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991 Sentences With "make a point"

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

I was going to make a point and was going to make a make a point well.
Now, for POTUS -- let me just make a point.
To compromise that to make a point, is deeply troubling.
Melanie "Mel B" Brown knows how to make a point.
REGARDING TRADE, SCOTT, OKAY, LET ME MAKE A POINT HERE.
Primary voters want to win, not just make a point.
Does it make a point about female representation on TV?
He's able to make his case and make a point.
The absence of even good things can make a point.
We wanted to make a point and get their attention.
That would be the simplest way to make a point.
The Pussy Grabber Plays make a point of being comedic.
Over time, make a point to increase your savings percentage.
Mr. Schroepfer had showed the pictures to make a point.
His complaint offers lessons on how to make a point.
Democratic Senator Tammy Duckworth provided visuals to make a point.
As you go, make a point of rapping Lil Wayne.
So I thought, 'OK, I'm going to make a point here.
It was the most ruinous way imaginable to make a point.
You could also make a point about the brand-new cameras.
And he's not driving an old car to make a point.
That's why I make a point to pack these eight essentials.
Carve out some time and make a point to do so.
It seems pretty clear that they're trying to make a point.
I wanna make a point of bringing more diversity on air.
I make a point of telling her she's good at math.
Maybe it's a little melodramatic, but it does make a point.
I guess you'd say I was trying to make a point.
They make a point to highlight queer Appalachians running for local government.
If that sounds creepy, forgive me; I'm trying to make a point.
" And I was like, "Well, I was trying to make a point.
Except in cases where the agency really needs to make a point.
Students should make a point of seeking help to make the jump.
The "report seems to make a point with its vocabulary," Jackson said.
Make a point to alternate whether men or women do coffee runs.
Is that something that you make a point of trying to include?
Connect with old friends or make a point to meet new people!
HAYES: I brought it up because I wanted to make a point.
History does not need to be repeated just to make a point.
"I think he's using these examples to make a point," said Sen.
And this particular guy marched down the street to make a point.
Sometimes AI is in the story to make a point about otherness.
Because whatever it is, the writer is trying to make a point.
You make a point of it to rep Carol City really hard.
Scooters were graffitied, disemboweled, and even pooped on to make a point.
Before the night ends, I make a point to talk to Chris.
Yet a prolonged shutdown is an expensive way to make a point.
To be a fan is to make a point of being unreasonable.
He once shocked himself with a cattle prod to make a point.
"I just want to make a point of this," Mr. Shanahan added.
I shouldn't castigate a large group of Americans to make a point.
I always make a point we are a country of 50 border states.
Lonely Island and Lajoie play characters in their raps to make a point.
I make a point to call them both at least once a week.
I make a point to ask if they need more to take home.
A crushed ambulance video Nothing like a good visual to make a point.
The copy on the site uses pictures of eggplants to make a point.
"I guess you'd say I was trying to make a point," Souza concluded.
But Democrats are hoping their guests will help make a point to Trump.
We don't need to reduce people down in order to make a point.
The series doesn't make a point to emphasize this — it doesn't have to.
Why does Caroline make a point, in extremis, of shouting out "Dickie Roper"?
If you're part of a pair, make a point of being bae's BFF.
They talk about "servant leadership" and make a point of cultivating their "stakeholders".
But using the flag or anthem to make a point can be sticky.
Make a point to be social (that shouldn't be hard for you, Gemini).
It can also inspire teenagers to abuse their independence to make a point.
However, I make a point of spending quality time with him during breaks.
Ann Wagner (R-Mo.) attempts to make a point of order after Rep.
WINDSOR, Ontario — Bernie Sanders wanted to make a point about a crippling injustice.
He's doing it to make a point or bring emphasis to certain words.
He suggested he would not make a point of going after Mr. Trump.
That's why they make a point of adhering to a few specific ones.
Chidera Eggerue started the #SaggyBoobsMatter movement to make a point about body image.
But this year, it seems like French startups are trying to make a point.
Every August, I make a point of reflecting deeply on my use of technology.
Seems like he's trying to make a point about casually kissing lots of people.
The most successful democracies make a point of separating powers and slowing governments down.
I don't think you need to resort to body-shaming to make a point.
RIVERA: Because I found what people do is, they want to make a point.
And make a point of doing more to promote serenity: yoga, meditation, outdoor exercise.
That's how you show dedication—not by staying longer just to make a point.
And just to make a point about male lawmakers regulating women's health care, Rep.
In fact, Sanchez would probably make a point of respecting the country's EU commitments.
We love finding new adventures and make a point to get off main roads.
They are calm and collected, and they make a point of always battling fairly.
The Outlaws make a point to mention that "Copa" set the prices, not them.
In my everyday life, I make a point of coming out when I can.
You've said in the past that you shaved your head to make a point.
Some countries make a point of targeting their commissioning largess toward their own composers.
We make a point of not touching hands, even if we're all wearing gloves.
Make a point to smile at the other transients to spread a little joy.
Memes often try to make a point using very few words and mostly images.
He didn't scream or grab players by the face mask to make a point.
You might think I am exaggerating -- and, I am, slightly, to make a point.
She was simply using basic, evocative language to make a point come to life.
And right-wing commentators make a point of defending Western civilization against liberal criticism.
Mainstream gay rights groups often make a point of standing up for trans women.
RIP He was walking across the country -- barefoot -- to make a point about climate change.
Make a point to do some networking today because you will make some amazing connections.
I make a point to take part in a variety of activities to let loose.
When Rohrssen wants to make a point, he tends to lean forward in his seat.
"I decided it's okay to serve food you hate to make a point," she responded.
You decided to make a point about something you don't really know the dynamics of.
All that evidence (ph) that came out -- INGRAHAM: I&aposm trying to make a point.
Unlike his rivals, the California billionaire did not make a point of going after Warren.
I do make a point to force myself to go out and make work, though.
Even if you have to make a point or two to get them to listen.
It uses Bob Marley's "Waiting in Vain" to make a point about being unbearably horny.
She does her first set and jokingly pulls her breast out to make a point.
Make a point of expressing your continued interest in contributing to the team's overall success.
They now always make a point to show that they don't agree or support him.
Make a point to connect with people because some interesting news and ideas will come.
In the end, the bot was able to change minds—it could make a point.
Koltiska feels this policy is unfair, so she took to Facebook to make a point.
Finally, we must make a point to understand what it's like to be a patient.
Whenever they make a point about how human life is countable in units of time,
Not to mention we make a point to take the stairs as often as possible.
Make a point to have fun today, despite the transformations that are happening your life.
One point does not make a curve, and one curve does not make a point.
So I'm in the business of trying to make a law, not make a point.
What I wanted to make a point about, and my son's statement speaks for itself.
Norman told CNN he wanted to make a point in the debate over gun violence.
Violating congressional traditions to make a point is itself a longstanding tradition for good reason.
And even if he were, he would make a point of staying below the radar.
Instead, he said, he was trying to make a point about the heated political environment.
More than a few have been executed with antiaircraft guns, just to make a point.
Just to make a point, of course we are not saying we're a philanthropic company.
Here are three instances when lawmakers used their questions to make a point about Trump.
Aside from that, I would make a point to elaborate on each of your experiences.
Watch how he uses little rest stops just before he wants to make a point.
Some owners make a point of scouring review sites so they can do just that.
Who do you make a point of reading regularly whose ideas you don't agree with?
"I decided it's okay to serve food you hate to make a point," Monroe says afterward.
They make a point of curating mostly women spaces when they play and when they tour.
She said she declined the offer and went to the appointment anyway to make a point.
Clearly, Lyft wants to make a point: Its services help lessen traffic and boost community mobility.
You still listen to music on an iPod Nano to make a point about planned obsolescence.
She could just delete her tweet too, but she is clearly trying to make a point.
The best ads use a celebrity's widely known, but seldom acknowledged weaknesses to make a point.
In order to succeed female politicians in the region often make a point of acting tough.
Yet characterizing Trump as "crazy" relies on the stigma of psychiatric disabilities to make a point.
I tried to make a point of saying, yes, this is awkward and ugly and uncomfortable.
The choice to call attention to your own daughter's vagina to make a point is weirder.
The Tamimis, and Mr Ehrenreich, make a point of always calling them that, not "rubber bullets".
On Friday, CNN sent a courtroom sketch artist to capture the scene and make a point.
But it is allowing him to make a point about how Trump isn't keeping his promises. .
I was trying to make a point, but something else would have made that point better.
In Haye's telling, younger investors should make a point of not getting lost in the weeds.
But he may make a point of visiting one of his favorites: Spring/Break Art Show.
The Moon is in fellow fire sign Leo today, so make a point to have fun.
So yeah, you can include that if you make a point in saying, 'We were wrong.
And sometimes it was Jesus wanting to make a point that was the catalyst for healing.
It's not out of some desire to do something for humanity or to make a point.
Now, I make a point to tell makeup artists that I want my freckles to show.
But I make a point of not mothering him too much and doing everything for him.
Sure, it's possible that this, his feature debut, missed a few opportunities to make a point.
He seemed to enjoy telling stories, but all of them were calculated to make a point.
With all of that said, I want to make a point about the term "woke" itself.
But we can fight to make a point and position the party for 2018 and 85033.
" But she wanted to make a point: "No one is too small to make a difference.
Blackish will frequently cut to footage like this when Anderson's voiceover wants to make a point.
"It's very misleading to point to outliers and use them to make a point," Stinson said.
That it was possible to make a point without morphing into a shout-fest that turned pointless.
Schumer turn to the letter to help make a point about the strength of America through diversity?
Like the opening crawl, the credits make a point: I've just been through a Star Wars adventure.
Yet even the KMT used Taiwan's Palace Museum to make a point about the island's distinct identity.
I think he is prone to drawing very stark contrasts when he's trying to make a point.
Bruno Studer, from the east, adopted an Alsatian accent in parliament this week to make a point.
The first was a direct confrontation that leaned on history to make a point about the present.
The video isn't really about ketchup, of course, but uses condiments to make a point about sexuality.
I try to make a point to give them this stuff before they ever ask for it.
