men 15 and older was 14.9 per 100,000 people, while the UK's rate was 16, France's was 16.4, Germany's was 18.8, and Denmark's was 63.
Tellingly, while Le Pen does well in France's presidential elections, there are only two Front National members in its National Assembly, which elects by district à la the US or UK. So even if Trump were to be persuaded by his followers and embrace single-payer, he'd face a tough task.
While assuming less immediately visible forms, this quarantine-surveillance model continued to develop over the ensuing decades, especially as the 1965 Immigration and Nationality Act abolished the quota provision and thus granted more erstwhile "undesirables" entry (though, tellingly, homosexual men and women would not receive the same privilege until 1990).
The first gallery at the FIT exhibition shows how the earliest denim clothes were often uniforms: it includes a prison uniform, sailor's overalls and, most tellingly, the sort of blue work-shirt made of chambray (a cousin of denim) that inspired the term "blue-collar worker" back in the 1920s.
As president, Mr Obama has broadly neglected the transatlantic relationship, but tellingly even he has been moved to urge Britain not to perform such a self-mutilating move (damaging to his country too insofar as a dynamic and effective Europe is in American interests) as to throw all this away.
A few moments later, Tarantino stands, unsheathes an LP and drops the needle on side two of Rod Stewart's "Every Picture Tells a Story," then raises his glass to Ninja and Visser in a facetious toast — but they already have their backs to him and, tellingly, the volume is significantly lower.
The law is only a start: Tellingly, to ensure its passage, certain provisions were edited out of the final bill, including a section to allow the formation of Jewish-only communities that would have effectively denied the mixing of peoples and individuals that is Israel's aspiration and also its reality.
Of course, being a human and being an artist are in many ways continuous, and tellingly, both films end the same way, with a man at a table, looking into the camera with great melancholy and saying, "Today, too, I experienced something I hope to understand in a few days."
Both sides concluded the first round of talks promising further discussions, though somewhat tellingly the North Korean delegation returned to the Panmungak (a North Korean building in the infamous demilitarized zone that separates North and South Korea) on the north side of the border for lunch, according to NBC News.
Tellingly, though, Musk acknowledged how difficult it was to squeeze that extra 22020 kilowatt hours into a battery that size, and said the company will not put a battery larger than 2100 kWh in the Model S, X, or 250, meaning the company will have to find another way to push range higher.
Not only are the Russians still desperate not to burn their bridges with Trump -- tellingly, the counter-sanctions were announced after the US measures were passed on the Hill, but before the presidential signature, so they can be sold as a response to "Congress's sanctions" -- these are eye-catching but essentially empty measures.
Out of the law's total $1.7 billion budget, $1.1 billion was allocated for law enforcement: more boats, planes, and weapons with which to fight drug traffickers on land, sea, and air; more federal agents and boots on the ground in the ever-expanding drug war—and, tellingly, more prosecutions and more jail cells.
And, tellingly, much of their political relevance: one of the most moving images in the show, despite its naiveté (or perhaps because of it), is an illustration from Century of the Common Man in which two families, one black and one white, create a symmetrical composition dominated by red, brown, and blue.
Tellingly, given that he spends his half of the episode employing two women as mechanisms for self-discovery, he tells Delphine that he let Alison carry all the grief from their son's death, to the point where he made her feel literally insane, so that he wouldn't have to deal with it himself.
Tellingly, much of the media coverage and social media reactions chastised Tlaib — who later apologized — as an unruly, ungrateful Bernie Bro who should be thankful to Clinton for clearing a path for women in politics, rather than a feminist whose beliefs about class and imperialism are fundamentally at odds with Clinton's politics.
Tellingly, one can never actually even see all of the painting at one time, since the frontal view actually obscures the effects of its heavy impasto (rendered undetectable in photographic reproductions), which at points reaches several inches in depth, curving over colors underneath, and on close inspection reveals a high-gloss finish on its underside.
