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"infamy" Definitions
  1. [uncountable] the state of being well known for something bad or evil
  2. [uncountable, countable] evil behaviour; an evil act
"infamy" Synonyms
disgrace discredit disrepute shame ignominy notoriety scandal disesteem dishonour(UK) opprobrium atrocity disapprobation disreputableness obloquy odium abomination blame censure condemnation contempt baseness evil iniquity sordidness vileness wickedness corruption degeneracy depravity dissolution immorality iniquitousness sin turpitude unscrupulousness wrong abuse indignity offence(UK) offense(US) sneakiness guile cunning craftiness wiliness deviousness artifice craft slyness artfulness foxiness deceit subtlety duplicity cunningness guilefulness dishonesty fraud trickery cheating cruelty barbarity brutality savagery inhumanity horror heinousness transgression viciousness villainy wrongdoing atrociousness enormity ruthlessness badness barbarism flagrancy blatancy insolence outrageousness brazenness egregiousness flagrance flagrantness glaringness grossness obviousness ostentation shamelessness public display rankness monstrosity crime sinfulness vice impropriety criminality evildoing foulness knavery nefariousness fame reputation renown prestige repute celebrity eminence glory honour(UK) standing honor(US) prominence note esteem importance acclaim name greatness illustriousness credit peccancy debauchery devilry perversity diabolism impiety indecency lawlessness licentiousness malevolence malignity guilt culpability fault guiltiness rap responsibility accountability answerability blameworthiness culpableness liability onus malfeasance delinquency wrongfulness stigma incrimination More

636 Sentences With "infamy"

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

It&aposs the simplest cause and effect: If someone performs an act for the sake of infamy and you provide him that infamy, mission accomplished.
Mengele's sadistic methods gained infamy, and often had horrific consequences.
"Slater" name, and its associated infamy, slammed doors on professional
But like Bryan, they have only ensured their own infamy.
Monday, July 16 — a date which might live in infamy.
Of course, even Ruth had his moments of October infamy.
"A speech that will live in infamy," Mr. Vietor lamented.
It "became a day of monetary infamy," Mr. Friedman would say.
PAKISTAN'S blasphemy laws have been a source of infamy for decades.
Graham — and all the rest of them — will live in infamy.
The Terror: Infamy airs Mondays on AMC at 9 pm Eastern.
In reality, that infamy should be reserved for someone called Decimus.
But fame — or infamy — can't be contained by space and time.
He joins them when the infamy of ISIS is well known.
And the country promised never to forget this day of infamy.
But despite his infamy, a Weinstein conviction is far from assured.
Here, we look back at his progression from fame to online infamy.
Here are five Zarqawi claims to infamy tied to today's ISIS: 1.
Here's a quick explainer of the tweetstorm that will live in infamy.
Pinky the dolphin got its name and infamy from its unusual color.
Like Calloway, the show has turned viral infamy into a lucrative business.
At the height of his global infamy, he was our human meme.
Now, the Benettons are suffering through their first encounter with national infamy.
As the infamy of such cases suggest, death during sex isn't common.
In this forum President Franklin Roosevelt spoke of the Day of Infamy.
For the rest of her life, she wrestled with fame and infamy.
Marketing is how he has made his money and attained his infamy.
Until now, Blunt may have been taking the piss, grinning into infamy.
December the 18th 2019 is another date that will live in infamy.
Martin Shkreli gained a number of monikers in his rise to infamy.
Mr El Aissami said the order was an act of "infamy and aggression".
FOR Catalans of whatever persuasion, October 1st 2017 was a day of infamy.
The charges did not tie into the incidents that first brought Shkreli infamy.
Nevertheless, she is willing to cross her own dad for infamy and money.
There are some Halloween episodes that will forever live on in television infamy.
It's a phenomenon that's seen wild popularity — and infamy — in some U.S. cities.
And on July 11, 1995, a massacre in Srebrenica would live in infamy.
N.F.L. Roundup On the verge of infamy and embarrassment, the Cleveland Browns triumphed.
In 22016, Kelly Ellard seemed an unlikely candidate for such attention and infamy.
"Today, December the 18, 2019, is another date that will live in infamy."
Madame is mononymous, and for all the wrong reasons: not fame, but infamy.
But as Mr. Guzmán's infamy increased, so did the efforts to catch him.
Sad you guys missed it, but the story shall now live on in infamy.
But his moment of infamy was forever immortalized in what became a hit song.
Many credit Sanchez with the popularization of narcocorrido music, singing tales of gangster infamy.
But it is "infamy," not the suffering of men, which is Roosh's primary concern.
In any case, Mr Soros's infamy from the bayous to the Balkans is odd.
The one that now lives on infamy as one of the internet's greatest memes.
The source tells PEOPLE that Casey has tried to distance herself from her infamy.
We can't imagine this newfound infamy will be doing this man's salon any favors.
The lines between fame and infamy would have blurred, and both could be monetized.
To propel, through self-detonation, bolts and nails into kids is a particular infamy.
The reverse also brought one more bit of infamy to the Bills this season.
Hence the calculated infamy that M-G-M, long ago, spun around Jean Harlow.
Exhibit A: all the mistakes people have made on Chopped, enshrining them in culinary infamy.
If Zarqawi had never risen to infamy, would the Iraq War have played out differently?
Of course, Rohrback's first brush with fame was also a crash course in internet infamy.
His 22020 minutes of infamy came in September 2018, when his bets went spectacularly wrong.
The case made headlines as "the Satanic murder of Sondershausen," propelling the band to infamy.
But it has lived on in pop culture infamy, from Bridget Jones to Benedict Cumberbatch.
Moment of Infamy: Ed's villainy actually came to the forefront after the show was over.
What Spicer's Emmy appearance proved is that in our culture, fame and infamy are indistinguishable.
"From that day of Nevada infamy, we have become #VegasStronger," he tweeted after the ceremony.
Maybe living on -- even in lexicographic infamy -- is too kind a fate for William Barr.
December 22007th, 220, I wrote the very first — The date that will live in infamy.
His performance today will live in infamy as much as the Pearl Harbor attack or Kristallnacht.
A Washington Post article from November brought the company viral infamy and criticism from AI experts.
Miss Cash Me Ousside is cashing in on her infamy ... and starring in a music video.
It's a city of fantasy and infamy, at the intersection of Snow White and Tiger Woods.
Moment of Infamy: A few of the rumors surrounding Michelle during her time on the show?
Mr. Allen has brought infamy to flops, lining the walls with framed posters of theatrical failures.
INFAMY: The Shocking Story of the Japanese American Internment in World War II, by Richard Reeves.
In September 1974, the Chicago Tribune ran a story about Taylor's welfare fraud, launching her infamy.
It seems that the EA comment is safe to live in world-record infamy for now.
But the hardest part of her job interview, the confirmation hearing, wasn't without incident (or infamy).
Findlay's most notorious film is Snuff (1976), but its infamy has nothing to do with him.
Yet she admits that the infamy does play a big part in her idolization of Snowden.
I watch the world descend into chaos and infamy and fear what the future may hold.
Ten years ago this fall, there came a VMAs moment that will live forever in infamy.
Last season, the Browns avoided infamy by winning their final home game and finishing 103-15.
The mythos and underworld infamy of the Mafia has long been romanticized on the silver screen.
"December 18, 2019, is another day that will live in infamy," he said on the floor.
He achieved international fame — or infamy — when Erin Hills in Wisconsin hosted the 2017 U.S. Open.
From that moment on, Simpson's name lived on in the infamy of this very public ordeal.
Zellweger's What/If character, Anne Montgomery, is bound for internet infamy (the impending in-home archery alone!).
Because Maja, locked in near-complete isolation in a Swedish prison, knows nothing of her newfound infamy.
I found myself absolutely engrossed by their story, as the group slowly grows in importance and infamy.
Which is why attempts at actual autonomy generally lead in two directions: artistic obscurity or scandalous infamy.
For Krofta, his new-found infamy has only pushed him further into the world of white nationalism.
Despite Brown's fame (and infamy), Guzman said her goal is to give Royalty a normal, supportive upbringing.
Even PETA, for all its fame (or infamy), rarely spends more than $100,000 a year on lobbying.
Make that the beginning of the end for Japan just six months after the day of infamy.
And next year, after Trump has followed Nixon into humiliation and infamy, things can return to normal.
However, startups and fringe organizations saw their share of infamy over the past ten years as well.
FARA, a World War II-era law, has gained new prominence — and infamy —in the Trump era.
The second episode of The Terror: Infamy, AMC's anthology horror-drama, ends with a blatant money shot.
Following these steps has helped me avoid all of the messiness of dating in multiples — viral infamy included.
Moment of Infamy: Before he became The Bachelor himself, Nick vied for Andi Dorfman's heart on The Bachelorette.
Moment of Infamy: Even though Jake seemed really interested in Rozlyn, she was, well, less interested in him.
" This particular year lives in infamy for what farmers in the Northeast are calling the "Valentine's Day Massacre.
Should you be asked to give a toast, there is no need for it to live in infamy.
Inspired by Michi Nishiura Weglyn's book "Years of Infamy: The Untold Story of America's Concentration Camps" (1976), Mrs.
"It was a dark day in Dallas, 1963, a day that will live on in infamy," it begins.
At the height of her infamy in the mid-19643s, Taylor wasn't just depicted as a brazen thief.
He would cease the reckless spending that had brought Argentina infamy for defaulting on its debts eight times.
In a moment that will live in infamy, the distinguished film director Ken Loach defended questioning the Holocaust.
The model will be part of the Los Angeles museum's exhibition "A Universal History of Infamy," opening Aug.
Reading Richard Reeves's "Infamy," about the Japanese-American internments during World War II, had me in angry tears.
After the categorically insane election, Vanity Fair published an expose, sending Infinity to fame and Payton to infamy.
Here are 12 other scandalous divorces that have gone down in flames — and will live on in infamy.
Over the years Robinson went on more walks, and his infamy grew through the power of local gossip.
At the time it was dubbed "The Great Motörhead Bust," setting the tone for the band's growing infamy.
He launched into meme infamy in October of 2017 after a video of him singing Bitconnect's praises went viral.
His escape out of Mexican prison through an elaborate tunnel system last July propelled the man into further infamy.
Yet, Empire's answer to Joffrey "Baratheon" (Jack Gleeson) made it to title card infamy in less than 25 episodes.
It's one of nine "dirty deeds" his character "Zach" needed to complete to gain infamy at his high school.
The so-called Olympic Destroyer attack gained infamy, too, for using a number of false flags to muddy attribution.
He parlayed his infamy into more than a dozen subsequent reality TV appearances and a career in professional wrestling.
Brett Talley, of ghost-hunting infamy, had never even tried a case; the administration withdrew his nomination on Wednesday.
No one, it turns out, likes to be thought of as a liar, even if it comes with infamy.
Moment of infamy: Gilmore's profile was so low that even Donald Trump had nothing to offer on his candidacy.
The official presentation is scheduled for Saturday, but its journey, to glory or infamy, has been tracked for weeks.
But the Sixers' record of infamy, along with some lottery ball luck, did indeed land them top draft picks.
Thus, his infamy and his position as the Republican candidate have made him a person of interest in Pakistan.
And now that both Beyoncé and Queen have worn the boots, they will definitely live on in infamy forever.
I would say that his performance today will live in infamy as much as the Pearl Harbor attack or Kristallnacht.
I would say that his performance today will in infamy as much as the Pearl Harbor attack or Crystal (inaudible).
Loser: Every other sports mascot in history This one only warrants an entry on our list because of its infamy.
And to answer your second, yes he was that relentless in his quest to find success through his son's infamy.
Now is the time for Mark Zuckerberg to spare himself the infamy and resign — for Facebook's sake and his own.
IN THE annals of Latin American democracy, Marcelo Odebrecht, a Brazilian construction magnate, will occupy a place of unique infamy.
There should be an honest discussion, though, of the factors that led to this day that will live in infamy.
As for the media, be aware that your blanket coverage of a symbolic gesture meant for infamy does not help.
My heart breaks for another day that will live in infamy but crime is still going on…in my house.