My face wasn't just used to sell stuff or make a point, but also to illustrate things.
It was clear Sekiro was trying to make a point, and finally, I was willing to listen.
And so they flay about, trying to make a point about relevance that nobody but them understands.
Like Mattis, his fellow Marine and confidante, Kelly is blunt when he wants to make a point.
Others make a point to note that they aren't sexual deviants, they simply enjoy not wearing clothes.
"This isn't a transaction as much as it is an effort to make a point," Miller said.
"I wanted to make a point, that I am comfortable with my Melanin and roots," she wrote.
Duncan Hunter (R-Calif.) to make a point about the ramifications of opening combat jobs to women.
It's not that I'm trying to make a point about who is defining their eating choices wrongly.
You can just heat the plastic and rub it against a rough surface to make a point.
Make a point of researching every seller, especially if there's anything on the page that seems suspicious.
It didn't make a point of determining which teachers might have been using birth control, for example.
A spokesman later said that Mr. Duterte had only been using colorful language to make a point.
I was trying to make a point, but I should've made it in a more effective way.
A viral image They hung a fake poster of themselves at a McDonald's to make a point.
We broke the story, the City Attorney desperately wants a case to prosecute to make a point.
He declared himself to be a white supremacist and that he was trying to make a point.
Instead, EDEKA—one of Germany's biggest grocery chains—is trying to make a point about diversity and racism.
Supreme Court justices make a point of not commenting on politics, much less responding to things politicians say.
And that, ladies and gents, is how you make a point on Twitter and still maintain some class.
Before the end of each day, I make a point to respond to emails and social media messages.
They are trying to make a point with the thousands of new products and features they bring out.
And the complaints from a few users couldn't be used to make a point about the entire industry.
I never know what they're going to look like, so I make a point to be open-minded.
Douglas MacArthur, who died in 1964, to make a point about America's pursuit of the ISIS terror organization.
I am using Phelps to make a point: That we observe the success of men and women differently.
You can accept the story at face value or not; Sacca told the story to make a point.
I did make a point of saying, 'This does not make me feel comfortable,' and that was respected.
Anytime I go somewhere to do a show I always make a point to visit the markets there.
"I make a point of order that the gentlewoman's words are unparliamentary and be taken down," Georgia Rep.
After that, whenever I heard a Tragically Hip song come on, I would make a point to listen.
Servers make a point of telling you that the pasta is not the size of a main course.
Still, Kvyat set the fastest lap of the race on Lap 53, as if to make a point.
Following are articles from CNBC Digital: There's a time where you stand up and you make a point.
In our guide, we make a point of giving you the return policies for each option we recommend.
In this case, it's to make a point — she's just doing what men in her position routinely do.
And silence as a protest tactic is being used to make a point without ruffling too many feathers.
If you do create a group, make a point to be super vigilant about the spread of misinformation.
But how do we explain to Abrar that because we want to make a point, she must starve?
But I bring them up to make a point about the inherent difficulty of theory as a tool.
Mr. Snyder, a Republican, is following a familiar playbook for elected officials seeking to make a point. Gov.
Buffett often does this in his talks, adding anecdotes from his life and career to make a point.
He may want to make a point by running up the score against the lowly Broncos (0-2).
They remember when he brought squealing piglets to the state house to make a point about "pork" spending.
And it was also genius for Trump to make a point of pumping up his own moral squalor.
And the American destroyer Donald Cook entered the Black Sea this weekend to make a point to Moscow.
Lawmakers also often introduce amendments while the bill is still in the committee process to make a point.
She added that after the walkout, the participants will make a point to go directly back to class.
Too often, people grab a quick, sexy, polemical, historical analogy to make a point or further their cause.
If you have a friend whose life always seems perfect, make a point to connect with them in person.
The reality is ... the constant verbal attacks have been building for weeks and Khabib wanted to make a point.
As experimental as you are, you can get stuck in your ways—make a point to get unstuck today.
Vanessa Beecroft, who designed the stage, told Art News she was trying make a point about poverty in America.
"These new caravans have helped Trump make a point and support the further militarization at the border," she said.
Like I think you have to think in terms in these terms if you want to make a point.
Early search services weren't immune to privacy concerns, but some claimed to make a point of vetting their clients.
We need to make a point about how important it is to care about everyone's voice in this process.
If you haven't seen the 2017 Whitney Biennial yet, Sagittarius, you really should make a point of going soon.
"I told stories instead of making a provocative statement to make a point," he said, recalling his rebound race.
Single guys: Make plans with your friends on Valentine's Day, and make a point to ask how they're feeling.
The billboards follow a tradition of bringing Hollywood's most visible fictional protest symbols to life to make a point.
Tillemann is the guy who sprayed himself in the face with pepper spray to make a point about guns.
We as entrepreneurs have got to make a point to give stock to everybody that works for us. Period.
A flood of tweets were shared, to make a point about the recent allegations against Alabama politician Roy Moore.
"I think a lot of information is put out to make a point," Ballmer told Recode in an interview.
"I think a lot of information is put out to make a point," Ballmer told Recode in an interview.
Everything we saw was different from the western world, so we decided to make a point of highlighting that.
Definitely make a point to do as much networking as you can in the second half of the month.
He's also burning the proceeds of his privilege to make a point about the lives of the unprivileged, apparently.
But Trump did make a point of saying he would represent all Americans if elected president on Nov. 8.
News. Jenner has also used social media to make a point to subtly shut down speculation surrounding Stormi's paternity.
He's a politician trying to keep the mic and make a point, and politicians routinely dismiss one another's points.
She wasn't there long, but she was clearly there to make a point ... Jaden and his fam support her.
And he exhorted readers to send Gersh -- whom he also identified as Jewish -- enough messages to make a point.
" The guidelines also make a point of stating that "people do not eat food groups and nutrients in isolation.
Specifically, he used a famous moment in the debate between Bush and Clinton to make a point about Trump.
A Republican congress member from California tried to make a point about women in the military, and it backfired.
I shot my last ad campaign in a landfill site for a reason, and to make a point, obviously.
Like most politicians, Reagan could exaggerate to make a point, but he hated to be caught telling a falsehood.
So why did Saudi Arabia make a point to tell the world that oil supplies with Canada will continue?
If anything, most new developments in North Brooklyn seem to make a point of distinguishing themselves from these structures.
I don't feel under pressure, I don't feel like I have to sell hella albums to make a point.
As the moon squares off with action planet Mars, make a point to ask for what you want, Aquarius!
She doesn't believe for a second that the proposed regulations will become law; she's trying to make a point.
Taurus is a sensual Earth sign—make a point to connect with your senses as Venus travels through it.
We make a point to eat dinners at the table together so we can talk and spend time together.
He did not make a point of rehashing the battle over Justice Thomas on the campaign trail in 1992.
Make a point to meet managers and other interns beyond just the people you are working with every day.
But Pakistan is not the only one of the nuclear-armed neighbors to use missiles to make a point.
"I wonder if he was taking the word 'scherzo,' which means 'joke,' to make a point," Mr. Corigliano said.
At the same time, we have to make a point that exhibitors and distributors have a great responsibility here.
While some groups perform intermittently along the parade route, others make a point of dancing as much as possible.
"It is clear the bride wanted to make a point of her racial identity," one of our reporters wrote.
"Blocking such a deal would serve to keep the American influence away and also make a point to America."
They have their own security units, called the Borhani Guards, though leaders make a point to keep them unarmed.
WASHINGTON — After Mark Ein bought the Citi Open, he said he would make a point of highlighting doubles play.
That makes sense for the AP, but what about left-leaning outlets that might want to make a point?
Prison officials say they make a point of keeping IS supporters away from each other, and from other inmates.
The second season of Narcos: Mexico wants to make a point about consequences, at least on a surface level.
Norman told CNN after the event that he wanted to make a point in the debate over gun violence.
And I always make a point of saying the college years are not the best years of their lives.
He did, however, make a point to let listeners know his opinion on one particular aspect of the series.
But she proposed it last week to make a point and give male lawmakers a taste of their own medicine.
S. and I have a long chat about money, which we try to make a point of talking about regularly.
Lawmakers did, however, make a point to note the absence of Google, which declined to send a top-ranking executive.
She works at the one restaurant in town, and I'm going to make a point to visit it sometime soon.
There is one thing you will have to make a point of going out and buying, though: a new router.
"It's become more difficult to make a point to just get lost and find our way back together," she admitted.
If you are responsible for building an online product, make a point of not making poor choices for your customers.
PHIL LEBEAU: And you're working with Uber Air, but you make a point of saying it's not just Uber Air.
"We want to make a point that you can both invest in communities and build a great business," Zimmer said.
The guys who run the flags on the field, they always make a point to stop by before the game.
Everyone tells me that they now make a point of checking for the exits when they are in public buildings.
Duncan Hunter (R-Calif.) offered the amendment to make a point about the ramifications of opening combat jobs to women.
But when he wants to make a point, he plays with a heavy hand — fortissimo, when piano would have done.
When faced by overwhelming force, Tehran usually backs down from a confrontation, but still could want to make a point.
Officers will "make a point" to show increased presence near the media outlets, which were not identified, the spokesman added.
Make a point to get plenty of sleep, and make time to work out or otherwise tend to your health.
In general, even when I'm approached by non-HuffPo reporters, I make a point of asking if they're getting paid.
He did make a point of praising Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman and his Vision 2030 plan for the country.
Ms. Garner was unafraid to speak her mind, use rough language to make a point, or go against the grain.
You use morose or dire language to make a point, and don't often romanticize a situation when you're discussing it.
I've been to lots of observation decks, and make a point of it when I go to a new city.
Do you ever see memes that use stereotypes or hurtful beliefs about an individual or groups to make a point?
"The headline was written as a rhetorical device, using understatement to make a point," said Tom Jolly, associate masthead editor.
At times he drew a copy of the Constitution from his breast pocket and brandished it to make a point.
George goes on to make a point about equality, and it's not exactly what you might be used to hearing.
The administration should also make a point of working with the Iraqi government to deal with the militias, Ford said.
If you want it to have teeth, and you're trying to make a point, you might piss some people off.