Tellingly, he says he chose wine based on two different but strong factors: Italy is the first or second largest wine producer in the world with more than 0003,000 wineries, and the Italian online wine market was at only 0.2 per cent penetration and had "huge opportunities of growth in the next few years".
Perhaps most tellingly, when the Financial Times interviewed her for a May 31 article about her monetary policy views, she chose to conduct the interview at the Trump Hotel in Washington, DC. She also suggested that Mar-a-Lago might be an ideal place to host her proposed international conference on the gold standard.
" U.S. ups pressure on Al-Shabaab in Somalia Number of dead still unknown Tellingly, Al-Shabaab's propaganda video uses the Kenyan authorities' own words against them, highlighting the inaccurate KDF press release sent in the immediate aftermath of the attack, and accusing the KDF of "distorting the truth and blatantly lying to their public.
Treating abortion care as separate from other services is an obvious attempt to shut down Planned Parenthood, which serves 41 percent of women who rely on Title X. Tellingly, the changes also make it easier for fake health centers that actively deceive women to keep them from seeking abortions to receive Title X funding.
In fact, we've seen some very high-profile examples of just how dangerous it can be to try to quickly charge batteries that exist today: The Note 7 fiasco at Samsung (which tellingly is an investor in StoreDot) highlighted how graphite, one of the key materials in lithium-ion batteries, overheats when charged too fast.
Weighty or delicate, his objects have a commanding bodily presence and that is why his three-dimensional works interact so tellingly with Lopez-Huici's photographs, for among her most frequent subjects are heavy, at times obese, nude women unabashedly assuming the poses that have long been used to reinforce conventional standards of feminine beauty.
Tellingly, whenever Chomsky has been wheeled out to comment on the foment in America and the world this year, he's sounded little different to most of the commentariat—like everyone else, he points out that there is unease over globalization, an anomie in the citizenry, we're more isolated, oppressed, and grumpy than ever before.
For The Great Hack, directors Karim Amer and Jehane Noujaim (who made the 2013 documentary The Square, about the Arab Spring) talk to experts, journalists, and — most tellingly — whistleblowers and former employees at Cambridge Analytica, the data firm that came under fire for its work with both Trump's campaign and the Leave campaign during the Brexit referendum.
Tellingly, the campaign in these final weeks was dominated by two stories that turned out to be non-stories: FBI Director James Comey's infamous letter to Congress saying new emails had been discovered in the bureau's investigation of Clinton and WikiLeaks publishing the emails of Clinton campaign chair John Podesta, which ultimately produced more smoke than fire.
But the book does flag, tellingly if briefly, when, near the end, she turns the story over to fellow-addicts, in particular four people she tracks down who had once passed through Seneca House, a "rag tag rehab" established in the nineteen-seventies in a converted motel on the banks of the Potomac River in Maryland.
The Whitney show underscores too tellingly the lesson of the Guggenheim's Hilma af Klint exhibition, that the largely all-male narrative of modernist abstraction needs reworking, with much more credit to female artists and their implicitly feminist embrace of spirituality, a field of study broached by the art historian Susan L. Aberth in her essay in the Phoenix catalog.
The less famous characters include Harman and Margaret Blennerhasett, Anglo-Irish newlyweds who lit out for the territory because they were uncle and niece; the Revolutionary War veteran Rufus Putnam, whose frontier library tellingly featured Milton's "Paradise Lost"; and Cajoe, an enslaved Virginia man who gained his freedom in Ohio, preached the Gospel and lived past his 100th birthday.
" Even more tellingly, the group "we" has given way to an "I," a passionately imperfect character who's impulsive, sensual, easily hurt but also proud and a little cerebral: "I overthink your punctuation use," she admits in "The Louvre," a song about the rush of infatuation and obsession for a guy she already knows is "not my type.
