So I think audio is going to be titanically important.
|
|
The movies he titanically struggled to make all along included a couple of misfires.
|
|
Square Enix has announced Dragon Quest Walk, a new smartphone entry in the titanically successful JRPG series.
|
|
"This advice is not only cynical but also titanically stupid, and bad news for the people who love you," I thought, quietly.
|
|
Disney owns a handful of titanically successful IP universes—Pixar, Marvel, and Star Wars, not to mention Mickey and the gang—and soon a distribution channel to pump them into people's homes.
|
|
These are the rules I first learned from William K. Zinsser in the college classes on which he would base "On Writing Well," and then from my titanically influential boss at The Atlantic, William Whitworth.
|
|
And yet for reasons unfathomable to me, the people who made this movie don't trust what they've got: the tale of one of the crucial fashion imaginations in Roy Halston Frowick, who went, titanically, by that middle name.
|
|
What Patti Blagojevich is trying to do here is titanically transparent: She is appealing to Trump's vanity and his innate belief that a "deep state" is operating within the government and attacking innocent people like him (and Rod Blagojevich).
|
|
They see someone with a romantic view of himself in the world—he once wrote, "The surest escape from the mundane is to teleport into the tragic realm"—who is also titanically self-absorbed, and desperate never to appear reactive.
|
|
The artist Doug Wheeler is known for creating simple-seeming but titanically tough to achieve environments in which light and space are experienced in a manner usually reserved for the realms of mystical vision or psychedelic drugs: as things in themselves.
|
|
Screenshot via TMZ Ray J is, generally, kind of an asshole—something long known before his titanically petty 2013 single "I Hit It First," a pseudo-diss track aimed at Kanye West and Ray J's former sex tape partner Kim Kardashian.
|
|
All these ingredients were titanically encapsulated in a dinner Mr. Harrison once shared with Orson Welles, which involved, he wrote, "a half-pound of beluga with a bottle of Stolichnaya, a salmon in sorrel sauce, sweetbreads en croûte, a miniature leg of lamb (the whole thing) with five wines, desserts, cheeses, ports" and a chaser of cocaine.
|
|