Nor does he set out to make a point or pass along a revelation, all reasons to distrust a poet.
Maybe Lt. Stamets is trying to make a point of giving useless work to Burnham, given her status as a mutineer?
Horse girls were the first to get braces, and would make a point to change the rubber band colors every month.
Make a point to party today—you've been stuck at home a lot, and you really need to have some fun.
From shaving a 13-year-old's head to murdering 22 people with fentanyl to make a point, Darlene is chaos personified.
Day 3:Since I'm absolutely useless in the mornings, I always make a point to prepare my lunches the night before.
This one was kind of a no-brainer, especially since your own notes make a point of watching out for Stan.
On Wednesday's episode, Bee's TBS series unveiled Full Fronterdale to make a point about vaccinating children: that it's a good thing.
The National Review's Kyle Smith said McKay, a donor to Democratic candidates, crafted "left-wing fantasy dialogue" to make a point.
If nothing else, Obama seems determined to make a point about the importance of heeding scientists and respecting their institutions.[Science]
Beckford says she and her family make a point of having a family member at every one of Yust's court hearings.
Although this makes me feel uncomfortable at times, D. and I make a point to not spend a lot of money.
And that prospect alone will continue to excite the many Americans who make a point of voting for pro-life politicians.
He moved to Lancaster because his wife has family ties to the area — and he also wanted to make a point.
Back in the real world, Sanders is trying to make a point about Amazon — not craft a bill that makes sense.
It's become an unwritten rule that you don't touch the trophy, albeit one that teams occasionally make a point of breaking.
On the contrary, Iran has pledged to restart its nuclear activities — and these are not merely threats to make a point.
This can lead to balance billing surprises even when patients make a point to seek care at an in-network hospital.
At the joint press conference, Macron seemed to make a point of highlighting issues on which France and Russia sharply disagree.
Very rich person Donald Trump Jr., who inherited his wealth from his father, would like to make a point about socialism.
The family does, however, make a point to support various causes, donate to charities, and raise awareness issues impacting the world.
He had argued that "this is simply not the case" to make a point about the "culture of corruption" at Rikers.
But does that mean we punish children and permanently scar them to make a point of the unfairness of the system?
Yasmine: He was also saying that you were whining, when you were trying to make a point that was super relevant.
August, 250 The credits for Lady Gaga's 22016 debut, The Fame, make a point of thanking Andy Warhol and David Bowie.
I make a point to choose articles that have enough information to allow students to find out about the subject's character.
When Karen Russell's short stories appear in The New Yorker, as they frequently do, I make a point to read them.
Ladies — we NEED to make a point to celebrate our own accomplishments and not just to celebrate engagements, weddings, and babies.
While these services make a point of removing the hassle for consumers to get started, canceling is a whole different matter.
We're going through this tour of Valhalla to make a point: Odin has another son that Nintendo hasn't used yet: Thor.
The spread is generous, but it is safe to assume they will try to make a point with a big win.
American, Australian and other military forces make a point of flouting these rules – which have little international legitimacy – with relative impunity.
It is leaders of autocratic countries, not democracies, who make a point of telling journalists how they should do their job.
Instead of revisiting them, make a point of seeing — or-re-seeing — a one-of-a-kind triumph of the imagination.
I was used to Long Islanders, not exactly shy or retiring, stopping me to ask a question or make a point.
The journalist licensing bill, which he said he may file to make a point, is almost identical to the handgun bill.
Both Gates and Buffett make a point to read every day, a habit that research shows reduces stress and boosts intelligence.
Also, make a point of only applying the salt in the precise spots where you want to remove snow and ice.
When I make a point of walking upright and fluid, sitting straight, even cooking relaxed and unhurried, I have no pain.
She says Phil and the other brass already knew the source of the leak, but they wanted to make a point.
They rallied to make a point to the virtually all-male Trump administration about just how valuable and essential women are.
You often make a point, in my experience, of pushing an optimistic narrative in the face of an increasingly pessimistic culture.
Fewer games seem to know quite what to do with the feature, even those that make a point of promising HDR support.
The State Department cuts also make a point to end the Global Climate Change Initiative and other international efforts on the issue.
In Dumplin', Aniston plays a former pageant queen whose plus-size daughter enters her competition to make a point about beauty standards.
Elsie did make a point of saying that hosts still record sexual interactions while in sleep mode — maybe they record conversations, too.
Steve Clay of Belgrade, Montana wanted to make a point to friends elsewhere that Montanans are tough, said his wife, Angie Clay.
Next time you hit up Trader Joe's, make a point to stock up so you can always have real cheese on hand.
Alicia Garza, a cofounder of Black Lives Matter, said Thursday that Zuckerberg had co-opted the organization's name to make a point.
It wasn't the first time - nor likely the last - that politicians rolled out a vacant chair to try to make a point.
The actor, 53, made a special appearance on the Jim Jefferies Show earlier this week to make a point about global warming.
I make a point of bringing on [people] who make Netflix shows, I want to ask them what that process is like.
If someone makes a really bold or obnoxious or controversial statement they'll leave the Slack room dramatically just to make a point.
I make a point of always leaving my phone downstairs during this time so that I can make sure I'm fully present.
That's something worth taking note of: not just for Democrats, not just for politicians, but for anyone looking to make a point.
Basically — try not to be a narcissist, don't take credit for other people's work, and don't make a point of criticising people.
This video kind of reminds me of Juan when he tries to make a point and just doesn&apost quite get there.
Officials now make a point of providing their campaigns with a basic "to-do list" on steps to protect against security breaches.
I did make a point to include some bands that are not on my list of favorites, in the interest of inclusiveness.
Ganesh sees me writing this down in the back of his rickshaw and wants to make a point about his wife's employer.
One way of resetting this attention bias is to actively make a point to notice the positive stuff that you normally ignore.
And France's Minister of Economy, Industry and Digital Affairs Emmanuel Macron was also there, trying to make a point about French startups.
When Trump first proposed the wall, I knew I had to speak out and use his own words to make a point.
Apparently, Stalin was trying to make a point: he had been warning of spies in their midst, and now here was proof.
In Boston, it was reported after the shooting that officers would "make a point" to show increased presence near the media outlets.
An index finger rises from where it was resting on a thigh, as though the cadaver were about to make a point.
Let's say he portrayed a woman burning to death in order to make a point about the violence in his own movies.
So I make a point of talking about that and working to make sure that our political education activities speak to that.
Whenever I return to Amsterdam, I make a point of visiting Frieda Menco, who, at age 91, is literally my oldest friend.
I use two 5-pound weights and I make a point of keeping my core tight and twisting with the different punches.
They just wanted to make a point: some Internet of Things devices fail to take simple security precautions, leaving users in danger.
That's one of Ms. Sampson's gifts: She is uncowed by supposed rules of construction, unafraid of genre-switching to make a point.
The book is a celebration of feminism and women, but it doesn't feel like anyone is being punished to make a point.
EBONI BOOTH ("Dance Nation") Clare was trying to make a point about how we're a lot of different ages at different times.
It's something most of them make a point of mentioning, so you can often find a hospital's teaching status on its website.
But other observers think he missed an opportunity, if only to make a point about liberals like those who shouted him down.
They make a point to say the guy didn't want Mikaela prosecuted, but the officers say their department is still moving forward.
Such is the reality of em dashes: They're meant to be used judiciously, not every time you need to make a point.
The spectre of authority hung over the event, along with the dream that the kids might make a point to their parents.
I think you have to just make a point of relaxing and taking a nap, just thinking about little things that you enjoy.
"Pushing these people back just to make a point when the security situation remains tenuous is a terrible idea," one diplomat told Reuters.
Talk about the tools that you talk about, because each of your stories is trying to make a point about a certain thing.
Bernie Sanders, initially thought to be running more to make a point than to actually win, came within striking distance of the nomination.
You should always be thinking of this as an intersectional issue, and make a point to reach out to girls in underrepresented communities.
MANILA — The 89-year-old woman stood in the broiling sun this week outside the Philippine presidential palace hoping to make a point.
And Girl on the Third Floor, a horror film that premiered at 2019's SXSW Interactive Festival, doesn't make a point of trying.
I really make a point of that because, actually, you need people for a democracy, you need popular support to get things done.
I always buy the new version shortly after its release, and make a point of telling Android-using friends how wonderful it is.
To the bewilderment of my in-laws, I make a point in Italy of drinking espressos only while standing up at coffee bars.
If you'll owe for 2018, make a point of setting aside additional funds so that you're ready to pay your bill next spring.
In this instance, Chappelle fails to make a point, flip the issue on its head, or, really, say much of anything at all.
Legislators are not always above using the occasional prop to make a point — see, for example, the senator who recently enlisted the shruggie.
Young managers, especially, might make a point to be firm and not seem too lenient so as not to get taken advantage of.
And you make a point of saying very little about it, of establishing it as a known quantity in society, no big deal.
"I look like a white guy from California who wants to use black people to make a point," he says with a laugh.
But he did make a point to inquire about McCartney's trademark Hofner bass, which had played crucial role in the Beatles' sonic blend.
In his latest exhibition, Echo, Madrid-based artist Daniel Canogar is trying to make a point about how we interact with the world.
He's not running a campaign to just make a point or to win an argument this time; he's in it to win it.
Still, Kazianis said, North Korea "wanted to make a point" to the United States that it will not give up its weapons programs.
We use humor and sarcasm to make a point and add color to the broadcast; in this instance, we were off the mark.
Bill: Yeah, I think the Congo thing is just to make a point of just how evil these imperialist powerful capitalist masterminds are.
" He later deleted the tweet, explaining that "I tried to make a point about regional differences in politics between urban and rural areas.
At times the show seems to use its main characters only to make a point about the cyclical nature of trauma and karma.
Determined though her research may be, Pilon seems to make a point of protecting the reader from the grind of engaging these truths.
If that's too expensive, find a coffee shop and make a point to go there at least a couple of days a week.
"Battlefields," by Yan Morvan, as if to make a point, is an object so heavy its weight broke its spine in the mail.
Even now, when enough of my friends are together for a night out, we always seem to make a point of walking home.
The Chinese government has started to make a point that they have a sovereign right to be able to regulate networks inside China.