Tellingly, Senate Energy Chairman Lisa MurkowskiLisa Ann MurkowskiThe Hill's Morning Report - Progressives, centrists clash in lively Democratic debate Senate braces for brawl over Trump's spy chief Congress kicks bipartisan energy innovation into higher gear MORE (R-Alaska) snuck this amendment into the bill during a floor voice vote that included about a dozen other mostly uncontroversial amendments.
According to a 2015 Bloomberg Businessweek survey that tracked M.B.A. graduates from 2007 to 0003, the women earned, six to eight years later, on average 20 percent less than the guy who sat next to them in class; even more tellingly, female graduates of Columbia's business school, a significant proportion of whom land on Wall Street, earned nearly 40 percent less.
I think the first generation of Transformers was built on really solid foundation with a fully realized and cosmic backdrop—developed by Jim Shooter, editor in chief of Marvel at the time, and further developed by Denny O'Neil and, most tellingly, Bob Budiansky—a great cast, each with their own fleshed-out character bio, and a cool dual-toy concept to boot.
It's Sophia who eventually uploads Dodge's consciousness into a computer after he spends decades languishing on a server because no one can figure out how to read the data that now makes up his brain, and Sophia who becomes responsible for protecting Dodge from the menacing (and perhaps too tellingly named) Elmo "El" Shepherd, a tech billionaire who's obsessed with immortality.
In July, DeVos held a series of meetings to discuss Title IX. She met with groups representing survivors of sexual assault, but tellingly, she also met with the groups Families Advocating for Campus Equality (FACE) and Stop Abusive and Violent Environments (SAVE), which advocate for the rights of people accused of sexual assault, and the National Coalition for Men (NCFM), a men's rights group.
Tellingly, a number of liberal economists, including Obama CEA chairs Jason Furman and Austan Goolsbee, cheered his appointment when it was first rumored— not because they agree with him, but because he's a fundamentally serious thinker who could bring some rigor to the Trump White House: If true, Kevin is an excellent pick--he is committed to research and dialogue plus understands policy/politics.
Sensible Brexiteers are tellingly welcoming the judgment, the essence of which is that the executive's "royal prerogative" does not empower it to overrule the 1972 act taking Britain into the EU. The result is a victory for parliamentary democracy and a credit to Gina Miller (pictured above), the businesswoman who bravely brought the case in the first place (she has been showered with death threats for her troubles).
Tellingly, the same day Director Cordray made his ill-considered claim that consumers in the states that ban small-dollar loans "seem to get by just fine," at least 11,600 consumers in the 14 states without small-dollar loans went online to seek such loans, according to data my organization, the Community Financial Services Association of America, received directly from the non-prime credit bureau Clarity Services Inc.
Tellingly, what Sanders did get was Marianne Williamson's backing, and she's arguing that the Democrats supporting Biden are launching a coup worse than anything attempted by Russia: This kind of thinking is a bigger problem for the Sanders operation than people realize: If you treat voters and officials in the party you want to lead as the enemy, a lot of people in that party aren't going to trust you to lead them.
" He perhaps more tellingly had a broader instinct to see unauthorized migration as not just a problem on its own terms but as a root cause of a much wider set of social ills, telling the Los Angeles Times in the wake of the Rodney King riots that "the problem of immigration enforcement — making sure we have a fair set of rules and then enforce them — I think that's certainly relevant to the problems we're seeing in Los Angeles.
Tellingly, the broader issues explored in "Swiped" are so much in the public consciousness right now that they're peripherally the subject of two dramatic projects that premiered just this weekend: "You," a Lifetime series about a stalker who uses social media to try to seduce his prey; and "Sierra Burgess is a Loser," a Netflix movie in which a self-conscious teenage girl assumes a classmate's identity as she uses her cellphone to flirt with an attractive boy.
" Perhaps most tellingly — attorneys representing congressional Democrats, including then-Senate Majority Leader Harry ReidHarry Mason Reid2020 Democrats fight to claim Obama's mantle on health care Reid says he wishes Franken would run for Senate again Panel: How Biden's gaffes could cost him against Trump MORE (D-Nev.) and House Democratic Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.), argued in their brief that "the approach suggested by Idaho and the Solicitor General would upend centuries of settled understanding and would undermine the effectiveness of Medicaid.