Moment of Infamy: While Hannah's season is just a few episodes in, Luke has asserted himself as a potential villain.
Moment of Infamy: Some of the show's contestants really are looking for love, but Wes was not one of them.
The militant group has gained global infamy for its use of children, including girls, as "human bombs" in suicide attacks.
It's not uncommon to see the word "riot" used with regard to Woodstock '99, which continues to live in infamy.
It won't affect Trump's behavior, but he would take his place alongside the Joe McCarthys in a hall of infamy.
Along the way, the mastermind's infamy transcended his crimes, and the Tate-LaBianca murders became known as the Manson murders.
Endlessly entertaining, often hilarious collages of celebrities, politicians, and ordinary people are at the crux of artist Phillip Kremer's infamy.
If creepypastas are being forced out by their own infamy, then fans of that brand of terror need not worry.
A year ago, he wasa stirrups-wearing afterthought who gained a slice of infamy last spring in El Paso, Tex.
But the hysteria likely wouldn't have reached its current level of viral infamy had it not been for Slender Man.
The Cro-Mags seemed destined for fame by the mid-80s, but instead you guys have lived on in infamy.
Sketchbook | The Literati How the success of "In Cold Blood" led to a quick fame, followed by a long infamy.
Before they achieved internet infamy, the men, who have not been publicly identified, seemed to be having a good time.
What he never predicted was that to do any of that, he also would have to overcome viral video infamy.
Now, "Grace from Boston" has spoken out about the Peloton ad that catapulted her and the brand into internet infamy.
The elephant in any room that Simpson enters is his unique and pervasive infamy, which has nothing to do with memorabilia.
But it was his follow-up film, 1972's Last Tango In Paris, which earned him an international reputation and infamy.
This is a low-risk, low-infamy approach to reselling, lacking the spunk or humor of an establishment like Pirate Joe's.
"It's a great infamy," he said of the disaster during a speech in Mexico City's main square, the Zócalo, in 2011.
For those who think Brexit should be smashed, it was a festival of deceit and democratic infamy that must be overcome.
The single — which celebrated its own decade of infamy just a few weeks ago — is the crown jewel of Sasha Fierce.
While Joey Buttafuoco and Amy Fisher have seemed to revel in their infamy, Mary Jo Buttafuoco has kept a lower profile.
Moment of Infamy: Only one episode into the newest season of The Bachelor, Corinne Olympios established herself as resident pot-stirrer.
Moment of Infamy: Olivia was one to watch from the first episode – she did get the First Impression Rose, after all!
There was the so-called "butterfly" keyboard, which retained its infamy even in the second and third iterations of the laptop.
Anthony has tried to distance herself from her infamy — and hasn't watched her parents in their TV interviews since her acquittal.
Scholars are comparing the era to the Gilded Age of robber barons, when the issue of trusts first gained popular infamy.
In his interview with NBC, he noted that the current 85033chan administrators left the tagline "Embrace infamy" on its front page.
That's a day of infamy in West Virginia because on that day, Massey's Upper Big Branch mine exploded, killing 29 miners.
Milo Yiannopoulos, a Breitbart writer and arguably the most recognizable leader of Gamergate, used the movement to propel himself into infamy.
From touchdown to trial, Simpson spun fame into infamy into some other wretched thing, as we all watched live on television.
Among the many questions that are unanswered is what influence, if any, his father's absence and infamy had on his life.
But despite the media couple's 1980s-era salon luster, the house drew much of its fame — or infamy — from earlier stewards.
But somehow President Trump managed to add a day to our calendar of infamy, and it may be the crassest yet.
Rafael Nadal will go for his 19th major championship against Daniil Medvedev, who gained infamy in the tournament for boorish behavior.
Ukraine may want Trump's goodwill, but it doesn't want the Democrats' ill will or the distraction and infamy of this investigation.
This is the kind of petty infamy that will be referenced for years, at least if smartwatches are around for that long.
It was no wonder Bannon wanted to groom Yiannopoulos for media infamy: The bigger the magnet got, the more ammunition it attracted.
The IRA attained infamy prior to the 2016 election after it was profiled in depth by the New York Times in 2015.
Virtually all of the tweets have been deleted by Microsoft, but a few were preserved in infamy in the form of screenshots.
Christine Keeler went down in infamy for having a sexual relationship with a conservative cabinet minister, John Profumo, when she was 19.
But the runner-up in the climate hall of infamy—methane—is turning out to be a bigger problem than we realized.
And lastly, we have to talk about the messiest girl on the series (who is thus slated for reality show infamy): Kathryn.
Moment of Infamy: The male model was not shy about telling just about anyone who'd listen that he was … a male model.
The exchange prompted a defensive, expletive-laden response from Sex Pistol Steve Jones, and helped launch the Pistols to UK tabloid infamy.
He has since remarried (to Manuela Testolini, Prince's ex-wife), but will forever live in infamy due to this (iconic) Jay verse.
Fish from a river in Ohio that gained infamy after it caught on fire due to pollution are now safe to eat.
"Don't Let Sean Spicer Tap-Dance Out of Infamy on 'Dancing With the Stars'," James Poniewozik wrote for the New York Times.
The case, which brought global infamy on the town, is now revisited in a documentary, "Roll Red Roll," directed by Nancy Schwartzman.
Ninety-six years later, he and the scheme that bears his name live on in infamy—even in the world of wine.
Moment of infamy: During an early GOP primary debate, Paul sparred with his fellow Republican contenders over the issue of legal marijuana.
Moment of infamy: Graham may have been the most outspoken candidate about the Republican contenders being divided into main and secondary debates.
She now knows what she is convinced Mark could not bring himself to see, that infamy can be as fleeting as fame.
Trump's 32-year old senior policy advisor is getting his 15 minutes of infamy, infuriating some Republicans nearly as much as Democrats.
Here&aposs who made Dashlane&aposs list of the year&aposs worst password offenders, along with the stories behind their password infamy.
At one time, Mr. Mahathir might have been more suited to the hall of infamy that included Asia's despots and junta chiefs.
His intervention in the race to dig dirt on former Vice President Joe Biden has already earned him the infamy of impeachment.
For the rest of her life, Ms. Nie wrestled with the fame, and the infamy, that her act of rebellion would bring.
But Ferguson's synonymity with A-list celebrity fame takes a wicked detour into infamy with the events that transpired on Aug. 22019.
"Today, December 18th, 2019, is another date that will live in infamy," Kelly said, echoing what President Franklin Roosevelt said on Dec.
"I'm not going to be able to act like I'm 123," Yow says, humbly downplaying his infamy as an intensely physical performer.
The shooting rocketed Mr. Comello, an otherwise unsensational young man who was struggling to launch his adult life, into true-crime infamy.
Brunner had more political experience, having run in the 2012 Missouri Senate primary and lost to Todd Akin of "legitimate rape" infamy.
As particularly deadly events, mass shootings are intended to draw more attention, whether the goal is to terrorize or to garner infamy.
So when fellow internet favorite Amy Schumer debuts a brand new special on the site, you know it's bound for social media infamy.
Its infamy has been helped by The Wire, among other fictional depictions of Baltimore, but the truth might be even scarier than fiction.
Alabama politicians will forever live in infamy for this vote and we will make sure that every woman knows who to hold accountable.
Some of them are old favorites while others have yet to gain greater infamy, but all of them are clearly sent from Hell.
They embody and embrace the simple reality that, when it comes to getting paid, there's no longer a difference between fame and infamy.
The guy had the shortest tenure as White House Press Secretary in U.S. history, and he quickly achieved infamy for his unfiltered chatter.
The island's landscapes give shape to the characters' hopes and fears, as its grandeur becomes a refuge that endures and outlives human infamy.
After Mr. Killen's arrest, Judge Gordon said he intended to treat the case routinely, despite its infamy and his familiarity with the defendant.
Eri Hotta is author of "Japan 1941: Countdown to Infamy"; the Japanese edition, "1941-- Ketsuinaki Kaisen," won the Asia Pacific Award Special Prize.
It doesn't seem to matter what nationality you are or how rich you are—notoriety and infamy always gets the best of them.
Moment of infamy: Despite holding just 1% of supporters in a September CNN poll, Jindal wasn't afraid to criticize GOP frontrunner Donald Trump.
Moment of infamy: Walker's presidential campaign was notoriously short, and his biggest moment in the election season was leaving the race so early.
In the first half of The Terror: Infamy, one of the characters is pregnant, so I know roughly how much time is passing.
"The Williamsburg Bridge lives in infrastructure infamy," recalled Mr. Pearlstein, adding that many people thought it would be cheaper to simply replace it.
Alabama politicians will forever live in infamy for this vote and we will make sure that every woman knows who to hold accountable.
But the muckraking, for which no city official or agency was too obscure to be blasted into infamy, has become an endangered species.
Luckily for her, the cold bite of internet infamy was quickly followed by the warm embrace of Ryan Reynolds and a boozy ad.
Now it&aposs possible to compare Pearl Harbor&aposs idyllic settings with the scenes on that "day of infamy" nearly 80 years ago.
The real Tonya Harding went from fame to infamy in 1994, after she was implicated in an attack on Nancy Kerrigan, a rival.
The more brutal the war becomes for Chester, the closer he senses Yuko getting in her global pursuit of him; but Infamy, at least in its first six episodes, doesn't do much work to explore why a spurned woman, a young, lonely social pariah of unknown background, is the nexus around which its metaphorical ouroboros of past and present infamy must spin.
These are the sort of superfluous, bossy government ventures that we can live without, despite the cries of infamy that will accompany the cut.
" Thomas Piketty, the economist and best-selling author, was quoted as saying in the newspaper Libération that the government had added "infamy" to "incompetence.
The franchise keeps trying to push them in our faces, and they will live on in Bachelor Nation infamy, sure to be seen again.
Even though I was a baby when the scandal occurred, the infamy, and then punchline her name evoked through the late '93s, followed me.
"The footage went viral on Tuesday after reappearing online but Canales was remorseless and appeared to revel in her newfound infamy," the website wrote.
Others who've shared her infamy include Ruth Eisemann-Schier, who kidnapped a millionaire's daughter in 1968 and became the first woman on the list.
Image: YouTubeThe Russian robot that gained internet infamy by "breaking out" of its lab a few months ago just can't stay out of trouble.
How can a film tell the—even remotely fact-based—story of Mayhem's rise to infamy without washing off some of the corpse paint?
It's against this backdrop that the AMC TV series The Terror has made these events the subject of its upcoming second season, subtitled Infamy.
"Today is a day that will live in infamy for everyone who sells groceries in this country," the "Mad Money " host said on Friday.
The first is that the WikiLeaks that released Manning's documents in 2010 is not the same WikiLeaks that rose to new infamy in 2016.
In PEARL HARBOR: From Infamy to Greatness (Scribner, $203), Craig Nelson, the author of "Thomas Paine" and other books, also takes a granular approach.
The BBC is trying to mine his fame — or infamy — with "Tonight With Vladimir Putin," presented by a digital effigy who interviews real guests.
Mike Kelly, calling the impeachment vote "another date that will live in infamy," likening this peacetime political act to the bombing of Pearl Harbor.
Lil Tay herself will almost certainly be doxxed and have to suffer untold amounts of infamy and the hate mail that comes with it.
JILL WINE-BANKS, MSNBC CONTRIBUTOR: I would say that his performance today will live in infamy as much as the Pearl Harbor attack or Kristallnacht.
The result is a generation that's less willing to play the villain or the idiot for 15 minutes of fame and a lifetime of infamy.
Iguala is also a place of special infamy — 43 college students were taken and disappeared by the police working together with the cartel in 20183.
This one particular family party will live in infamy in my mind and serve as a reminder of how far I've come with body acceptance.
Having recently embraced a more public role, his fame — and infamy — in the West have even fueled rumors of possible political opportunities in his future.
On that day of infamy in 1941, Mr Elliott took the radar blip far more seriously than his fellow operator did, despite being less experienced.
As an example, he said hours after the El Paso shooting, the administrators kept a tagline that said, "Embrace infamy" on the site's front page.
He now lives in California and has built a powerful consulting business based on the sales skills that brought him so much fame (and infamy).