It's one of the few times I make a point to get out and walk around a bit because there's so much history.
Make a point to go abroad, take that safari in Tanzania, tour Angkor Wat in Cambodia, float in the Blue Lagoon in Iceland.
Some airlines provide special meals for kids, while others make a point of reminding parents to pack sandwiches and snacks for their kids.
What Sally is having is a fake orgasm, in a crowded deli, demonstrated for Harry to make a point about women and sex.
There's emphatic swearing, for instance, which is meant to highlight a point, and dysphemistic swearing, which is meant to make a point provocatively.
Highlighting an example of the young sisters' dynamic, Fallon shares, "They almost make a point of it: 'I like "A Whole New World.
Sitting on a bar stool, the glass in front of him mostly drained, the actor Richard Roxburgh leaned in to make a point.
"Overall, I think he was trying to make a point, and his message became what kneeling was all about," Ross said of Trump.
Members of Congress trot out guests who will help them make a point, good or bad, about the president's agenda, and vice versa.
His goal was to fool the media into picking it up and make a point about how easy it is to do so.
He covers the rink like a Zamboni, rushing from one end to the other, smacking his stick on the ice to make a point.
I don't make a point of expecting things for free because I don't work for free and I don't expect other people should either.
"When we're debating on the Senate floor, sometimes we make serious proposals, and sometimes they're tongue-in-cheek to make a point," he said.
Maybe she understands that squads are a media creation and wants to make a point that there's no need to qualify friends with labels.
The next time I am visiting my brother at Section 60 of Arlington National Cemetery, I will make a point to stop by Capt.
He said Trump had been trying to make a point about being "hamstrung" in his efforts to deal with Russia because of the investigation.
So add the Golden State Warriors to your calendar, make a point of watching, and let Oscar Robinson know he should do the same.
But he doesn't have to make a point of blocking off time for research—mathematics simply fills all the spaces between his other obligations.
"When we're debating on the Senate floor, sometimes we make serious proposals, and sometimes they're tongue-in-cheek to make a point," Onder said.
This season, Unreal is aggressively trying to make a point, but after the first two episodes, it's not quite clear what that is yet.
They agonise about so-called third-party lawsuits, whereby outsiders pay for one side in a legal dispute in order to make a point.
Dr. Bassett adds that you should make a point to actually clean your air-conditioner's filter according to the instructions that come with it.
"  He eventually deleted the tweets, saying he had been trying "to make a point about regional differences in politics between urban and rural areas.
"Concluding, Sheriff Wiles wrote: "El Paso will never be the same, because a racist came to our city to try and make a point.
Of course, Ferris should have the opportunity to work, but I couldn't help thinking, How dare Gold use her disability to make a point?
There will be a moment in the coming months when Congress will feel compelled to make a point about United States policy toward Russia.
Robert C. Byrd, the longest-serving senator, was perhaps the best known, sometimes whipping out his ever-present pocket Constitution to make a point.
Ms. Berrin wrote about her encounter with Mr. Shavit to make a point about sexual harassment, after similar accusations were made against Mr. Trump.
"Most people, even if they wanted to make a point, they'd do it in a way that the other person isn't flailing out there."
Carroll did make a point to say his organization has been supportive of players who are trying to put a spotlight on social issues.
Let's not forget that PlayStation came from a position where it had to make a point of trying harder with indies, and it delivered.
Make a point to meet with a higher up, mentor, or someone whose work ethic you admire in order to create a strong alliance.
His lapse was probably an extreme case of a tin-eared Israeli using the wrong tools to make a point about his father's enemies.
Make a point to change out of whatever you slept in and into something cleanish and comfortable before you start working for the day.
All it would take is for judges to make a point of publicly disseminating written decisions whenever they find an officer was not credible.
In the NBA, major stars like LeBron, Kyrie Irving, Isaiah Thomas, Devin Booker and others make a point to follow and praise WNBA players.
"If you were trying to get them to be more gender neutral, they would make a point of being very gender specific," Manning said.
Political change doesn't just happen in the Capital Beltway, so make a point of reaching out to your municipal and state-level leaders, too.
But the mayor wanted to make a point: He felt that some coverage "hurt the city" and it was time to call it out.
Although it's ultimately just a message, the passage of this Senate resolution enables Democrats to make a point and put Republicans on the record.
But they feel different than the almost routine way Trump has used the power, as if to make a point in a news cycle.
Because mass shootings are so chaotic and unintentional mistakes have happened so frequently, police chiefs now make a point of qualifying their early statements.
My favorite chocolatier introduces new artisanal chocolates a few times a year and I make a point to try them — and to savor them.
As a physician affiliated with Concierge Choice Physicians, I make a point of reminding my patients that the flu vaccine can be a lifesaver.
That's why nearly 50,000 workers at General Motors went on strike for six weeks, willing to take a financial hit to make a point.
It was a protest of sorts -- the College Board and ETS, which administer several US university entrance exams, clearly wanted to make a point.
The 100 and The Walking Dead are both post-apocalyptic series that make a point of letting their audiences know no character is safe.
"Whether you're talking out of your ass or actually well-traveled, I certainly like to make a point of talking about travel," Murray says.
You make a point in your book that Lincoln understood the changes happening around him and understood the power of the president's platform to persuade.
But it suffices to make a point: Periods of divided government can be an opportunity to develop initiatives for the next period of unified government.
"I just think it's really important even in the rain and in the snow that we come out and make a point today," Francis said.
It is the second time this year the administration has sought to make a point to the Kingdom by intervening in its planned arms purchases.
Almost half of those polled make a point of celebrating their fur babies birthday, and these dog mom are there for the bad days too.
" The reporter notes he "leans forward and narrows his eyes to make a point" when he adds, "You don't want to do too much touching.
POLLACK: Also you know, people ask me, I just want to make a point, what could you say to these families that lost their children?
But this will be the first time in his seven years in office that Mr. Obama has left a seat unfilled to make a point.
President Donald Trump's lawyer and representative Michael D. Cohen wrote to Congress this week to make a point: None of what you heard is true.
Check out the clip -- Ebro doesn't say anything overtly offensive, but definitely wanted to make a point about how seriously he considers sexual assault allegations.
Jamie goes on to make a point about big-time Hollywood players who've been in the game for a long time, like himself and Spike.
"I think he was trying to make a point that they are going to try to stay true to more conventional monetary policy," Schlossberg said.
She inverts pop to make a point: there are no safe places anymore, no more apolitical retreats, and no more time for avoidance and escapism.
It is easier to argue fluently or to make a point subtly when not trying to call up rarely used vocabulary or construct sentences correctly.
"We had a magical night," said Ms. Conger, who is tall and slim and has a tendency to wave her hands to make a point.
I also make a point of committing to play competitive tennis at the highest level possible in national age group tennis tournaments and local leagues.
Neil deGrasse Tyson took to Twitter following the horrific events in Texas and Ohio, to make a point about mass shootings that was widely criticised.
He told The Post and Courier Friday that he used the weapon to make a point about how guns can be used in self-defense.
The Shadow of War situation has angered some fans to the point that they're trying to ruin the game for others to make a point.
Yet each year, prize birds rake in millions of dollars in bets, often from the very politicians who make a point to decry the sport.
Google Maps lets users suggest labels for notable locations, and sometimes users play pranks to make a point, but they rarely leave a permanent mark.
If spreading germs is a serious concern, make a point to have phone conversations or FaceTime with other humans (your co-workers or your friends).
True, the talk show host Trevor Noah did make a point of tipping up his Louboutin pumps so everyone could clock their signature red soles.
In 22016, a judge in Texas decided to make a point by setting accused murderer and real estate mogul Robert Durst's bail at $2120 billion.
DUMPLIN' Danielle Macdonald ("Patti Cake$") plays a Texas teenager of size who signs up for a beauty pageant to make a point about double standards.
And when a number is big and splashy, like Mr. MacLeod's 60,000 victims or Everytown's 18 school shootings, it can make a point very powerfully.
She's trying to make a point about downtime as dreamtime, a mode of passive-resistant creativity in an era of frantic, art fair-directed production.
We pretty quickly homed in on the cigar sketch and thought about ways that we could exaggerate that to say something and make a point.
He boycotted the world track and field championships in Beijing last summer to make a point about the relationships among athletes, sponsors and national bodies.
No, he's a business — a leader, a machine, and the kind of guy who will screw over and embarrass his family to make a point.
I typically don't like the term "f*** you money" — it's so in-your-face ugly — but I'm going to use it to make a point.
Now that Republicans control the executive branch, the Dems knew there wouldn't be any melodramatic war memorial or museum closings just to make a point.
In the quote above, she was referring to James Madison, who she used to make a point about the importance of impeachment in the Constitution.
McDonald sparked controversy during a Christian Science Monitor breakfast with reporters Monday as he tried to make a point that patient satisfaction was the priority.
There's nothing wrong with introducing legislation that's primarily designed to make a point when you're a member of Congress who sits far from the center.
Murray seemed to lose his cool with announcers speculating that he then purposely lost the replayed point just to make a point with the umpire.
I always make a point of looking around for other Black faces at shows and, if I'm lucky, I'll spot one or two in the distance.
Now, in the case of my family, we may get angry but only in trying to make a point of how much we all detest Trump.
She wanted to make "a point to the people working with me," she told Z22 in September, that she didn't want her name next to his.
But I think you make a point that cannot be underscored enough: The survival of Trump's presidency comes down to a couple of dozen Republican senators.
And if they don't try to re-create hangings, the players will make remarks that make a point of reminding him when the game takes place.
This is a way for a small startup that has very little power to sort of leverage whatever power you do have and make a point.
He tried to make a point using the famous Star Trek line, "to boldly go where no man has gone before," but then he said this.
This all might seem like a moderately funny joke, part of a long history of using intentionally poor work to make a point about academic publishing.
Bernthal brings authenticity to every moment, quickly moving from impassive or even genial into hyper-violent when he's threatened or just needs to make a point.
A few minutes later, she brought him up again, this time to make a point about her plan to tax people with wealth over $50 million.
On months that date nights are fewer, we'll make a point to sit together on the couch and watch a show or two and relax together.