Industry titans like Wynn hunted for donations to Trump's RNC, even though Wynn hasn't even said whether he voted for him in November and isn't technically a member of the RJC ("Did Steve Wynn hit you up for some money yet?" one top fundraiser asked another on Saturday.) And perhaps most tellingly, top Jewish Republican donors showed little eagerness to blame Trump for occasionally crossing them, such as when he slow-walked acknowledging the anti-Semitism behind the Holocaust this month or the recent threats at Jewish community sites this week.
Consider the fact that Durex happens to manufacture and distribute pleasure-oriented products like vibrators and lubricant, which are prominently displayed on the company's website, yet that hasn't stopped Facebook from partnering with the company on custom ad campaigns.) And then there's the fact that sex education itself seems to be getting more explicit, with a number of self-described education projects like HappyPlayTime (rejected by the iOS App Store), MakeLoveNotPorn, and OMGYes (which, tellingly, specifically notes it's not available as an app) veering into more X-rated territory.
Tellingly, the day after this happened, Democratic Senators Jeff Merkely of Oregon, Tom UdallThomas (Tom) Stewart UdallDemocrats, environmentalists blast Trump rollback of endangered species protections Republicans should get behind the 28th Amendment New Mexico says EPA abandoned state in fight against toxic 'forever chemicals' MORE of New Mexico and Bernie SandersBernie SandersJoe Biden faces an uncertain path Bernie Sanders vows to go to 'war with white nationalism and racism' as president Biden: 'There's an awful lot of really good Republicans out there' MORE of Vermont, incensed that their colleague had been silenced, both read from the Coretta Scott King letter, uninterrupted.
Still, there does appear to be something uniquely millennial-parent about LaVar Ball, who in addition to hatching Big Baller Brand, the family apparel line, has created a sports talent agency, Ball Sports Group, whose sole purpose will be to represent Lonzo and his two brothers, high school standouts who are expected to follow their brother to U.C.L.A. Perhaps most tellingly in this regard, Mr. Ball reportedly demanded that any apparel company intent on signing Lonzo license the Big Baller Brand, telling USA Today that a deal including all three sons would have to yield them $1 billion.
Buck and his team never seemed to figure out the superhero they had in Iron Fist, and the reviews, which hit right when Inhumans began production, were awful (it should also be noted that the show was announced in November 2016 and began filming March 2017 — a really short, perhaps rushed, turnaround for a show): Tellingly, the early reviews of Inhumans echo the main problems critics had with Iron Fist, notably the lifeless script and flat storytelling, as pointed out in IGN's review: The clunky dialogue sounds like a first draft, not the sharp material you'd expect from the MCU.
In the long run, the techno-utopian vision that these companies have crafted for voice AI — one that revolves around machines that will help us become our better selves — must counteract a legacy of pop culture narratives populated by evil, or chillingly value-neutral, computers, in addition to broader societal misgivings about AI. (Already scientists, entrepreneurs, and think tanks have begun to worry about the use of AI in autonomous weaponry and its Strangelovian potential for precipitating nuclear war.) While HAL was just one of the many plot elements previewed in the original 21 trailer for 220: A Space Odyssey, in 20113 it is, tellingly, the thrust of the newly recut trailer for the rerelease.
This is an administration, after all, that has proposed to shrink national monuments and reduce protections for the imperiled sage grouse in order to accommodate the oil, gas and coal industries; that is moving to open up the species-rich coastal plain of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge to drilling; that plans to make available now-protected waters along America's Pacific and Atlantic coasts for the same purpose; that proposes to sacrifice parts of Alaska's Tongass National Forest to logging; that, most tellingly, aims to weaken the Endangered Species Act, approved in 1973 with Richard Nixon's signature in what seems a distant era when there was fairly deep bipartisan support for environmental values.

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