" This resembles, at least a little, the way FDR actually started gearing up for war 18 months before the "date which will live in infamy.
Moment of Infamy: We should all really take a moment to admire Juan Pablo: It's not easy to be the villain of your own season.
It is every contestant's nightmare to botch it, becoming the latest newsfeed laughingstock, sinking you down into pageant infamy and months of low self-esteem.
It was a moment that will live in infamy, a low point for a presidency that seems to be composed of nothing but low points.
While CEO of Turing, which he founded, Shkreli gained widespread infamy for hiking the price of its anti-parasite drug Daraprim more than 2000,000 percent.
The game's cult, the Collective Justice Mission (CJM), has more in common with real world cults like Jim Jones' People's Temple, of Jonestown Massacre infamy.
After the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, President Franklin Roosevelt told the American people that day would live in infamy, and it has ever since.
And while the ill-fated Sydney Cove has gone down in infamy for being shipwrecked, her spirit lives on 220 years later in yeast form.
In its final generation, sold from 1992 through 1996, the SUV gained infamy as the car OJ Simpson was in during his 1994 car chase.
But a sustained public backlash against the practice formed in late 2017 after a particularly egregious implementation in Star Wars: Battlefront II rose to infamy.
In 2013, the US Navy remembered the "day of infamy" with a series of photographs that compared scenes from that horrifying day to the present.
It landed him a 21-month stint in federal prison and a peculiar flavor of infamy in the art world upon his release in 2006.
These people have decided that internet infamy is worth a potential trip to the emergency room and have been eating those convenience packets of laundry detergent.
Day of infamy: Attack on Pearl Harbor From Mitsubishi to the military Kuehn said the corporate culture of modern Japan also contributes to a stronger force.
The lamps, the chairs, and the popcorn machine from that haunting image melted in the piles of sodden sheetrock and carpet, relics of a viral infamy.
Couldn't you parlay this sort of infamy into, at the very least, a few sponsored Vines where you try to jump over things and hilariously fail?
The group gained global infamy in April 2014 for abducting more than 270 schoolgirls from the town of Chibok, about 275km (170 miles) southeast of Dapchi.
This was the start of Omarosa's surreal existence, crafting controversial moments into headlines and reality television content, feeding on feuds and building infamy out of chaos.
She's the very real woman who gained infamy after attempting to assassinate Andy Warhol and created S.C.U.M., a manifesto that encouraged women to kill all men.
With three fights between them and, in addition, a weird match-up in terms of weight, this fight could well go on to live in infamy.
The Chinese group achieved instant infamy, tied to the successful hacks of more than 100 US companies and the exfiltration of hundreds of terabytes of data.
His contribution to the Satanic Panic rightfully earned him public infamy, as did his fear-mongering about feminism, LGBT rights, New Age spirituality, and even Catholicism.
Absinthe and its "Green Fairy" myth live in infamy as the highbrow beverage of choice for a number of European artists, from Van Gogh to Picasso.
Aside from the house's infamy, the couple also added that the bathroom situation doesn't help matters — there's just one toilet in a house of four bedrooms.
What is needed is a credible voice that booms out the truth — that being a terrorist leads to the opposite, to a wasted life and infamy.
Guanajuato's governor, Diego Sinhue, estimated that around 300 people helped set fire to vehicles, although he defended the town against its infamy as a crime hotbed.
The scheme came to light during the subsequent congressional Watergate hearings, giving Stone his first brush with national infamy and leading to his departure from Sen.
Sadr has spearheaded a number of political movements in Iraq, gaining infamy for directing attacks on U.S. troops in the wake of the 2003 Iraq invasion.
Now living in his native Japan, he essentially cannibalized the infamy of his crime for a living and has a discomfiting, symbiotic relationship with his brother.
So I set off to find out even more about who he was as a person beyond his large penis and meme infamy, and I did.
No man is worth calling a man who will not fight rather than submit to infamy or see those that are dear to him suffer wrong.
On Twitter on Tuesday, Mr. El Aissami called the accusations "infamy and aggression," but he said he would focus his attention on fixing Venezuela's economic collapse.
What it got him instead was widespread infamy on social media, as reporters and fans alike crowned the play the worst flop they had ever seen.
JILL WINE-BANKS, MSNBC CONTRIBUTOR AND LEGAL ANALYST: I would say his performance today will live in infamy as much as the Pearl Harbor attack or Kristallnacht.
Yet the chemical attack that killed at least 85 people in the rebel-held town of Khan Sheikhoun (see article) stands out as an act of infamy.
Bowers' memoir rocketed to fame, and infamy, largely due to the enormous stars he posthumously outed, and Tyrnauer knew he had to include them in his film.
After killing a cemetery worker for a new car, he drove to Miami where he shot Versace, which created the publicity explosion that led to his infamy.
We know with certainty that abuse will happen, and manufacturer should foresee this, too—whether for a big payday or infamy, that's just what some jackasses do.
If the procedure wasn't well-known before, it certainly gained infamy after Kardashian wept through her "vampire facial" in an episode of Kourtney and Kim Take Miami.
And while a college star at Wake Forest, Paul smacked North Carolina State star Julius Hodge in the balls — which remains a moment of college basketball infamy.
The ensuing fame (or infamy) of being a feminist online who was criticizing the Trump administration forced her to think carefully about everything she tweeted and posted.
Venezuela: How paradise got lost Dramatic introduction Perez rose to prominence -- or infamy -- in June with the attack on the Ministry of Justice and the Supreme Court.
Friday is the 77th anniversary of the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, a day that lives in infamy and changed life for a generation around the world.
Thiel's tactical retreat is likely an admission that he has grown tired, at some level, of the infamy that has surrounded him over the past several years.
The infamy of feral hogs grew following a viral tweet about an Arkansas man needing to kill "30-50 feral hogs" as a defense of assault weapons.
The most egregious example of a trial judge who allowed the parties far too much leeway was Judge Lance Ito of the O.J. Simpson murder trial infamy.
The meaningful difference is that Barnes is a world champion role player and Williams only just began his transition out of draft bust infamy two years ago.
Mr. Jones has achieved infamy and financial success for spreading lies, such as many mass shootings are government hoaxes and Democrats run a global child-sex ring.
I then spend the rest of the night watching 2, Prodigal Son, The Good Doctor, The Terror Infamy, and some YouTube while messing around on my phone.
At one point in the interview, he compared Warren to the former NAACP Spokane chapter president whose false claim that she was black earned her international infamy.
Eventually disbarred by a New York State court, Cohn first gained infamy as chief henchman for Senator Joe McCarthy during his persecution of government officials during the 1950s.
Photo: Jose Luis Magana (AP)A wave of deplatforming efforts earlier this year did a great deal to deflate conspiracist and MAGA windbag Alex Jones of Inforwars infamy.
You do always want to claim that relationship to fame or infamy, but you have to own the darkness in your family as well as connections to greatness.
Those weapons, built to fight World War III with the Soviet Union, were failure-prone, and gained infamy for killing and wounding civilians as well as American troops.
The group gained infamy for their patrols, group events where they gather and march through the snowy streets of Finland as a show of intimidation to the refugees.
But whether viewers will actually see him morph into Saul Goodman of "Breaking Bad" infamy in this round, the show's creators, Vince Gilligan and Peter Gould, aren't saying.
" More than 2,400 U.S. service members were killed in the attack on Pearl Harbor, which President Franklin D. Roosevelt described as a date that would "live in infamy.
The case, coming a year before the infamous "Hot Coffee" lawsuit (which, really, didn't deserve its infamy), is probably a more deserving example of a dumb court case.
On Thursday, a Nevada parole board will make its recommendation, potentially opening a new chapter in a life that already includes a legacy of fame, fortune and infamy.
Earlier this year it acquihired a startup called Bold and picked up its co-founder David Byttow (formerly of Secret fame/infamy) to become its new product lead.
Moment of infamy: Santorum never made it onto the main debate stage in the GOP primary faceoffs this time around, unlike 217, when he won the Iowa caucuses.
Arguably the first botched restoration project to gain public infamy was the 2012 "ecce homo" fresco fiasco that occurred in yet another sleepy town of Spain, called Borja.
The women were Marlene Dietrich, Anna Way Wong, and Leni Riefenstahl, and all of them were on the brink of achieving international fame and varying degrees of infamy.
And instead of resenting the song that made her famous, she's embraced the infamy -- and made peace with the teen who never could've expected what "Friday" could do.
At the film's end, after a spasm of murderous violence, infamy and grief, the Kims' son makes a "fundamental plan" to grow rich enough to save his father.
The 1967 NFL Championship game lives in infamy as the "Ice Bowl" for its sub-zero temperatures and intense rivalry between the Green Bay Packers and Dallas Cowboys.
Mr. Trump also invoked the last time Republicans gave away a Senate seat by nominating a flawed candidate, an event that he suggested would live in political infamy.
Jeremy Giambi, Oakland's lumbering designated hitter, was rounding third base and trying to score from first when Spencer uncorked a throw that seemed destined to live in infamy.
Seven days later, the infamy was compounded when Vice President Mike Pence broke a 50-50 tie in the Senate that would allow states to defund Planned Parenthood.
That bit of infamy belongs to the PriceWaterhouseCoopers accountant who was tweeting from backstage rather than paying attention to his one job (and has since been fired from it).
" Michael Bromwich, a lawyer for Ford, said in a tweet that Kavanaugh's confirmation capped, "A week that will live in infamy for the U.S. Senate, permanently diminishing its stature.
Some conflicts were resolved — the Kardashians have embraced their newest members, Blac Chyna and Dream; Ryan Lochte is settling into civilian infamy with a new baby on the way.
Dunham will be playing Valerie Solanas, the woman who gained infamy after attempting to assassinate Andy Warhol and created S.C.U.M., a manifesto that encouraged women to kill all men.
Corbally also brought in clients for Kroll, including a Long Island brokerage firm called Stratton Oakmont, which went on to infamy in the movie The Wolf of Wall Street.
Shkreli gained national infamy in 2015 after the company he founded after his ouster from Retrophin – Turing Pharmaceuticals — hiked the price of its drug Daraprim by more than 5,000%.
Sanders's claim in the Democratic primary debate that climate change is the top national security threat is in no way, even a little, like FDR's "date of infamy" speech.
Ironically — given Napster's early infamy with music sharing — Parker helped Spotify negotiate its first deals with labels to pay licensing fees for music that listeners streamed on the platform.
In the case of Ariana Grande and Pete Davidson, the tragedy of their breakup occurred exactly seven days ago, on October 15, a day which will live in infamy.
In Infamy, a Japanese American community in the 1940s is plagued not just by the racism around them, but also from within by a literal ghost from the past.
Similarly, Greece's former finance minister rose to fame (or infamy) at the height of the country's financial crisis in 2015 when Greece came close to exiting the euro zone.
But working together sets them on a path toward a shooting (complete with "Worldstar!" shouted in the background), jail, and hometown infamy all in the space of the premiere.
Long after Emwazi was killed by a drone strike, his frightening legacy and the "Jihadi John" nickname endure in immortal infamy, but his actual aims are not as memorable.
Beeching achieved an infamy unique for a civil servant normally reserved for top politicians such as Anthony Eden (Suez), Neville Chamberlain (appeasement) or Thomas Cromwell (dissolution of the monasteries).
Shkreli gained infamy in 2015 when as CEO of the drug firm then known as Turing Pharmaceuticals he raised the price of the medication Daraprim by more than 5,000%.
Amazon Prime Day: On a day that lives in retail infamy, Amazon will offer its Prime shoppers massive deals in a show of force for the e-commerce giant.
The only demonstration the churches have organized in recent years was to join the protests by Muslims against the American pastor Terry Jones, of Burn the Quran Day infamy.
Their appearance on shows like Wife Swap and Hell's Kitchen (Gordon Ramsey served them a cough sweet) suggest the Ingrams' taste for celebrity was only fueled by their infamy.
From other interviews you've given, it sounds like you were working on The Terror: Infamy as separation at the border policies and detention camps became prominent in the news.
Overshadowed by its much-mythologized back story — Capote and Huston claimed that the movie was more-or-less made up as they went along — the project lived in infamy.