In this game, failure mostly feels out of your hands — unless you make a point of using it as a tool to have fun with friends.
At Toyota factories, engineers make a point of knowing everything they can about each component and process, all the way down to what each part costs.
Indeed, when one wants to make a point of dismissing someone's appeal, concern, or query as beneath notice, laughter is a more pointed rejection than silence.
"But I just want to make a point of this: we are following the law, using the rules, and we're not bending the rules," Shanahan said.
One woman named Mia Redworth recently showed off her stretch marks, eczema, and C-section pouch to make a point that these supposed imperfections are normal.
"I make a point to try and get out and do as many site visits as possible," she said during her nearly half-hour long testimony.
Curvy model Tabria Majors recently took to Instagram to make a point about the need for more models of all shapes and sizes in lingerie ads.
But despite his busy schedule, "we always make a point of sitting down with the family even if I have other work to do," he says.
" At a rally in Minneapolis on Tuesday, he warned the crowd against "nominating someone just to make a point ... because they seem angrier than everybody else.
In a string of tweets, Drudge raised the idea that the government is exaggerating the force of the storm to make a point on climate change.
Trump had assembled a pile of meat, wines, a pyramid of bottled water, and one magazine to make a point that he is a successful businessman.
The administration gives reasons for cracking down: to make a point about the finality of a deportation order, to deter others from attempting the dangerous trip.
Vargas later said he realized the photo of the boy in the cage was misleading but defended his right to share it to make a point.
"It was just silly, because they were trying to make a point without ever asking me what I really think," Curtis told USA Today on Wednesday.
Pennsylvania trio Secret Cutter have mastered the style, which they make a point of shoving in your face on their ridiculously vicious new album, Quantum Eraser.
I can, however, walk slowly by, after going to the men's room, and make a point of staring at the diners disapprovingly and flagrantly taking pictures.
But this week, tweets that she fired off in December were plucked from internet history and used to make a point about Kim Kardashian's naked selfies.
Often stopping short at a breezy 150 pages, they make a point of being concise, and are meant to be dispatched in one or two sittings.
To make a point that is both logical and fair, he should now hold a White House event showcasing the thousands killed by native-born whites.
But he said he went into the Oval Office determined to make a point about what he views as the dangers of the president's inflammatory language.
"We use humor and sarcasm to make a point and add color to the broadcast; in this instance, we were off the mark," the statement said.
The EU also doesn't want to make Brexit particularly easy; it wants to make a point that leaving the EU has legitimate risks and serious fallout.
Critic's Pick If you genuinely want neighbors who have never been to your house to drop by, you have to make a point of inviting them.
Mr. Sanford, after all, was a governor who once brought squealing pigs into the South Carolina State House to make a point about pork-barrel spending.
Lighten up, Bloomberg's campaign has responded to complaints about the videos and fake quotes — of course it's tongue in cheek humor intended to make a point.
Let Michael Ray chip away at it with earnest country charm and a voice that slips into dulcet soul when he's trying to make a point.
But then I imagine people posting 7-year-old photos of me to make a point and I realize it's a bit of a cheap shot.
Elizabeth Warren have pressed Facebook on the matter, and some progressive groups have tried to test Facebook's policy out to make a point about its pitfalls.
Denuclearization is more of a priority than eliminating short- and medium-range missiles, but Japan continues to raise the issue to make a point, he added.
Even his least controversial nominees like Defense Secretary James Mattis and UN Ambassador Nikki Haley have drawn token opposition from someone looking to make a point.
The State of the Union address is upon us, and with it comes the annual tradition of trying to make a point by inviting special guests.
The curators make a point to say the show is by no means comprehensive, and they invite viewers to include their own personal suggestions through social media.
But I do make a point to pay for things from companies that are friends or that I like, although I do get a really good deal.
Let's be honest, it's pretty damn hypocritical that Linda inserted herself into Teigen's pregnancy conversation in order to make a point about Teigen vocalizing her political beliefs.
Similarly, it was Megan Rapinoe who knelt before US Soccer games in solidarity with Kaepernick, who was trying to make a point about racial and social justice.
You know the type: those long strings of related messages designed to tell a story or make a point that can't be expressed in a single tweet.
Cory Booker (D-NJ) made a show of releasing emails that were already slated to become public to make a point about Kavanaugh's views on diversity. Sen.
Kashuv was trying to make a point about double standards in the media about boycotts, but at least one company pulled its ads from MSNBC in response.
Though Lowry didn't appear too fazed by the comment, she did make a point of telling her friend with clenched teeth, "I'm filming" and the conversation concluded.
"You can have some DA offices that consistently make a point of taking these cases very seriously and you have some DA offices that don't," she said.
It's as if they want to make a point, to show people on the other side what China has achieved as it emerged from its dark ages.
A few months later, Tillemann released a campaign ad in which he literally pepper-sprayed himself in the face to make a point about gun control measures.
Proving that you don't need a graphic T-shirt (or a cheeky Instagram caption) to make a point, these barrettes reflect your mood without saying a word.
They're also trying to make a point to many of the northeastern moderates: there's no way your governor would opt out, so you shouldn't worry about it.
It's the only clear image in the video, and to make a point that nothing truly is real, with a wave of his hand, the fire disappears.
"  He added that he wanted to make a point about his publisher and how it chose cover art that's a "poor representation of characters within the book.
"I want to make a point here that US relationships with India and Pakistan really stand on their own merits and terms," a senior administration official said.
Harry and Meghan always make a point to try and shake hands with as many people as they can, as well as interact with their well-wishers.
It doesn't deny the conversation on the red carpet, but rather exploits it, turns the tables so that clothes as a talking point actually make a point.
Recent tumbles in two tech stock giants make a point investors can't afford to forget: Moving money between stocks that are correlated is the opposite of diversification.
I'm not telling you so that you can contact me, but rather to make a point: both are publicly available "identifiers" for me in the modern age.
For just one moment, to make a point, take these GOP politicians at their word: No, they didn't create Trump and no, they are not eager sidekicks.
In one account, Fidel was said to have bicycled head-on into a wall to make a point to his friends about the strength of his will.
Borrowing the president's favorite nickname for the newspaper, Hegseth was trying to make a point that The Times was not reporting on successes for the Trump administration.
Although I still use Amazon on occasion I have ended my Prime subscription and make a point of shopping local or buying from alternative websites whenever possible.
If you were a child meeting up with a chocolatier who wanted to murder you to make a point about greed, you'd be safe with this one.
He said the protesters could have easily entered the factory compound but chose not to because they wanted only to make a point, not to vandalize property.
The Kentucky Republican was furious -- red faced, banging the lectern in front of him with his finger to make a point and raising his voice several times.
Make a point to spend time with fun people during this new moon—the more you laugh and enjoy yourself, the more magical its influence will be!
If you haven't seen Morant play yet, make a point to clear some time Saturday to see him and the Racers take on No. 2128 Florida State.
"In their anxiety, I sense leverage and opportunity to make a point, and that point is that Putin's aggression has consequences against Russia's elite," Mr. Fried said.
One farmer who said he received less than the equivalent of $20 for 1,600 pounds of onions sent the money to Mr. Modi to make a point.
To make a point on the teacher shortage and lack of funding for education, Danks stood at an intersection last summer to raise money for her classroom.
We eat a lot of Gulf shrimp down here, and I encourage you to make a point of trying to find it instead of questionable imported crustaceans.
"I make a point to try one restaurant wherever I'm visiting, but making your own dinners and packing your own lunch everyday saves a lot," he said.
I do make a point of wiping it down after each run, but some areas are hard to get dry, such as the tray under the console.
"It was clear to McCabe that Trump mentioned McCabe's wife repeatedly to make a point and send a message, like a bullying tactic," the interview summary says.
It wouldn't be disruptive if so many guides didn't make a point of jumping in the water to grab the caimans and hold them up for photos.
Whichever you choose, consider also finding ways to "fix it forward" — as in, make a point of never being this thoughtless toward anyone else in your life.
This is akin to the No True Scotsman fallacy in which the definition of a word/phrase is modified from its actual meaning to make a point.
So the process issues are mainly to make a point to the American people about how unfair this process was and is leading to the wrong results.
Duncan Hunter (Calif.), the GOP sponsor who proposed the amendment actually voted against it but intended to make a point about women serving on the front line.
I do make a point to explore a variety of other artists' work because it's a way to understand political and social issues outside of my own culture.
Less predictable was the fact that Creative Assembly would make a point of changing Total War: Rome 2, now several years into its life, to feature female generals.
Our antihero Hole is himself a bit of a boor, roughing up his female partner to make a point because he's got to save the day, his way.
A few months later, Tillemann had released a campaign ad in which he literally pepper-sprayed himself in the face to make a point about gun control measures.
Make a point of aiming your recruitment and hiring efforts at identifying and hiring those potential employees who would delight in serving and wowing customers when opportunities arise.
Mr. Quinn boils down the contribution of groups like the Irish or the Jews to a trait or two, often zeroing in on language to make a point.
In a tweet Thursday, Jon Cooper, chair of the Democratic Coalition Against Trump, attempted to make a point by sharing a photo of a teenage Sarah Huckabee Sanders.
At the scooter community town hall, representatives from Lime, Bird, and Skip make a point of telling Oaklanders that teens on scooters definitely aren't the scooter companies' fault.
The internet has exploded with memes mocking Donald Trump for signing bills and controversial executive orders, but in Sweden they've found a different way to make a point.
Second, she will make a point of establishing her hippie chick bona fides in every interview she gives, and it will range from charming to hilarious to annoying.
On MUNCHIES: London Bars Could Be Ripping Off People Who Don't Drink But maybe I am mad at this flawed idea that graffiti can make a point anymore.
You can also stand beside those already speaking out, such as by supporting the local businesses that make a point of countering bias, through a variety of initiatives.
I think we used to try to make points ... I remember the early seasons, we were more pedantic, or we felt like we had to make a point.
Hilaria looks very worried about his reaction in the situation, but it's obvious Alec did this to make a point: that he can play nice with the paparazzi.
John Harwood: But if the reason was to make a point about the Republican Party, even if you didn't win, you would not be willing to do that?