The website branded itself as the "darkest reaches" of the online world, and touted its logo, "Embrace Infamy" — even after several 28500chan users committed violence in the real world.
"What's more, they constitute an infamy against the highest authority of the state, and constitute without doubt a false positive against a decent and dignified Venezuelan," the statement said.
Compelled to respond to Pourmohammadi's infamy, Rouhani shuffled him to another position of influence and replaced him with Alireza Avayi, who had sentenced thousands to hang in Khuzestan province.
December 9, 2019 "A date that will live in infamy" is remembered this Monday on CNN 10, more than 78 years after the Pearl Harbor attack was carried out.
Aided by statements like Mr. Trump's in his State of the Union address, MS-217 has achieved an almost mythic level of infamy in the world of street gangs.
The movie's subject is ostensibly outré, but the narrative arc is all too familiar, tracking Oystein's journey with his group Mayhem from garage-band anonymity to breaking-news infamy.
Wang's son, Wang Sicong, shot to infamy last year when he showed off pictures of his dog wearing two Apple Watches, and bragged about it on his dog's Weibo account.
America's shock, and its grief for the more than 23,2000 US military dead on this date of "infamy" led to overwhelming unity of purpose as we entered a world war.
If anything, these photos will go down in infamy simply because they happen to coincide with the slow-motion implosion of the Republican-led effort to repeal and replace Obamacare.
Now the company has garnered a degree of mainstream infamy — fed by a 19-minute takedown by John Oliver — thanks to its political leanings and ties to the Trump administration.
Waldhauser acknowledged differing opinions about how much influence Islamic State has actually had so far over Boko Haram, which won global infamy for its 2014 kidnapping of 276 school girls.
It seems that the same apparatus that brought infamy upon the beer-throwing Yankees fan also held a mirror up to him, and connected him with his beer-soggy victim.
Strikingly, he acknowledged that the war had seen cases both of Polish heroism and of Polish infamy, with some Gentile Poles betraying their Jewish neighbours and those who helped them.
Instead, there was Bale flashing toward the wing, the ball suddenly coming across and McAuley, with nowhere to go, tumbling into infamy as the red end of the stadium roared.
British Prime Minister Boris Johnson on Wednesday compared his main rival in the upcoming election to former Soviet leader Joseph Stalin, who garnered infamy for killing millions in labor camps.
This feeling was evident in Franklin D. Roosevelt's description of the Pearl Harbor attack -- "a day that will live in infamy" -- and in George W. Bush's words after 9/11.
Like these renegade politicians, Trump will use his infamy to cement his ties with his followers, and to fight on even in the face of political defeat or criminal indictment.
Mark Harelik may have only made one appearance on "Seinfeld" as the braggadocious tennis pro, Milos, in the 1997 episode, "The Comeback" ... but his game will live on in infamy.
Unlike season one, whose unease and dread grew slowly out of an atmosphere of stifling isolation, The Terror: Infamy plunges abruptly into the many-year nightmare of the internment camps.
Season two — dubbed The Terror: Infamy — is, like all good ghost stories, about the ways we are haunted by history, the ways we cannot escape pasts both personal and political.
Cave Brown won infamy for his marathon benders, chartering speed boats and private planes on the company's dime and scurrying down hotel fire escapes before sunrise to avoid the bill.
"On December 7, 1941, a horrific act happened in the United States and it's one that President Roosevelt said, 'This is a date that will live in infamy,'" Kelly said.
Opinion Louise Linton, the wife of Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin, had her 15 minutes of infamy today when she posted a photo on Instagram of herself exiting a military jet.
But Medvedev, who gained infamy earlier in the tournament for his boorish on-court behavior, still needs to win three tough sets in order to take home the winner's trophy.
Whatever happens over the next one or five years, Trump's name will dwell in infamy alongside Andrew Johnson and Bill Clinton as the only commanders-in-chief to be impeached.
For all the condemnations and warnings that Pelosi and her colleagues would regret "a date that will live in infamy," as Pennsylvania Republican Mike Kelly put it, Pelosi appeared unmoved.
Every character she's trapped with — from Clarence Thomas to Ann Coulter, and Ronald McDonald to Donald J. Trump — is identified by name, occupation and infamy in free printed exhibition guides.
But this year's tournament now will live in infamy — at least in Canada — as the first time the Canadians failed to earn a medal when serving as the tournament's host.
The scandal resulted in a lengthy investigation that ended with Clinton's impeachment and decades of infamy for Lewinsky, who has recently emerged in public life as an activist and writer.
Though it's been over two decades, the ordeal has lived in pop culture infamy, and was resurfaced once again in a biopic starring Margot Robbie as the embattled Harding in 2017.
An 18-year-old who rode the fast social media tsunami of fame to infamy said she's learned a valuable lesson about sharing intimate details of her life on the internet.
And they are this way in large part because San Quentin, despite its well-earned infamy, is a prison that really puts the "rehab" in California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation.
Rarely have a character's base and noble traits collided as they did at the World Cup of 1986, in which Diego Maradona ascended from infamy to sublimity in a single game.
The fact is, notoriety serves as a reward for these killers and as a call-to-action for others who would seek to do similar harm in the name of infamy.
The crime — which stunned the tight-knit, trusting community — gained national attention, and eventually infamy, after author Truman Capote traveled there to research it for his 1966 book, In Cold Blood.
In the summer of 21990, a 22004-year-old former prep school student was thrust into infamy after he was arrested for killing an 29-year-old woman he'd been seeing.
The prosecutor-general, Carlos Baca, has confirmed that the vice-president is a target of a probe into embezzlement in an oil deal in 2012; Mr Glas called the decision "infamy".
The procrastinator contemplates his deed and realizes all its future imperfection, but — fallen creature, "man of the world," part of the "infamy of Creation" that he is — he must do it.
And it is a reminder of the lure of the burst of fame, or infamy, available to troubled, violence-prone people in an age of social media and instant global communication.
Jared Kushner gained infamy by attempting to raise $150 million via the program to help bankroll a Jersey City skyscraper in 2017 (facing scrutiny, he dropped that fundraising effort in 2018).
It also alleges that Butowsky was in contact with White House adviser of Breitbart infamy Stephen Bannon and Sarah Flores, the director of the Department of Justice's Office of Public Affairs.
If you couldn't fake your way to the top by cosplaying as a secret agent of the Resistance, you could still achieve viral fame and infamy if you were outraged enough.
It's hard to reconcile Rodriquez's evident maternal devotion with her tabloid infamy—as the "teen who carried dead tot into store" almost three years ago, according to the New York Post.
The "Queens of Infamy" series by Anne Thériault: This series about badass royal women from around the world and throughout history was one of the best things published in 2019. Period.
Mr. Guzmán's infamy, including escaping from two maximum-security prisons in Mexico, puts him alongside Mr. Escobar and indeed the bootlegger Al Capone as the most notorious traffickers of modern times.
Petain led the French army to victory in Verdun in 1916, but gained infamy and a conviction for treason for his actions as leader of Vichy France from 1940 to 1944.
One of the first clues I vigorously rolled my eyes at was 51A, "'Beavis and Butthead' spinoff," since I have consigned those fellows to the ash heap of pop culture infamy.
Sherman gained fame in the North and infamy in the South for his use of scorched earth tactics during his March to the Sea at the end of the Civil War.
Martin Shkreli, the smirking "pharma bro" who gained worldwide infamy by raising the price of a lifesaving drug 5,000 percent, is awaiting sentencing next month on three counts of securities fraud.
Brooks says he is willing to deal with the glare of viral video infamy, as long as it culminates in a championship and confirmation that all his hard work paid off.
Shkreli has at times seemed to revel in his public infamy and since his December 2015 arrest, he has used social media to boast of his wealth and lash out at critics.
We see her in intimate settings and public spaces as she navigates her newfound infamy, and her almost pathological confusion as to why society won't accept her as a "transracial" black woman.
If you behaved like an idiot on a flight 20 or 10 or even five years ago, you might have got kicked off, but you probably would not have gained overnight infamy.
As part of the US Pacific Fleet, the ship was at Pearl Harbor when it was attacked on the famous "date which will live in infamy," in President Franklin D Roosevelt's words.
He blames Watkins, the new owner, and the site's administrators for "giving constant nods and winks to the radical, neo-Nazi part of their user base" and for enjoying the platform's infamy.
If you made it through the entire first season of 13 Reasons Why, then by now, you know: Bryce Walker is a name that will forever go down in Netflix-binging infamy.
His infamy has increased since then following appearances in several television shows and the co-authoring of books recounting his past and rise as a criminal in the tough suburbs of Paris.
Schlossberg discovered the perils of online infamy this week after tens of thousands of people shared a smartphone video showing him berating Spanish-speaking employees in the midtown Manhattan restaurant Fresh Kitchen.
The crimes were unrelated to the action for which Shkreli gained widespread infamy in 477.133 while heading another drug company: raising the price of the drug Daraprim by more than 5,000 percent.
C.) and Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.), concerning their bill requiring all encryption to be breakable on command, which achieved infamy in record time following the leak of a draft earlier this month.
Twenty years ago, when he was 2000, Mr. Rebagliati came to global fame — and infamy — after winning a gold medal in the giant slalom at the 1998 Nagano Winter Olympics in Japan.
An Amazon-owned home security company, Ring has exploded in popularity in the past few years, and perhaps in infamy within the past few months due to not-so-glowing media coverage.
In the midst of a glowing, Tron-inspired installation, Steyerl's film is a parable of class struggle set in a not-so-distant future characterized by motion-capture gulags and internet infamy.
You see, Evil Chad of Bachelorette and Bachelor in Paradise infamy, is another year older yet apparently none the wiser, as he spent his birthday sending rude, crude, and immature tweets to fans.
While you may carefully curate your own social media profile, your Google footprint can offer an unvarnished look at life, complete with all its blemishes, from bankruptcies to arrests to unintended viral infamy.
The pair would achieve a certain level of infamy after a late November 2016 profile by the Washington Post portrayed them as misinformation merchants who were getting rich by stoking fear and anger.
If it is true, we most certainly want to know want a follow-up on Monday morning, to see if this woman has the strength not to step up and embrace her infamy.
"Notoriety serves as a reward for these killers and as a call-to-action for others who would seek to do similar harm in the name of infamy," Gross said in a statement.
Moment of Infamy: Though Cam received Hannah's first rose of the season during Colton Underwood's After the Final Rose, he quickly started to show his dark side to the men in the mansion.
And when it's all over, they make a name for themselves because we gave them what they wanted -- infamy and the attention they couldn't get for themselves at school or in the workplace.
"On October 23, 1987—a day that lives in conservative infamy—Robert Bork's nomination to the Supreme Court was rejected by a Democratic Senate," The Weekly Standard's Bill Kristol wrote after O'Connor's announcement.
Sharrouf, the son of Lebanese immigrants, shot to infamy in 2014 after photographs emerged of him and his 7-year-old son holding the severed heads of Syrian soldiers, causing a global outcry.
And just a few weeks ago, a veritable mob of teens and their parents went after a high school student in what a local sheriff called a blatant attempt to achieve viral infamy.
"Alabama politicians will forever live in infamy for this vote, and we will make sure that every woman knows who to hold accountable," said Staci Fox, the president of Planned Parenthood Southeast Advocates.
One of the works on view includes a 1982 skull painting by the artist, which has risen to infamy in recent history after Yusaku Maezawa paid $110.5 million for the work last year.
Reviews were bad—Roger Ebert called Dreamcatcher "a monster movie of stunning awfulness"—but a semi-flattering consensus soon formed that Dreamcatcher was destined for a certain type of greatness, or at least infamy.
The famously gruff-voiced singer was back in the news after Chad Kroeger (of Nickelback infamy) slung insults at Taylor's other project Stone Sour, eliciting a response from both Taylor and, improbably, Smash Mouth.
Jughead — he of ultra memeable "Have you ever seen me without this stupid hat on?" infamy — took off his trademark knit hat and put it on Betty's head to assure her of their partnership.
In December, for instance, he tweeted one of this primary's great tweets, which will go down in hilarious infamy when Cruz concedes the nomination: The Establishment's only hope: Trump & me in a cage match.
The director, who gained infamy for his 2003 movie The Room, announced at a Q&A screening of the film in Germany that his next project is a shark-attack horror titled Big Shark.
Moment of Infamy: Jake Pavelka's former fiancée spent most of her time on the show antagonizing and taunting the other constants – particularly soon-to-be-Bachelorette Ali – and then attempted to play the victim.
Moment of Infamy: When it came time for Bentley to tell Ashley Hebert that staying on the show "is not an option for me," he had only one concern: How his hair would look.
Moment of Infamy: Tierra loved attention and would do just about anything she could to get attention from Sean Lowe, though he finally caught onto her game after her hysterical fight with AshLee Frazier.
ED's rebirth as 'Oh Internet' is derided on the site to this day, often portrayed as a betrayal, an attempt to cash in on a community's hard-earned infamy before sanitising the lulz away.
Metal Slader Glory, for its infamy and oft-misunderstood status in gaming history, is proof that a game doesn't need to be measured by financial success or immediate critical acclaim to be of value.
The most famous part of the speech -- the "infamy" line — was originally written as "a date which will live in world history," according to the first draft now on file at the National Archives.
Over dessert, Mr. Richie considered how the hubbub around this liaison compares to the early 2000s, when his daughter, Nicole, had her own moment of infamy while joined at the hip to Paris Hilton.
A second-gen Egyptian who grew up among the mansions of Mississauga Road, his music is the sound of a kid who screwed around with his friends until he fell ass-backwards into infamy.
"This is a personal piece I made for Lena," Nelson, born Johnel Jamison, tells Refinery29, casually referencing the actress who wore the buttons he made to the Met Gala, catapulting him into fashion infamy.
Both sides were fixated on the case study of Representative Elise Stefanik, a Republican from New York who vaulted to fame among conservatives and infamy among liberals for her fierce defense of Mr. Trump.
It may be that socialism is less disturbing to voters on the fence than Mr. Trump's manifest deficits, or it may be that the label itself has lost some of its Cold War infamy.
At a new pop-up exhibition running through this weekend in Chelsea, Manhattan, Datuna (aka the "Hungry Artist") is inviting all of us to reenact the "performance piece" that shot him to viral infamy.
The artist then is tasked with doing anything they can to hold on to the moment, in hopes that such behavior might sell a few albums, or at least grant some infamy to their name.
If Sam could turn that admiration into social media infamy and a seat as prom queen when the pre-apocalypse world was full of competing distractions, what can she accomplish now in a barren dystopia?
They are not the faces of notorious criminals such as the "Birdman", "Machine Gun" Kelly or Al Capone; rather they are current and released inmates of Californian institutions who aspire to something more than infamy.
Trump's fame in the United States -- and infamy in Mexico -- drove demand for an unflattering Trump mask, which picked up last fall when it became clear that the Republican presidential candidate was a serious contender.
It's been declared "a date which will live in infamy" but President Donald Trump and First Lady Melania Trump both made errors when referencing Pearl Harbor Remembrance Day in a pair of tweets on Thursday.
A firebrand religious leader with millions of loyal followers, Sadr gained infamy shortly after the 2003 U.S.-led invasion by directing deadly attacks against American troops with his Mahdi Army, which also attacked Iraq's Sunnis.
A day that lives in retail infamy, Amazon Prime Day is the third on Cramer's list due to the simple fact that it gives the e-commerce giant yet another opportunity to flex its muscles.
Martin Shkreli, the pharmaceuticals executive who gained public infamy by unapologetically hiking the price of a drug by more than 5,33 percent, on Monday begins jury selection for his trial on charges of securities fraud.
McFarland rose to infamy a little over two months ago after Fyre Festival—billed as a luxury super-festival on a Bahamian island—turned out to be something more akin to a post-apocalyptic disaster.
There's always one guy, who fell through the cracks of society, who lived a life of solitary disappointment and who one day decided to try to make a blood-drenched leap from insignificance to infamy.
Just ask Cecilia Giménez, the 21519-year-old amateur painter whose farcically botched attempt to restore an almost century-old fresco of Christ in her local church in Borja, Spain, propelled her to international infamy.
One might say that insofar as the officials resisting Trump are trying to prevent his temperamental unfitness from leading to some mass-casualty disaster or moral infamy, they are doing the country a great service.
Long before United Airlines achieved infamy by dragging a customer off a plane, it provoked an outburst from a monk who until then had lived in reverential peace in an isolated complex in New Mexico.
We determined the best-known football player from every state based upon a number of factors, including records broken, stand-out game moments, presence in the Pro Football Hall of Fame, and pop culture infamy.
Consumer companies have tried all sorts of campaigns to reconnect with the millennial generation, but the social media infamy of the "Tide Pod Challenge" is not the sort of marketing Procter & Gamble would have liked.
The infamy of what's often considered the first school shooting of the modern era has produced a bizarre online community, consisting of Columbine-obsessed bloggers — including many teenage girls — who worship school shooters like heartthrobs.
Shkreli gained widespread infamy after he raised the price of a drug used to treat some pregnant women, babies and people with HIV by more than 5,000 percent, from $13.50 per pill to $750 per pill.
Championed by former U.S. First Lady Michelle Obama - along with a diverse cast of media celebrities - the campaign won international infamy for Boko Haram and helped galvanize the Nigerian government into negotiating for the girls' release.
Rachel Dolezal, as she was known then, achieved international infamy in June 2015 after her parents, with whom she has long feuded, told reporters their daughter was white but was presenting herself as a black activist.
A company called Shadow earned instant infamy this week when an app it created to tabulate the results of the Iowa caucuses led to a statewide meltdown that has thrown the Democratic presidential campaign into disarray.
Among Republicans, and on the Fox News TV shows that the president devours for hours each week, Mr McCabe is rivalled in infamy by two other senior officials at the FBI, Peter Strzok and Lisa Page.
Perhaps the closest we've come to FDR's "date of infamy" speech—and it wasn't all that close—was when Bernie Sanders, in the first debate, was asked to name the biggest security threat facing the planet.
Firstly, she accessorized an aubergine peacoat with a Goyard bag; but not the branded carry-all that has reached almost Louis Vuitton Neverfull-levels of infamy among fashion girls, rather a more unique top-handle style.
Phil's stardom is coupled with infamy and not just due to the fact that his forecasts have been off 503% of the time over the past three decades, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.
And presidents long before Trump have enjoyed spending some time on the links: William Howard Taft -- he of stuck in the bathtub fame/infamy -- was among the first presidents to publicly express his love of golf.
They often haven't been diagnosed with a mental illness, they will typically announce their criminal intentions, often on social media, and they long for infamy and attention they think a crime like this will bring them.
The former Arsenal and Barcelona striker earned World Cup infamy for steering the ball into the goal with his hand to see France through to the 2010 finals in the playoffs against the Republic of Ireland.
Blue Jays 250, Rangers 2000 | Toronto wins series, 3-0 TORONTO — It was not an obvious moment of infamy — no ground ball through the legs, no fastball down the middle just begging to be a hit.
One year ago, Donald Trump began his elevator ride to infamy, with a pitstop at a lectern, where he accused Mexico of sending rapists into America and announced his candidacy for president of the United States.
When people think of the eight wonders of the world, a time will come when they think of the Disco Bunny, such is his infamy and the joy he brings to unsuspecting members of the public.
I called up Farrar to ask about his newfound infamy, and whether or not he has any regrets: VICE: Can you tell me about the Twitter interaction with Charlie Kirk yesterday that led to this madness?
Mr. Simpson and Mr. Cosby went on to high-profile criminal trials and, despite a not-guilty verdict for Mr. Simpson and a mistrial for Mr. Cosby, moved from infamy to a starkly more complicated reality.
In Charlottesville, Va., officials announced that they had issued four warrants for the arrest of Christopher Cantwell, the white supremacist who shot to infamy after his appearance in a Vice News documentary on the violence there.
This was the Thatcher who maintained that there was "no such thing as society," only individuals, "and people must look to themselves first," a statement that Moore attempts, with little luck, to wrestle from its infamy.
"We pause today to remember the 2,403 American heroes who selflessly gave their lives at Pearl Harbor 85033 years ago, on a date that will forever live in infamy," the president-elect said in a statement.
Jennifer Wilbanks gained infamy (and the nickname "Runaway Bride") after she got cold feet and skipped town before her wedding, claiming she was sexually assaulted and kidnapped by a Hispanic man and white woman back in 2005.
Further insults came at the RHONY season 10 reunion, when Medley asserted that de Lesseps only sought treatment to avoid jail time and that she had become "confused between fame and infamy" after her cabaret took off.
This isn't a novel idea—Sean Parker of Napster and Facebook infamy pitched his version of a home-video service called Screening Room a few years ago and sought to offer movies at home for $50 each.
Prior to Cambridge Analytica gaining infamy for massively misusing Facebook user data, the company, which was used by the Trump campaign, claimed to have up to 7,000 data points on the entire U.S. electorate — circa 240M people.
It is the age of brands — or rather, #woke brands, those hyper-aware corporate behemoths with gargantuan marketing departments that see in every social and political cause du jour an opportunity for 15 minutes of web infamy.
At the end, everyone — including Billy Ray Cyrus, whose appearance on the original remix vaulted the song to pop novelty infamy — convened together, dancing and partying and generally indulging in the utterly absurd unlikeliness of it all.
"I'm not a patient man," warned Mr. Murray, who earned infamy when he falsely insisted that the 21 collapse of his Crandall Canyon mine, which killed six miners, was due to an earthquake, not dodgy mining practices.
"On December 7, 1941, a horrific act happened in the United States and it's one that President Roosevelt said, 'This is a date that will live in infamy,'" Kelly said as he made gestures with his hands.
" He called the case "the most egregious congressional spending scandal since Aaron Schock," referring to the former Republican congressman from Illinois who gained infamy for decorating his House office in an ornate manner inspired by "Downton Abbey.
The death sentences handed down by a Saudi court to five anonymous men in the killing of the journalist Jamal Khashoggi at the Saudi Consulate in Istanbul only add another level of infamy to the foul murder.
It's a jokey afterthought following a sprawling conversation on Chambers, her brand-new Netflix show bound for infamy; the magic of working with Miss Mia Wallace herself, Uma Thurman; and the creepy magnetism of Tony Goldwyn's Ben LeFevre.
Fyre Media gained infamy last month when the eponymous music festival it promised would be an opulent uber-Coachella on a remote island turned out to be more of a Lord of the Flies reenactment with Instagram kids.
They do deep dive on these shooters immediately and if you are a kid who wants to go out in a blaze of glory and you see it is glory and it&aposs infamy because we cover it.
From this point on, the made-for-TV biopic followed Brown's post-boyband life as he endured one tragedy after another while reaching infamy as a solo artist and half of one of pop culture's most controversial couples.
While Ford rose to international infamy due to his crack-smoking admission, racist tirades, and the general mayhem he brought to Toronto, he was the favorite son of the former city of Etobicoke for a pretty long time.
Advertise on Hyperallergic with Nectar Ads I recently have been having conversations about what I plan to do on the inauguration day (a day that will no doubt live in infamy if we just give it enough time).
Advertise on Hyperallergic with Nectar Ads After leaving a recent screening of The Disaster Artist, my mind wandered to another, much better film about a clueless auteur bumbling his way to silver-screen infamy: Tim Burton's Ed Wood.
In terms of infamy, the statues paid tribute to two of the most controversial Confederate figures: Civil War general and Ku Klux Klan leader Nathan Bedford Forrest, and Jefferson Davis, who served as President of the Confederate States.
At the time, Carton was the host of an FM talk show out of Trenton called "The Jersey Guys," where he'd achieved some infamy after making fun of Governor Richard Codey's wife, for her battles with postpartum depression.
Azimi: About Reza's being plugged into all that — the play he was working on just before his death, "A Story of Infamy," was built around love letters exchanged between a dying man and a man on death row.
But the social network has only ballooned in power and infamy since the movie came out in 2010 — so this visual allegory of Mark harvesting people's data for a website only became more relevant as the decade progressed.