While they're maybe trying to make a point in not reviving some of the jobs Obama had, they certainly in those other jobs haven't found anybody at all.
Granted, an actual Pixar film would certainly make a point of relieving the tension and sorrow this short sets up, and would use it to some spectacular end.
He pulled a notebook from his bag on Wednesday to show a visitor the meticulously researched, handwritten numbers he would use to make a point about the Mets.
And she miraculously found one of the few real estate firms in the city that make a point of renting to relatively new businesses: The Hudson Companies Inc.
Definitely make a point to watch it; the adventures of walking, talking fast-food items are often brilliantly funny and helped kick start the whole Adult Swim phenomenon.
Though the bill will go likely nowhere in a Republican-controlled Congress, it does afford Moore the opportunity to make a point about drug testing for welfare recipients.
And I do think that is a very good point in terms of using people's words to make a point that is not the point they were making.
Some text editors, like TextMate, also put up this roadblock, while others, like Bear or Evernote, make a point of not letting such a roadblock ruin your experience.
Image via Wikipedia For reasons unbeknownst to us, Taylor Swift emerged from her crab-walk exile to make a point that she is still relevant— courtesy of Nelly.
When I visit Reno, though, I still make a point to spend an afternoon with Sean on the Truckee River or at one of the nearby mountain lakes.
And if consumers are concerned about the spread of the virus and heed the WHO's advice, they'll make a point to avoid using cash until the outbreak subsides.
It's fine to make a point, particularly a provocative one, but that point resonates only if it's fleshed out and explored rather than simply hammered over and over.
It is very doubtful that Rowling was intending to make a point about the weakness African state system — as Blattman quite readily points out on his personal blog.
"El Paso will never be the same, because a racist came to our city to try and make a point," Wiles, the El Paso sheriff, wrote on Sunday.
McQueen doesn't prepare the viewer for Ashes's death, but he doesn't try to make a point of or exaggerate it either; it is revealed very matter-of-factly.
Make a point to avert your eyes when new messages pop up on someone else's phone, and turn away from your coworker's monitor when they leave for meetings.
One of the challenges students have to confront in our editorial cartoon contest is how to make a point, or prompt a realization, primarily through a visual illustration.
In November, Kasich asked a supporter at a town hall whether she had ever been on a diet in order to make a point about balancing the budget.
So often, our needs aren't nearly as obvious as we think they are; if you haven't used the word "lonely" yet, make a point to do that ASAP.
Gottlieb pointed to Singapore, which has now identified around 50 cases, to make a point about the US, which receives similar numbers of travelers from China every year.
Whenever Welteroth wanted to make a point, she would wave her hands for emphasis, making it hard to miss the emerald-cut pavé ring on her left hand.
I started reading his work in high school and it was my first realization of how silly and absurd you can be and yet still make a point.
Coming from Sessions, who repeatedly misled Congress on his own contacts with Russia, the firing seems more like brutality exercised to make a point with Trump, Sessions' boss.
Though Trump's improvisational approach to the truth has broken all records, fact checkers have found most politicians will bend the truth if it helps them make a point.
Bits The executives at Snap, the parent company of the messaging app Snapchat, like to make a point of noting they do not run a Silicon Valley company.
Divisions are more plentiful than alliances in "Dolphins and Sharks," whose mix of characters seems orchestrated to make a point about fragmentation along lines of race and class.
We got Frankie in Beverly Hills and he thinks Kanye is just trying to make a point, even though the message isn't exactly clear ... as even Ye admits.
Additionally, it suggests that there's little else senators can do if they want to make a point, particularly in a chamber that doesn't exactly have a robust legislative agenda.
She said Taylor would make a point of visiting the office for a hug twice a day: once when she arrived in the morning and then at afternoon dismissal.
It was to make a point that advancements in medical research, powered by AI and machine learning, will soon make the $199 price tag — and lower — an everyday occurrence.
Leave it to General Electric —the company that once used grilled meat to make a point about science—to engineer its very own brand of eye-watering hot sauce.
As a showrunner, how do you reconcile the need use female nudity to make a point with the risk that it might come off as reinforcing a harmful trope?
We make a point to make each other a priority, our relationship is very important to us, so we're like okay, we can not let this happen to us.
"If you've got the money, you add a little risk, but you can make a point or two," said Howard Silverblatt, senior analyst at S&P Dow Jones Indices.
"I was obviously trying to make a point about the heinous acts that Assad had made against his own people last week, using chemical weapons and gas," Spicer said.
Hotz, meanwhile, made a show of the autonomous abilities, pivoting in his seat to talk to the cameraman in the back seat and gesturing effusively to make a point.
The majority of Hillerbrand+Magsamen's artmaking, in fact, takes place within the space of their suburban home in Houston, Texas, a structure they frequently deconstruct to make a point.
Nissan Motor Co. wanted to make a point — that it successfully could compete with Ford, General Motors and Dodge in the raging pickup truck wars in the United States.
The two other measures that failed included one offered by Senator Christopher S. Murphy, Democrat of Connecticut, who led a filibuster last week to make a point on guns.
Syatt explained to Insider that he wasn't advocating eating fast food every day, but simply wanted to make a point that there's no such thing as a "bad" food.
She wanted to make a point: That same month, she walked into the law offices of Michael Lamonsoff and hired an attorney to sue the city for false arrest.
Van Gaal, who normally never leaves his seat in the coaching area, came down to remonstrate with the referees' assistants, and faked a theatrical fall to make a point.
ARD does not say whether any of the samples belonged to Usain Bolt, but does make a point to add that some of the samples were from male runners.
Nobody would bother with the whole charade if the Clippers didn't make a point of preceding their annual catastrophe with a period of brilliance in which they look unbeatable.
Ryan told reporters he decided to make a point to deliver that message to his GOP colleagues this morning because of recent reports that he said used "faulty speculation."
Trump understands this and dressed this time around, at least to a certain extent, to make a point: to offer a different image to that of her pugnacious husband.
"But her emails!" even became a frequent callout from Donald Trump and his base, who ran with the scandal to make a point that Clinton should be locked up.
The final straw was when, to make a point, he pulled a knife out of his back pocket and held it to the throat of a young male student.
In a new interview with Variety, Lopez, 50, shared that both she and fiancé Alex Rodriguez make a point of being together — even when the other is busy working.
Scheduling (or forcing) a vote on the resolution enables Democrats to make a point and put Republicans on the record, but this measure has little likelihood of being enacted.
Today's Lemonades are tomorrow's MetLife's, so the more startups are willing to sacrifice customers and revenues to make a point, the more that becomes the norm down the road.
John Rodgers, the Democrat who introduced the legislation, told The Barre Montpelier Times Argus that he doesn&apost expect it to pass and introduced it to make a point.
The Fed is expected to raise rates in September, and Chandler said it may emphasize after that meeting that it could hike in December, just to make a point.
Moral regrets are usually packed up in deep self-storage and we often make a point of remembering to forget them, even while we are awash in pseudo-regrets.
Lee also referenced his original 1990 nomination for Do the Right Thing — to make a point about continuing to change history: The 2020 presidential election is around the corner.
Nadell does so in order to make a point: While both were Jewish American women, they lived in dramatically different eras, self-actualizing and contributing differently as a result.
Students and parents don't show up to school to prove they're worthy of equal treatment, and neither need to make a point to dress well to receive a public education.
Israel has an ambassador stationed in Cairo but Egyptian officials make a point of keeping their distance and the embassy has been the focal point of protests in the past.
Trevor Noah is one of those people — and to make a point about it, the late night host and his team at The Daily Show actually made a video game.
The hat also serves to make a point about why the two elements of the design — the Trump-inspired visuals and "black lives matter" text — don't seem to go together.
I make a point of being that and that has pissed off literally tens of thousands of dude-bros who just want to tear me down and kicked off books.
To the show's credit, later seasons make a point to calm down some of the yowling caricatures, showing the live-and-let-live tolerance that exists in this small town.
But I will make a point to quit clicking aimlessly around the internet to delay going to bed, and I'll get my beauty sleep when I can — like on vacation.
On Saturday, men and women alike joined together in the freezing cold to make a point and take a stand—not just against Roosh V, but against everything he represents.
In your new email, make a point to mention a topic this person discussed during a meeting you both attended or a news article that might have quoted this person.
If you haven't blown off steam in a while, make a point to have some fun today, or at least engage in activities at home that help you feel grounded.
"If someone took my picture while I was in labor, I would make a point of keeping my placenta just so I could throw it at them," a third wrote.
Oppo has started teasing its forthcoming F215 smartphone that's headed for India, and all of its teasers make a point of drawing attention to its cutout along the top edge.
Ms. Boshart used technology in a recent burlesque performance, including a recorded voice-over appearance by the astronomer Carl Sagan, to make a point about humanity's intertwined role with science.
"As you go forward from this place, I would like you to make a point of reaching out to people whose beliefs and values differ from your own," he said.
The study also found that, "humorous complainers are better liked than non-humorous complainers," meaning Dufu's method could be a way to make a point without damaging a professional relationship.
If we're both naked, we make a point of speaking, as if doing so will shield us from the mild embarrassment of our nudity, from the Oedipal drama once removed.
" Cornyn called the potential that Saudi Arabia could sell U.S. assets a "hollow threat," saying, "they're not going to suffer a huge financial loss in order to make a point.
"It's a pity we are so behind, for the sound," said Ms. Kampe, who has the charming habit of repeating words in triplicate when she wants to make a point.
Ironically, Gobert had jokingly touched every microphone and recorder during his media availability on Tuesday evening following a game to make a point about the NBA's reaction to the virus.
Many museums and cultural institutions make a point these days to connect with their neighborhoods, hosting street fairs, music festivals and free first Fridays (and first Saturdays and first Sundays).
Its core audience is full of Marvel devotees, but it also brought in many people who don't typically make a point of seeing Marvel movies — many of whom are black.
While most of the artists featured in Der Sturm were men, Walden did make a point of including female artists in his curatorial efforts, unlike his early-20th-century peers.
And at Kiton, the Neapolitan tailoring concern for whom the finest is barely fine enough, exorbitant is merely a starting point (I always make a point to pet the vicuña).
I make a point of only looking at the color and not the content, and I don't use Instagram for research — it's dangerous, because you keep seeing the same things.
It was Dame Vivienne Westwood, who filled her runway with rappers, dancers, contortionists and clowns, and stuck garbage to her models to make a point about climate change and recycling.
"He will make a point to pause and bring them on stage with him and give them a hug and say he's going to follow-up with them," Grayer says.
Katherine Clark (Mass.), Barbara Lee (Calif.) and Brenda Lawrence (Mich.) discussed possibly abstaining from House votes to make a point on the "Day Without a Woman," but decided against it.
After I used the phrase "must-read" in a recent column to describe Jonathan Chait's work, a reader asked me which other journalists' work I make a point of reading.
The author and self-described "adventurer" who is also a competitive musher and prolific Twitter user, used her adorable army of sled dogs to make a point about body image.
L.A. City's top prosecutor is anxiously waiting for a sexual harassment case to land on his desk so he can "make a point" ... this according to sources inside his office.
His grandchildren make a point of living a different life from that of their famous forebear, who spent his last eight years ruling the nation out of a one-bedroom apartment.
Indeed, all the people mentioned above make a point, in their respective accounts, of noting their privilege compared to many of the other travelers they saw languishing in CBP waiting rooms.
The tusks and horns are worth $150 million, but rather than selling them for public improvements as some had suggested, authorities decided to burn the poached tusks to make a point.
But some picks always get more scrutiny than others, and after performing poorly with blue collar voters in 2016 Democrats are looking to make a point when considering Trump economic picks.
On January 15, it will make a harmonious connection with power planet Pluto (which is currently in your sign!), helping you connect with influential people—make a point to network today.
According to the shelter, the high school athletes make a point of swinging by the rescue before their early morning training runs to pick up pooches eager to stretch their legs.
Every time I travel, whether alone or with someone else, I make a point to leave myself open to local experiences and refuse to eat at or stay in US chains.
Hall said that representation of queer artists is especially important right now, and said that people like Braun who have so much power should make a point of supporting their careers.
If this cast doesn't make a point of wearing Asian designers on the red carpet, it's not like the cast of Venom or The Nutcracker is going to insist on it.
And Darren, as a joke—and I guess to make a point—wrote the lyrics to 'Song for the Dumped' (without any music or anything) in my notebook next to 'Dwarf.
We've spoken to others in the industry who say their experience is, rather than using makeup, casting directors typically make a point of hiring stand-ins who match the actors' complexions.
Alexandra Wong, 64, retired Wong is a dedicated protester who always brings along her British flag, to make a point that she feels Hong Kong was better off under colonial rule.
For instance, if you have a cigarette to get a chance to relax during the day, make a point to go for some quick walks around or outside the office instead.
Israel has an ambassador stationed in Cairo but many Egyptian officials make a point of keeping their distance and the embassy has been the focal point of protests in the past.
There were even quite a few games that were on there to Make A Point—games about the flu, about unethical farming practices in fast-food companies, about living in poverty.
Too bad the whole thing turned out to be an elaborate set-up to make a point about sloppy media coverage of scientific research for a documentary debunking the diet industry.
Schedule a date night or make a point to mingle in public, because people are dying to connect with you now, and the confidence boost could be just what you need!
" But the girls themselves say they are close, and they make a point of getting together for occasional band sleepovers where they watch movies and, according to Lena, "eat a lot.
At one point, he pulled a bemused Mr. Iti onstage to make a point about unity, before Mr. Iti retreated amid protest from the other representatives, the moderators and the audience.
The family members sat placidly Monday, but several chuckled late in the morning when a defense attorney asked for a second chance to make a point during discussion of a motion.
Workers wear blue Prime aprons advertising the membership, and cashiers are supposed to make a point of asking customers whether they are Prime members and therefore entitled to discounts at checkout.
If you want to stop this behavior, you could make a point of doing something else when you walk in the door, like changing into workout clothes or washing your hands.
To highlight the additional risks they say they must take in sanctuary cities, ICE agents make a point of issuing news releases that criticize jurisdictions that decline to cooperate with deportations.
Evidently forged by a slaveowner with an ax to grind, Adams had decided to present it to Congress in order to both make a point and make fools of slavery's proponents.
I always make a point of keeping firm records updated in the major data-trackers tracking the VC industry: AngelList, CB Insights, Crunchbase, Dow Jones VentureSource, Pitchbook, Preqin, and Refinitiv Eikon.
Again, a one-time protest to make a point is one thing but a continued, prolonged demonstration of disrespect for the National Anthem and the flag is a whole other thing.
And if you're going to make a point, if you can't bring some humor into it — I mean obviously someone getting shot and killed in Ferguson, Mo., there's no fun there.
Setting herself apart from all the other artists on display, Deborah Bright's "Dream Girl Series" demonstrates that a queer person's body does not have to be naked to make a point.
While it was interesting to learn about the actor's 50-year working relationship with his body double, Bridges was a bit Dude-like in his inability to really make a point.
If you've been bored with the people around you (as Geminis often are), this New Moon will introduce you to way more stimulating folks, so make a point to go out!
In a video package that aired before his Monday night episode of "The Late Late Show," Corden chronicled his somewhat mundane experience while traveling out of Los Angeles to make a point.
I make a point to make him a sandwich in the morning because his Mondays are packed with meetings and he doesn't have time to sneak in a bite at the office.
It's so standard for movies featuring monsters to withhold the monster as long as possible, but you make a point of having characters confront your aliens up close in your opening sequence.
Likewise, there are people who are obsessed with the local craft brewing scene here in Denver and make a point of touring the city (and state) to taste their favorite craft beers.
Franken also wanted to make a point about the overwhelming extent to which humans are contributing to climate change, since Perry suggested multiple times this week that climate change is naturally occurring.
I know he was trying to make a point about how free and "unboxed" the new Galaxy S8 is, with its super-slim, barely there bezels, but he raises a good point.
If you really want to make a point or change the tone, then it's something else to make use of alongside all of the emoji and other features built into Hangouts.10.
Every meal is important, but without a seriously complete breakfast, I'm a wreck by midday, and so when my appetite wakes up demanding eggs and toast, I make a point of listening.
But in season one it felt like Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt was trivializing Native American heritage, and in season two it feels like the show is trivializing yellowface — just to make a point.
Perhaps, like that woman who posted about dipping her pizza in milk, Austin Braun was probably trying to make a point about how nasty pineapple on pizza is by resurrecting this photo.
"  "He was trying to make a point about Hillary Clinton wanting to have one set of rules for herself and another set for the American people," Christie said on "Fox News Sunday.
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The cyclist, Juli Briskman, had been active in local politics before, but in October 2017 she lifted that one specific finger to make a point and ended up gaining the national spotlight.
The people chanting were not injured, but dressed as the sick and dying to make a point about their anger at Issa's "yes" vote on the House health care bill last week.
Plus, many startups and small businesses make a point to publish their mission statements in a highly visible place, so customers can get a sense of exactly who and what they're supporting.
I make a point that you don't have to have doula experience to do this because you use some of those skills, but you are learning a whole new set of skills.
I notice if I'm around they make a point to make me feel comfortable in these areas and they want me to be able to produce the best work that I can.
When you're buying a common item but the brand isn't one you know, make a point of doing a quick search to see if there's any readily available information about the seller.
Instead of bypassing your normal morning routine, make a point to not look at your work emails or Slack until you've gotten up and moving and are feeling a bit more human.
"If I gig for someone for the first time, I make a point of not mentioning that I am trans," says Laura Monmoth, 34, who has been performing comedy for three years.
"From the perspective of a group that wants to make a point in the primaries, all you need to do is go after one incumbent who is not paying attention," he said.
Will it be a limited incursion to make a point, or a full-blown operation to root out the Kurdish force that the Americans have built up and the Turks desperately oppose.
Some companies make a point of actively calling out their inclusive policies around transgender and gender diverse hiring when they write job listings, or they promote a culture of strength through diversity.
Soaking in foreign ideas and becoming students of whatever feels universal lends you a broad view of the world and it's this view that you make a point to share with others.
His bracing candor, disregard for convention and willingness to offend whole sections of the population to make a point came across as refreshing truth-telling to many Americans disenchanted with Washington elites.
The pair were seen on stage at the end of the debate in what appeared to be a tense exchange, with Warren seemingly trying to make a point to the Vermont senator.
A. Annotating screen shots of text passages — and then posting the image and a link to the article on Twitter — is an effective way to make a point with the selected text.
"I think people understand this is the act of a single senator who is just trying to make a point but doesn't really care too much about who he inconveniences," said Sen.
In addition to Alhadeff and Petty, a host of students from Stoneman Douglas High School, where 17 people were killed, turned to the political arena to make a point about gun laws.
And while we make a point to make regular donations to local charities year-round — not just during the holidays — we know we're privileged to be able to enjoy something like this.
I know that there are people who think if you are drinking from a hidden shampoo bottle you must be a lush, so I make a point of taking delicate little sips.
Even though a yes result would be highly unlikely to result in a new name for Taiwan's team, supporters of the campaign want to use the issue to make a point to China.
"[...] This was to highlight and raise our frustrations with not always getting a fair chance in the industry and to make a point that the struggle for black actors had not changed much."
When presented with a piteous, neglected child, Jane might allow that she's rather fond of the poor thing, but she'll also make a point of noting that the child is not particularly bright.
We typically see dumb comedies or funky indie movies — it's a total de-stresser for both of us, and we always make a point to do it when we've had a hard week.
The Grammys will also make a point of remembering the beloved stars we lost in 2016; John Legend and Cynthia Erivo will be on hand to honor them with the In Memoriam sequence.
Nuit Debout reveals a political problem: it's a gathering of people who want to make a point about this political issue—but it's still mostly just a political awakening, not a revolutionary force.
To make a point about consumer rights in the automotive industry, he rallied his supporters by obliterating a "lemon" of a car: That is, a freshly purchased automobile that is straight up garbage.
So just as an experiment, just to see what happens, maybe try to make a point of adding a little more to our collective online lives — rather than demonize each other even further.