Overnight, Jake T. Patterson has gone from local anonymity to national infamy, accused of kidnapping a 13-year-old girl about an hour's drive south, killing her parents and then holding the teenager captive for nearly three months.
In conjunction with the PST: LA/LA exhibition A Universal History of Infamy — featuring 16 artists who eschew a straightforward conception of Latin American Art — Ramírez-Figueroa will present his performance Corazón del espantapájaros [Heart of the Scarecrow].
Every single one of Kim's loved ones have seen or heard about her in various states of undress, from her infamy-creating sex tape, to her nude Paper cover, to her litany of topless, sometimes totally naked, Instagram selfies.
Over the last few days, the streaming service also debuted Daybreak, a bound-for-social-media-infamy teen apocalypse series, Jenny Slate's emotional special, and a food show that gives you Chrissy Teigen riding a camel through the desert.
It was a moment that would live in pop culture infamy for years: the image of a shell-shocked Taylor Swift standing helplessly on the MTV Video Music Awards stage as Kanye West ripped the microphone from her hands.
The "pharma bro," who first rose to infamy when he hiked the price of a life-saving AIDS drug by 5,000 percent, was convicted of securities fraud earlier this month—a charge completely unrelated to his more notorious exploits.
In a moment that will live in infamy in the reality TV world, 19-year-old Lauren Conrad chose love (her then-boyfriend Jason Wahler) over a trip to Paris during her internship at Teen Vogue in Hollywood, California.
Danielle Bregoli's infamy, including her catchphrase, has drawn endorsements from brands that experts say are likely paying her thousands of dollars to post about their products, a personal line of emojis and a deal for a reality TV show.
The Real Deal market, a dark web site that specialises in stolen data and computer exploits, shot to infamy this year thanks to its role in the sale of information from several massive data breaches, including Myspace and LinkedIn.
Moment of Infamy: Apparently, Justin misunderstood the premise of the show, because he forgot to tell Bachelorette Ali Fedotowsky that he was in a long-term relationship – a fact she found out after his girlfriend called to warn her.
Rikers recently achieved recent extra infamy thanks to its role in the horrifying story of Kalief Browder, a young man imprisoned and tormented there for years while the state delayed his trial for the alleged theft of a backpack.
Belmonte's gone on to a fair bit of infamy in the Nintendo fan scene, as he's also created very convincing images for nonexistent games like Super Mario Galaxy DS and a Majora's Mask remake (long before it actually happened).
"Sadly for sport, just as the 1988 Seoul Olympic Games are remembered by (Canadian sprinter) Ben Johnson's infamy, this year's Games will be remembered by participation of athletes served by a Russian system that corrupted clean sport," iNADO said.
That list includes Daraprim, or pyrimethamine, the anti-parasitic drug whose price Shkreli hiked 5,000 percent as CEO of Turing Pharmaceuticals in 2015, vaulting him to international infamy that's even affecting jury selection in his just-started fraud trial.
Knowing that there are forums where shooters will be celebrated, like 8chan, gives them a sense that they'll win a kind of celebrity status — that they'll be able to live on via online infamy even after death or arrest.
De'Andre Hunter — who missed that dispiriting tournament loss to Maryland-Baltimore County last year with a hand injury — scored 23 points to lead the Cavaliers, who recognize their place in infamy but, at Bennett's urging, have regrouped from it.
It is in some ways a case of one-percenters lusting after the privileges of one-tenth-of-one-percenters — possibly risking infamy and prison to buy something that, the evidence suggests, provides little value for their privileged offspring.
Local fandom and infamy in Austin quickly spread to music nerds and arty types beyond, and cemented him as a figure that continued to generate more and more curiosity and praise for both his songwriting talent and fascinating eccentricity.
The original campy TV movie swam into pop culture history in 2013 -- thanks to fans who couldn't get enough of its plot about a cyclone causing flying sharks to attack Los Angeles and they live-tweeted it into infamy.
Hometown of Canadian Teenage Murder Suspects Grapples With Infamy Port Alberni, the birthplace of the two teenagers who the police say went on a bloody rampage, says it is unfair for the town to be tarnished by the crimes.
Cardi B has deliberately employed her sexuality to guide her career, navigating her way through Instagram fame and reality TV infamy before breaking out in the mainstream with her number-one hit, "Bodak Yellow," her career skyrocketing from there.
David "Puck" Rainey gained famed (and infamy) after he stirred up drama with his HIV-positive roommate, Pedro Zamora, and was ultimately evicted from the house on MTV's 3rd season of the hit reality show, 'Real World: San Francisco.
Aaron Schlossberg achieved instant internet infamy on Wednesday after a video went viral of him yelling at women speaking Spanish at a midtown Manhattan lunch spot and threatening to call Immigration and Customs Enforcement on them for doing so.
Martin Shkreli — the biotech entrepreneur who, more than two years ago, gained infamy by increasing a life-saving drug's price by 5,000 percent — cried in court on Friday before being sentenced to seven years in prison, according to numerous reports.
"I do not make this decision lightly — I make it out of respect for my family," said Avenatti, who first gained fame and infamy for his representation of porn star Stormy Daniels in multiple legal cases involving President Donald Trump.
Then you have Good Sam, a sorta-rom-com built for Twitter infamy, and See You Yesterday, a brand-new Spike Lee-produced film (think of it as an appetizer for next week's She's Gotta Have It season 2 premiere).
Her father, Tywin Lannister (Charles Dance), was notoriously responsible for the Red Wedding, the season 3 episode that will go down in infamy thanks to the brutal betrayal and slaughter of the Starks, including Robb (Richard Madden) and Catelyn (Michelle Fairley).
A failed musician who spent his youth in and out of jail and juvenile detention centers, Manson rose to infamy after orchestrating a string of seven murders, carried out by his ardent followers over two bloody nights in August 1969.
The New York Daily News, which has garnered fame (or infamy, depending on your point of view) for its front pages critical of Trump, led the charge with a Wednesday cover that took dead aim at Trump's sympathy for white nationalists.
One of the Oaks top pitchers, Sleepy Bill Burns (so-named because of his lethargy on the mound), earned infamy three years later when he served as a fixer between gamblers and ballplayers in the 1919 Black Sox World Series scandal.
In the newspaper of record's endeavor to definitively capture and encapsulate this moment in our collective listening lives, you'll find more idiosyncratic picks, including Quebecois electro-provocateur Marie Davidson, admitted child sex felon 6ix9ine, and Pinkfong of "Baby Shark" infamy.
Conway is the first woman to run a successful presidential campaign, but her infamy stems from cable news appearances, where she spins her boss's controversies into what she deems "alternative facts" while flaunting blond split-ends and fruit-colored dresses.
In 2012, Bloc achieved infamy when, in an attempt to move to a docking yard outside of London, it miscalculated the number of people attempting to get in, leaving thousands stranded for hours outside of the London Pleasure Garden festival grounds.
But the radical pricing plan that brought the company national recognition and millions of subscribers, then infamy and customer fury, was only supposed to be a temporary deal, according to Stacy Spikes, one of the co-founders of the company.
While Wiseau gained a cult following after fans started hosting screenings of The Room, he rose to infamy in 2017 when James Franco and his brother Dave Franco brought Sestero's book about working with Wiseau to life in The Disaster Artist.
However this focus has a nasty habit, in many jurisdictions, of increasing gun sales and loosening gun laws, and may in fact contribute to the ongoing increase in rampage shootings by giving perpetrators the infamy so many seem to be seeking.
October 21st, 2016 is a day that may or may not not live in cyberwar infamy, but the DDoS was unexpectedly successful in uniting the community of mostly unnoticed and often forgotten people who work on maintenance of core internet infrastructure.
For example, you could argue that at the height of its infamy, English hooliganism was fueled by a poisonous cocktail of dying industry, regional resentment, mass unemployment, racial tension, a war on class loyalty, cruel government, corrupt policing, and fading empire.
Farhad: Finally, one of the biggest tech stories this week is about the Korean tech giant Samsung, whose Galaxy Note 7 smartphone descended further into infamy when the United States Consumer Product Safety Commission issued a formal recall on Thursday.
The sentencing came days after a separate case in which another musician shot from obscurity to infamy with the release of a video called "Hang White People", which has been pulled from Internet platforms ahead of a trial set for January.
But its lyrical premise is pointed and potent: Billie Joe Armstrong wrote the song in the voice of a delusional young mass shooter, dreaming of glory and infamy: I wanna be a celebrity martyrThe leading man in my own private dramaHoorah!
The race war Manson dreamed of never came to pass, but he achieved a kind of pop culture infamy through his antics during a well-publicized trial and subsequent books and television movies that tried to make sense of the carnage.
The Mets are paying the minimum salary for Gonzalez, a first baseman, instead of bidding for Eric Hosmer, the Keith Hernandez clone who slid his way into Flushing infamy by helping the Kansas City Royals win the 2015 World Series.
Instead, I found myself wishing more than once that Infamy had not been attached to The Terror at all, that it had just been a gripping drama about the war from the perspective of some of its most vulnerable victims.
Rebecca Black, who rose to infamy as an awkward teenager in 2011, when a low-budget music video for her puzzling and atonal single, "Friday" went viral, has re-emerged on Cameo, where she seems to have found her calling.
One of the most intriguing aspects of Cameo is not the videos but the site itself, where famous people from every corner of modern celebrity — music, sports, YouTube, reality TV, viral infamy — assign a dollar amount to their self-worth.
Mr. Shkreli, 34, a pharmaceutical executive who gained infamy for his price increase for the lifesaving drug Daraprim, was convicted in August after a five-week federal trial on three of eight fraud counts related to hedge funds he ran.
The Evin Prison in Tehran, where a long list of leaders, intellectuals and journalists have been detained over the years, added to its infamy this month with the so-called suicide of Kavous Seyed Emami, a leading environmentalist and academic.
"Al Franken's Memoir Complicates the Identity of Democrats' Most Unexpected #MeToo Casualty" by Shawna Muckle Few Democratic politicians in recent memory have spiraled so swiftly and so irrevocably from political stardom to scandal-ridden infamy as former Senator Al Franken.
"The demonstration planned in Gonesse in support of the Paris police murderer is an act of infamy and an insult to the memory of our police force," Interior Minister Christophe Castaner wrote on Twitter on Wednesday, in announcing the ban.
The film is based on Sara Zarr's young-adult novel, which was published only 10 years ago but has been updated here to account for the viral-video phenomenon; the route to infamy was somewhat lower-tech in the book.
That's a monumental task; Weinstein's infamy as both a Hollywood power broker and a launching pad for the #MeToo movement means that many potential jurors have already heard about the case — and formed their own conclusions about his guilt or innocence.
Dr. Peterson, a professor at the University of Toronto, rose to infamy in the wake of his protests against a Canadian human rights law he believed could result in jail time if he did not use a person's preferred pronouns.
Arpaio gained infamy for his unusual jail practices, like forcing inmates to reside outdoors in intense summer heat in a "tent city" (which he described as his very own "concentration camp"), reinstituting chain gangs, and mandating detainees to wear pink underwear.
First, the depiction itself could be as easily read as a reference to the SS units' infamy and second, it was just a game and not even the whole game but a single counter set in a game about World War 2.
Finally, Caycedo will read from her River Serpent Book, an accordion-fold artist book incorporating imagery and text from her research, that is also on view in the exhibition A Universal History of Infamy at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA).
Written by Andrew Kevin Walker (Seven), it follows two about-to-hit-30 slackers (voiced by Patton Oswalt and Paul Rudd) whose flailing careers prompt them to resort to desperate measures to attain the kind of fame (or infamy) they've always dreamed of.
The U.S. view of Boko Haram, which won global infamy for its 2014 kidnapping of 276 school girls, as a locally-focused, homegrown insurgency is likely to keep the group more to the margins of the U.S. fight against Islamic State in Africa.
The film's oddly lingering shot of a bare-chested Goldblum, mere hours after a brutal tyrannosaur attack, has likewise lived on in internet infamy, as has his fist-pounding diatribe against the reckless commercialization of genetic science represented by the dinosaur theme park.
This scene raises the question of what might have been had this man not been cast off at such a young age and had not spent more than half his life in prison, even before the heinous Tate-LaBianca murders sealed his infamy.
Jury selection in the securities fraud trial of Martin Shkreli got off to a slow start Monday as multiple potential jurors expressed disdain for the notorious pharma bro, who gained infamy in 2015 by raising a drug price by more than 5,000 percent.
"The consensus here is that this makeshift holiday will produce gains of up to 20 percent year over year, new benchmark, which would make it a day that will live forever in brick-and-mortar retail infamy," the "Mad Money " host said.
The authenticity of the cast's Japanese heritage contributes to the sorrow that hangs over the production; I found even relatively banal parts of Infamy more bleak and difficult to watch than far scarier shows, purely because of how real and contemporary everything felt.
This month the event got a new claim to fame, or infamy: According to The Wall Street Journal, a pornographic-film star was paid $262,203 before the 220 election to conceal a past relationship with President Trump that began at the tournament.
In the 260s, they saw one of their own become president, watching him gain glory as one of the most gifted politicians of his time, but also infamy as one of its most self-indulgent — a poster child for the Me Generation.
"The consensus here is that this makeshift holiday will produce gains of up to 20 percent year over year, new benchmark, which would make it a day that will live forever in brick-and-mortar retail infamy," the "Mad Money" host said.
And despite Mr. Guzmán's infamy, there are questions about whether he was truly the biggest drug trafficker in Mexico or just one of various powerful kingpins, including his fellow Sinaloan trafficker Ismael Zambada García, called El Mayo, who is still at large.
He wouldn't be the last nimble, technical wrestler to get burned out on WCW and jump to the WWF, though he's been the most successful: Malenko, Guerrero, and Chris Benoit would leave not long after Jericho moved on to varying degrees of success and infamy.
In a post on the Competitive Overwatch subreddit today, Redditor Limelatte shared Vansquad's well-earned infamy with the rest of the world, compiling a list of videos of that show off Vansquad's deadly aim with McCree and Widowmaker against South Korea's top Overwatch pros.
"There were so many cool things that came out of it, but it also gave me a lot of setbacks because there were tons of people who didn't love it," Black said while musing about the infamy that came after her video went viral.
The impermanence of it — how his lines are washed away by the tide, his linework akin to the beautiful, temporary patterns of animal travel that dot beaches — is also part of the point: even if the art world promises infamy, nothing truly lasts forever.
For Watson, who covers women's rights, it also provided an alternative to the roller coaster of viral infamy — where a few videos got huge numbers of hits from both sympathetic viewers and angry trolls, only to have YouTube to suspect click fraud and pull advertising.
Like the Wall Street stalwart, it thrived first as a private partnership, set up in 1974 as Marc Rich + Co. Its eponymous founder gained fame as a consummate trader, and infamy for evading American authorities irked by his busting of sanctions and dodging of taxes.
Positive name-drops include Ann Coulter, PayPal founder Peter Thiel, Fox News's Tucker Carlson, Rebel Media's Lauren Southern, Lucian Wintrich of The Gateway Pundit, YouTube personalities Stephan Molyneux and Daniel Keem, James O'Keefe of Project Veritas infamy, and Trump advisor and former boss Steve Bannon.
I guess we should have known when the UFC was purchased by a Hollywood talent agency that the days of the quiet little upstart sports promotion with the quirky ultra-violent reputation toiling away in relative obscurity, even infamy, weren't long for this world.
The Manchester City supporters watching Sergio Aguero's scuffed penalty against Paris Saint-Germain via their camera phones earned some short-lived social media infamy, while Gary Neville recently claimed an image of Liverpool fans welcoming Jose Mourinho to Anfield was 'scary for all football'.
And the passion has always been there for Sos—this has never been about making a name for himself, carving out a reputation at the fringes of indie gaming, or gathering a decent wedge of cash to go beside a respectable level of infamy.
"This is not any cause for glee and comfort," Madame Speaker said, as her giddy caucus used the floor of the House of Representatives — the very same place where President Franklin Roosevelt asked for a declaration of war following the "Day of Infamy" on Dec.
By John SolomonOpinion Contributor To date, Lisa Page's infamy has been driven mostly by the anti-Donald Trump text messages she exchanged with fellow FBI agent Peter Strzok as the two engaged in an affair while investigating the president for alleged election collusion with Russia.
The question is whether Algren's fate was really down to these two stoolies—Louis Budenz and Howard Rushmore, may their names live in infamy—or whether the forces that pushed him and his work out of the mainstream were broader in scope than that.
Second, even if you don't get caught by the police, there's the possibility a member of the public will film your outdoor licentiousness and upload it to social media, consigning you to a lifetime of infamy, and maybe even lead to you losing your job.
The men instantly became martyrs to the anarchist movement, and de Cleyre channeled her outrage at the "infamy" of the trial and executions into a vigorous endorsement of anarchism, speaking annually at Haymarket memorials and returning to the subject again and again in her writings.
But that day lives on in infamy, not because there was a football game, but because Americans, now as divided as they've been in years, watched collectively, beguiled by Prince, a God amongst men, as he embraced Mother Nature's deluge and turned it into art.
By that fall, when police connected the murders (and those of Leno and Rosemary LaBianca the following night) to Charles Manson and his cult-like "family," Manson was well on his way to infamy, becoming a murderous icon and a symbol of an age.
Cloudflare was a DDoS protection service for 8chan, which went offline following the company's announcement; however, it was soon back up and running as of publication time, with its mottos of "Embrace infamy" and "Welcome to 8chan, the Darkest Reaches of the Internet," unchanged.
Infamy never stops reminding us that all this racial unrest is happening again now, from scenes where Chester's former friends in the army turn hostile and suspicious overnight after Pearl Harbor to scenes where orphaned Japanese children are rounded up to join the camps.
After almost 12 months of analyzing evidence and information, the panel concluded "there was no single or clear motivating factor" behind the attack, and that Paddock's actions were inspired by obtaining "a certain degree of infamy via a mass casualty attack," the FBI said.
Just as the cocktail renaissance has brought renewed fame to classics like the martini, the manhattan and the Negroni, it has heaped fresh infamy on a rogues' gallery of less classy concoctions, most of which emerged during the final decades of the last century.
"Those who split the country will be doomed to leave a stink for 10,000 years," said Wang, one of whose previous roles was head of China's Taiwan Affairs Office, using an expression that means to go down in history as a byword for infamy.
A tenacious but also comical street rapper, he scored enough hits and filmed enough viral dance videos to achieve a certain degree of infamy, eventually collaborating with Drake on the top 10 single "Look Alive" earlier this year and becoming known as a Drake protege.
However, the family did have pre-established infamy: The family patriarch, now known as Caitlyn Jenner, was a globally-known Olympic gold medalist; the Kardashian girls' late father was a friend and attorney for O.J. Simpson; and, of course, Kim herself broke through via a sex tape.
From there, the movie would likely get a quick, winking theatrical release (maybe from A24 or Amazon Studios) before being committed to streaming infamy forever; an "actually, this is just okay"-style backlash would inevitably follow, with long, fun-free hot-takedowns tearing the movie apart.
"I actually agree that Jim Watkins ran 8chan in a callous, incompetent manner, whether it be by inviting its users to 'embrace (the) infamy' the site received from shootings, or by failing to temporarily close specific boards or the entire site in response to tragedies," he said.
But due to his father's infamy, Kushner had the misfortune to have the particulars of his admissions case discussed in detail in Daniel Golden's 2006 book The Price of Admission: How America's Ruling Class Buys Its Way Into Elite Colleges — and Who Gets Left Outside the Gates.
In this post, he encouraged many immigrants from the Commonwealth to come to work in the understaffed National Health Service — which adds a layer of irony to the fact that his most enduring fame, or infamy, is for an epoch-defining speech he gave against immigration.
One of the world's most closely-watched investors, Soros is known as "the man who broke the Bank of England," in reference to fame (and infamy) he garnered in 1992 for selling short the British pound, helping force the country out of the European exchange rate mechanism.
James O'Keefe: Notorious con artist But first, for those of you unfamiliar with James O'Keefe and his misnamed  "Project Veritas," here's a helpful recap: James O'Keefe is a notorious con man whose infamy arises from his addiction to pulling the same media stunts, over and over again.
Despite the stark differences between the Red Scare hosts and Calloway — who apparently arranged the Bell House event after meeting each other for the first time Thursday night — they share strikingly similar careers: they have found a way to turn viral infamy into a lucrative business.
You would think with all the deregulation Scott Pruitt managed in his 15 minutes of infamy, the guy could have done at least one good thing by accident, like figuring a way to make setting your loved ones on fire in the middle of the Pacific permissible.
But in a locker room at a college gym here, the cheers from an ersatz karate tournament echoing outside like glories past, it didn't take much prompting for Mr. Zabka to break down the injustice of Johnny's infamy: There was Daniel's cheap shot on the beach.
" President Daniel Ortega -- a former revolutionary whose Sandinista rebels overthrew Nicaraguan strongman Anastasio Somoza in the 224s -- said the UN report was "nothing more than an instrument of the policy of death, of the policy of terror, of the policy of lying, of the policy of infamy.
This one is a food additive that was so short-lived on the market that it could escape long-term infamy, although a large indigestible molecule whose only purpose is to make snack food less fattening could be looked on as a dire societal warning, couldn't it?
In his book The New Scarlet Letter, Steven Raphael, an economist at the University of California in Berkeley, suggests that carrying a criminal record in the U.S. labor market is like being dubbed with a badge of infamy that forever brands these individuals with their past transgressions.
The Manhattan federal court lawsuit — which seeks a lifetime ban of Shkreli from the pharmaceutical industry — comes almost five years after he gained widespread infamy by purchasing the rights to sell Daraprim, and increasing its price to $750 per tablet, an increase of more than 5,000 percent.
The militant group, once linked to al-Qaeda but now considered a province of the Islamic State's self-proclaimed caliphate — often going by the name Wilayat al Sudan al Gharbi — gained infamy after kidnapping hundreds of schoolgirls in Nigeria in 2014 and forcing many into slavery.
In his lucid, forensic style, Mr MacCulloch shows that the 48 charges apparently filed against Walter Cromwell-Smith in the court rolls of the Manor of Wimbledon are not testimony to his infamy, nor to his beer-watering, but rather to the way licences to sell ale were issued.
It's been tough to root for Azealia Banks through all of the murky social media gaffes and airplane altercations that have characterized her last year of infamy, but there's always been a sense that if she could just get a record out we'd remember why we love her.
The day after the attack, President Franklin Delano Roosevelt delivered his legendary Infamy Speech, but it speaks volumes on Obama's character that he was nowhere to be seen in the direct aftermath of Pearl Harbor, choosing to take a back seat in the sensitive matters of his shattered country.
But as it nears, the swarm of locusts comes into focus: billions upon billions of them, thick as a blizzard, uncountable as raindrops, a jaw-dropping procession of the ravenous creatures of biblical infamy, flailing and flapping in the air, blocking out the sun like a bad omen.
Perhaps more than the infamy he gained as a cartel chief — responsible for shipping tons of drugs to more than 50 countries around the world, with a wider reach than even Pablo Escobar in his heyday — Mr. Guzmán has earned a reputation as the world's pre-eminent escape artist.
Over the next two decades, as Mr. Guzmán's infamy grew and he became known simply by his nickname — El Chapo, or Shorty — the American authorities would charge him seven more times in courtrooms in Brooklyn, Chicago, Miami and other cities where his sprawling drug network had wreaked havoc.
Four days after declaring themselves to have outgrown Europe, the English must now watch their national football team leave the 266 Euros in infamy after losing to Iceland, the smallest nation ever to play in the tournament, in a shambolic 22016-1 defeat in Nice on June 27th.
As for Hillary, she says she'll have a better relationship with Israel than President Obama but does little to differentiate herself from Obama's policies and was indeed the architect of many of those policies, most notably the heinous Iran deal which will forever live in American foreign policy infamy.
His latest thriller, "The Destroyers," follows Ian Bledsoe, a young Manhattanite who finds himself cut off from his family and any future job prospects because of sudden internet infamy; he reaches out to his best friend from childhood, Charlie, a scion of a billionaire construction family, for help.
While Americans remember December 7, the date of the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, as "a day of infamy," Arabs and Palestinians may well feel the same about December 6— the date President Donald Trump delivered a fatal and fateful blow to peace and justice in the Holy Land.
He doesn't describe Chambers's subsequent career as Henry Luce's star writer at Time , or his sudden fame (and infamy) when, in 1948, Representative Richard Nixon put him under the lights and elicited his testimony against Hiss (who denied everything, then and for the rest of his long life).
Women Today Last week, we were treated to a news photo that will live in infamy: two dozen white male Republican congressmen (and zero women) around a White House conference table talking about dumping maternity and newborn care as part of their replacement for the Obama health care law.
"They don't know how to lampoon someone who's mostly maintained her composure even when her dad says he would fuck her on TV." Where Kellyanne and Melania drive themselves into infamy whenever they appear on the news, Ivanka remains composed, and complicit, in even the most ridiculous situations.
Pruitt, for what it's worth, could still be planning to use the infamy he generated during his time at the agency to fuel a run for office on the triggered-the-libs ticket, though there's no reason to suspect he will trip over his own incompetence any less at that.
WASHINGTON - The first-in-the-nation Democratic nominating contest in Iowa will go down in infamy after technological snafus resulted in results not being reported for nearly a day, costing the candidates who performed well their moment in the media spotlight and allowing others to question the legitimacy of the outcome.
My own copy of Joseph Menn's Cult of the Dead Cow: How the Original Hacking Supergroup Might Just Save the World is out for delivery, and what better way to kill time before it gets here than watching some never-before-seen footage of cDc at the height of its infamy.
A good get is a Joe Budden, slick-talking gigolo whose Twitter infamy has kept him afloat better than his formidable mic skills, or a Stevie J, storied producer for legends like the Notorious B.I.G. in the '90s who's great for TV not for talent but because he's a careless asshole.
The episode begins not on the date that continues to live in infamy, but 14 months earlier, with a remarkable internal White House audio recording in which President Franklin Delano Roosevelt notes a Japanese demand that the United States demilitarize on Midway Atoll and Wake Island and in Pearl Harbor.
In 1858, seven years after the newspaper was founded, President James Buchanan delivered a prime candidate for senatorial skewering: Nathan Clifford of Maine — known for "pro-slavery" views, if he was known for anything — to serve as an associate justice under Roger Brooke Taney, the chief justice of Dred Scott infamy.
Representative Joe Wilson, the South Carolina Republican who gained a measure of infamy after shouting "you lie" at President Barack Obama during a joint session of Congress in 2009, had that memorable catchphrase hurled back at him by a group of his constituents at a town hall event on Monday.
Claim to infamy: See above In 2011, after serving as a video editor for the Trump-run Miss Universe pageant and The Apprentice, Justin McConney noticed his boss's lackluster social media presence—no YouTube account, few followers on Twitter or Facebook—and convinced the Donald to hire him as director of new media.
It is chilling to discover the extent to which the bombers' connections criss-crossed Europe—from London (where Abu Qatada, a radical imam, served as their godfather) to Milan (where one of their senior figures took refuge) to Molenbeek (the Brussels district which achieved infamy after the Paris attacks of November 2015).
An elderly woman who rose to infamy over the last two decades as the "Internet Black Widow"—a name given to her for her attempts to rob from, poison, and murder some of her past partners via identities she assumed online—is scheduled to be released from a Nova Scotia prison Friday.
You may know her as Viva, the sometime actress, model and artist who sprang to fame — or infamy — as a sylphlike muse to Andy Warhol in the late 1960s; the female lead in a roster of intentionally amateurish soft porn Warhol films that were showcased in TriBeCa recently in their 16-millimeter original.
In the final weeks of the US presidential election, Veles attained a weird infamy in the most powerful nation on earth; stories in The Guardian and on BuzzFeed revealed that the Macedonian town of 55,000 was the registered home of at least 100 pro-Trump websites, many of them filled with sensationalist, utterly fake news.
But all it would take is one UFC fighter giving voice to his lifelong dream of being a hip-hop MC or a stand-up comedian and this whole experiment in the mainstreaming of mixed martial arts could explode in all of our faces, sending our sport back into the shadows of shame and infamy.
Reubens's relationship to the success he achieved is, to put it mildly, conflicted; he's both deeply warm and deeply guarded, and even before his fame gave way to infamy after his 1991 arrest on charges of indecent exposure, he weighed his ambition to reach ever-bigger audiences against the high premium he put on privacy.
One account to get the ax belonged to Jayda Fransen, the deputy leader of Britain First—a militant far-right group guilty of spreading anti-Muslim propaganda in the UK. Fransen's profile rose to international infamy in November after President Trump retweeted three videos from her account that allegedly featured Muslims committing acts of violence.
Taking two street fighters—one of whom was ran a backyard promotion—who rose to infamy through gross spectacle and lowest common denominator curiosity and putting them near the top of a major MMA card forced the MMA to confront its anxiety about its origins and the prejudice and misunderstanding the sport still faces.
" The set included two songs from the new album that rev up to the punky, speed-metal tempos of 230s Metallica: "Hardwired," with a chorus delivering unbridled pessimism in four-letter words, and "Moth Into Flame," a tirade at the corrosive effects of fame and social media: "Infamy, all for publicity/Destruction going viral.
Republican Representative Mike Kelly compared the impeachment to the Japanese attack on Hawaii's Pearl Harbor in 1941, calling the House proceedings another "date that will live in infamy" - similar to the words Democratic President Franklin Roosevelt used to describe the raid that killed about 2,400 people and led to America's entry into World War Two.
Stephen Paddock, the gunman who killed 58 people in a barrage of gunfire from his perch in a Las Vegas hotel suite, had sought infamy and most likely chose his target, an outdoor music festival, because of the image of harming people who were having fun, according to an F.B.I. report released on Tuesday.
There is, of course, a non-zero chance that the RoF would try to claim a school shooter as one of their own for greater infamy—going so far as admitting a group member purchased a gun on Cruz's behalf—but classmates told ABC News that Cruz was a member of the group and was seen with Jereb.
The last time the Oscars were without one, the result was an infamously bad opening sequence in which Rob Lowe, in an effort to rehabilitate his image (which had recently been damaged by a sex tape scandal), tap-danced and sang his way through a baffling musical number with Snow White that went down in Oscars infamy.
But the conduct of Speaker Nancy PelosiNancy PelosiPelosi, Schumer praise Romney after impeachment vote Senate acquits Trump, ending impeachment saga McCarthy to submit copy of Trump's SOTU address to House Clerk for archives MORE at the State of the Union address this week will go down as a day of infamy for the chamber as an institution.
The full scope of Kaelin's new life as a pop culture lightning rod only grows after this moment on screen, as we know, but the nod to its beginning marks the emergence of a central theme the show has snuck into the already content-packed folds of its narrative: the price of fame — or more accurately, infamy.
They also asked for $5 million in cash that was held in an E*Trade account as security for Shkreli's bond; Shkreli's shares of Turing Pharmaceuticals, the drug company that rocketed him to infamy for raising the price of the medicine Daraprim; the Lil Wayne album "Tha Carter V;" an Enigma machine and a Picasso painting.
Despite his infamy (he founded one of the most successful antivirus software companies ever, fled from Belize police in 2012 after being wanted for questioning in the death of his neighbor, and ran for president in 2016), McAfee is still viewed by some as a cryptocurrency sage; he was touting bitcoin as the currency of the future long before its recent gains.
So the Academy announced that the ceremony would move forward without a host for the first time in 22014 years; the last time the Oscars went host-free, in 212, the ceremony itself went off largely without a hitch, but parts of it — most notably the opening number, in which Rob Lowe duetted with Snow White — went down in Oscars infamy.
Ostensibly it's multiracial, too—where the action in both those tracks is located in black America, "Sunday Mass" names Nikolas C., Devin K., Stephen P., Omar M., Syed F., and Aaron A. before getting to Dylann R., and isn't it a mitzvah that most of us have already deprived these monsters of the infamy they craved by forgetting the surnames Quelle doggedly pronounces?
For some time, status in the first world has not been signaled just with expensive clothes and designer handbags, but also with so-called elevated versions of everyday items: an elegant pour-over coffee kit in place of a humble Mr. Coffee machine; dinky house ferns replaced by exotic Monstera plants; and in recent infamy, drinking straws and paper clips from Tiffany.
This fraudulent nobleman, along with many other underworld denizens of late-220th-century New York — the pickpockets and hotel thieves, the forgers and confidence men — would surely be forgotten today, their distinctive faces lost to cruel time, were it not for a New York police official whose legacy straddles fame and infamy: the singular and supremely confident Inspector Thomas F. Byrnes.
To assist concerned undergrads, the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC) has released a guide called "The Alt-Right on Campus: What Students Need to Know" that advises students to deny alt-righters (or as SPLC puts it, "the fringe movement driven by a small group of bigoted young men") the attention the movement uses to boost its infamy and recruit more college-aged followers.
In addition to Farfetch — which is somewhat the jewel in the company's crown — there is media/fe-commerce site Goop, of Gwyneth Paltrow and jade egg infamy; The Business of Fashion, a much respected fashion news site; Deliveroo (because everyone has to eat and this delivery service meets that demand stylishly); retail analytics firm Yoobic; and photography site Olapic, acquired by Monotype for $130 million; among many others.
Since her career began in the 1970s, she's accrued critical recognition, a touch of infamy and multiple awards, including a Golden Lion at the 1997 Venice Biennale for "Balkan Baroque," in which she attempted to scrub blood from an enormous pile of cow bones over a period of six days, evoking the enduring stains of war on her own country's history as well as on a global scale.
Woo, who has written for everything from Wonderfalls to True Blood, served as showrunner for Infamy, which follows the story of one family's detention in a fictional internment camp, the son's efforts fighting for the US Army in the war, and a ghost named Yuko who stalks the family's members on both sides of the Pacific and causes those who stand in her way to do themselves harm.
Though we've since gained more insight into what actually went down, those three minutes of utter disarray that unfolded on live TV will forever live in infamy as some of the biggest names in Hollywood gawked and scrambled to understand just what the hell went wrong; and now, thanks to The Hollywood Reporter's off-the-charts-wild oral history of the events, we know that things were 100% as chaotic as they appeared.
While names like Blackbeard, Captain Hook, Henry Morgan, and even the fictional Captain Jack Sparrow have lived on in infamy, notorious buccaneers and marauders like Cheng I Sao, who commanded more than 400 ships and 50,000 men off China in the early 19th century; Grace O'Malley, the Irish pirate who terrorized the British Isles in Elizabethan times; and Sayyida al-Hurra, pirate queen of the notorious Barbary Corsairs, have been largely ignored.
But Faso has a new infamy attached to his name: Pressured by polls showing that Delgado was tied or even ahead in the race, the National Republican Congressional Committee released a disgusting, deeply coded campaign ad that uses clips from Delgado's youthful flirtation with hip-hop (rapping under the handle "AD the Voice") as evidence that Faso's challenger was out of step with the values of the district and "unfit" to serve as their representative.
"He can say that nobody pushed him but understand that the United States is the most powerful country on earth … When the president of the United States withholds military aid that had been duly authorized by Congress and then on the July 25 phone call says 'do us a favor' -- four words, Chris that will likely live in infamy.... That is what you call a high-pressure tactic and of course the Ukrainian president got the message," Jeffries responded.
Following its months-long investigation into the man who murdered 58 people in Las Vegas in October 2017, the FBI has determined that the only discernible motive for 64-year-old Stephen Paddock was his desire to kill as many people as possible and gain "some form of infamy," according to AP. Why it matters: Ever since Paddock carried out the deadliest mass shooting in modern U.S. history, opening fire on concertgoers from his hotel room, there has been confusion about his motives.
After $110 million in career earnings on the course and several times that much off it; after more than 143 worldwide victories, including 14 majors; after two decades of being saddled with a superhero cape that is one loose thread from unraveling into infamy, Woods could have become a full-time chauffeur and cheerleader for his two children, a part-time fisherman and scuba diver and an occasional adrenaline junkie who satisfied his cravings through bungee jumping, sky diving or heli-skiing.
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