Whenever the EU discusses human rights with countries outside its ranks (a category that will soon include Britain) it should make a point of raising the question of anti-Semitism, the plan insists.
Smith was shot and killed during a road rage incident in New Orleans last year -- and with Mirren being a social activist, we wondered if she was following Smith to make a point.
This was to highlight and raise our frustrations with not always getting a fair chance in the industry and to make a point that the struggle for black actors had not changed much.
Plus in Seen and Unseen, Raymond Arroyo will show us the unbelievable lengths that one Democrats is going to, to make a point about guns, wait till you see it, it&aposs unbelievable.
I was raised in a culture where parents were so much more lenient with boys than they were girls, so I want to make a point of treating them as fairly as possible.
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He rarely speaks about the incident, but when he does it is usually to make a point about how victims of crime often desire something other than what the criminal-justice system provides.
With voters facing a choice of two celebrity candidates this year, you might consider allowing students to attempt — very thoughtfully — to use satire to make a point about the candidates and their campaigns.
Robert Ford, deputy U.S. ambassador to Iraq from 2008 to 85033, said he does not foresee Abadi enforcing the ban, beyond perhaps blocking several people from entering the country to make a point.
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"You can't make a point forcefully if you're a man and the person you are making a point with is a woman," he said at the time, according to the New York Times.
Sometime later, I will make a point of snacking on a bowl of popcorn with chocolate chips—lots of chocolate chips—it's basically a bowl of chocolate chips—while doing a crossword puzzle.
I feel guilty for all of the milestones I miss, and when I make a point of going to one, it takes extra hustle to keep up with the work I miss instead.
I go through the bloody and shameful history of the old, racist Democratic establishment -- and the heroism of African-Americans -- to make a point: today, people like Lewis and Thompson are powerful congressmen.
They told me that all were in favor of conviction except for one, who maintained that Ward's primary intent was not to break the law but to make a point about climate change.
Mencken had made the whole thing up, partly for entertainment during the bleak days of World War I, but also to make a point about how quickly a lie can become conventional wisdom.
While Van Wagenen was vague about the Mets' plans to upgrade the offense and defense, he did make a point of saying that the first base prospect Peter Alonso figures in them somewhere.
The researchers, or, actually the 24 research assistants that the researchers make a point of thanking in their paper in Current Biology, observed the South African mongooses and gathered data over several years.
At the top of the debate, Mr. Cuomo seemed to be striving to project command, pitching himself forward in his chair like a guidance counselor trying to make a point to worried parents.
Visitors to Havana make a point of touring the house on the outskirts of the city where Ernest Hemingway lived for two decades, Finca Vigía, and drop by his haunts in Habana Vieja.
"I wanted to make a point of voting away from religion and sectarianism" and "instill a sense of nationhood and patriotism in the hearts of our children," said one voter, Khalid al-Dabbagh.
When, say, Michael Bloomberg's campaign calls Bernie Sanders "the Trump of the left," it is trying first and foremost to make a point about how rude and unseemly Sanders and his campaign are.
The residents, Heather Lindsay, who is white, and Lexene Charles, who is black, defied a directive by the city to cover it up because they wanted to make a point publicly about intolerance.
We don&apost need to separate almost 2,000 kids from their parents just to make a point and use that as a deterrent as Chief of Staff Kelly and Attorney General Sessions, had said.
Make a point to drink at least one glass of water per drink of alcohol that you have, Alexis Halpern, MD, emergency medicine physician at New York-Presbyterian/Weill Cornell Medical Center, tells Refinery29.
Yeah I grew up in New Jersey so we'd go to the movies or go to the diner and you'd, like, call someone on their landline and actually make a point to get there.
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It's not entirely fair to write off Sicario's approach like that — it's trying to make a point about that lack of agency — but I'm not entirely sold on the detached, helpless feeling it creates.
On Friday, the singer blasted an unnamed football player, who had texted her earlier in the day, to make a point that his alleged behavior as a married man with three kids was unacceptable.
Now that I live alone, I make a point of saying yes as much as possible to being social, even if it's just running up to H.'s place and chilling on his balcony.
On April 24, when they expect more lawmakers in town, the group plans to invite arrest by heading up to the Capitol to smoke their marijuana on the federal grounds and make a point.
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Kaaya was obviously trying to make a point about the testing ... but even still, a rep from Smoothie King (800 stores nationwide) was quick to tell TMZ Sports the athletes have ZERO TO FEAR.
So necessarily, web culture started breaking all the traditional rules of grammar to make it better fit the medium, with trends like the extra space before punctuation ... or idiosyncratic capitalization to Make A Point.
Republicans and energy industry strategists say they're equally enthusiastic to use the case, which hinges on whether the Obama administration exerted too much authority over carbon emissions, to make a point about executive overreach.
" Instead, make a point of introducing women (and others from marginalized groups -- racialized, young-looking, and disabled, etc.) by using their full job titles and accolades: "This is Professor Maya Campbell, our department head.
Grande's trademark high ponytail, cat-eye, and unexpected hair accessories remained untouched, almost as if to make a point, despite it being vastly common for people to change their looks after a traumatic experience.
Not using it to make a point about the economic and regulatory forces that allowed the tragedy to occur makes the whole thing feel somewhat hollow and cynical, like manipulation masquerading as good will.
Finally, additional friction arose in November when Mortensen, during a post-screening discussion, used the N-word, seeking to make a point about shifting mores from the time depicted in the movie until now.
She "explained she considers herself a feminist and wanted to make a point that everybody should be fine with walking around their house or elsewhere with skin showing," her lawyers said in court documents.
The image is taken from a piece of Doctors Without Borders publicity material and repurposed within a gallery space to make a point about image consumption, and how to represent a collective American feeling.
Spicer sparked backlash Tuesday when he stumbled while trying to make a point about Syrian President Bashar Assad, an ally of Russia who the U.S. has accused of employing chemical weapons against his citizens.
Make a point to set up in another place in your home, and consider relocating (from the kitchen table to the couch, etc.) throughout the day—it'll help stop you from feeling too slovenly.
I always make a point to keep myself awake on the first day without any naps because I'm convinced it helps me get a better first-night's sleep and adjust to the local time!
Once again, these are all my personal recommendations; this is not a sponsored list, although I did make a point to only include books that were available digitally as well as in hard copy.
Terrell's refusal to call Ali by his chosen name led to a harsh drubbing and many felt that Ali could have stopped Terrell but chose to draw out the fight to make a point.
Jeffries' answer offered a direct contradiction by looking back at many of the past Senate impeachment trials — not just Clinton's 1999 case — to make a point that there are indeed many precedents worth remembering.
Because it seemed so ready-made for politicians hoping to make a point about the poisoning of our culture by Trump and his ilk: Smollett is gay, black and an outspoken critic of Trump.
She then "explained she considers herself a feminist and wanted to make a point that everybody should be fine with walking around their house or elsewhere with skin showing," according to the court documents.
Mostly. It's easy to savor the writing—brisk, romantic, sharp-humored—but at times the quest to make A Point can leave the novel feeling like a Franken-book, held together with crude twine.
Coleman lived in Chicago and then Houston, staging air shows all around Texas but increasingly spending time on the lecture circuit, a safer and more remunerative way to make a point about social uplift.
At the bar, long drinks start at 10 euros ($11.65), and the owners make a point of serving fair-trade alcohols, like quinoa vodka, although no one makes a point of talking that up.
When you get back to the office, make a point of noting how energizing it was to take a head-clearing break, and how ready you are to dive back into work as a result.
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SCREEN QUEENS From speaking up for peers to putting their career on the line to make a point, these entertainers made a difference in their industry in 2018... VIEW MORE OF THE POWER LIST HERE
But I make a point to when the message is about coming out, which I've written about often, and I wanted to tell him that despite having a Muslim father, I've never identified as Muslim.
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Essentially, Davis says that DEA agents set up a drug bust in front of the White House so that Bush could make a point about the pervasiveness of the drug problem in a televised address.
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Clinton made no mention of those attributes, but she did make a point of saying she supported the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, which Ms. Warren helped to start before winning her Senate seat in 2012.
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"Well, I think, frankly, they both make a point," he said on CNN's "State of the Union" when asked about Clinton and Trump's back-and-forth on who would take the United States to war.
The South Carolina Republican also received backlash earlier this year after brandishing a loaded pistol at a meeting with constituents to make a point about the dangers of firearms, according to The Post and Courier.
JetBlue and Ryanair make a point of saying they do not overbook flights, though the former's denied boarding rate has risen recently after it switched to smaller planes, meaning fewer seats were available than planned.
Make a point to party early this month, but keep your indulgences in check: Venus will clash with over-the-top Jupiter on February 4, which may find you spending more money than you'd planned.
Brian Mast of Florida, a retired US Army bomb technician and Purple Heart recipient, gave his colleagues the silent treatment to make a point in favor of the US killing of Iranian commander Qassem Soleimani.
As he stood to make a point in the trial's opening days, the months of grueling preparation caught up with Mr. Puzder: He promptly collapsed to the floor, fainting in front of judge and jury.
Attention and RebellionAn Asian friend was a super loud and boisterous guy who would make a point to be as out-there as possible in order to crush stereotypes that Asians were passive and quiet.
You've said before that you're not trying to make a point with the themes you explore, but do you think it's more important now to do that kind of work in animation than in previous years?
I make a point of this because another excellent mouse I've been trying — Razer's Wireless Viper Ultimate — also comes with a sensitivity switch button, but it's on the underside of the mouse, which is less convenient.
Maybe we're all just more used to her, but on Tuesday, Williamson seemed like she came to make a point, and she made more of an impression than many of the other candidates on the stage.
Last November, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg told investors that he intends to make a point of communicating that cybersecurity spending will be hard on earnings, but is a necessary component of the company's forward-looking goals.
And the suffering of 40% of federal government workers who are forced to stay home—or who must work while waiting to be paid later—is a lot to bear to make a point of principle.
As recently as last week, the US drew the wrath of Chinese defense officials when an American guided-missile destroy sailed through the South China Sea to make a point about unimpeded access in international waters.
It's unclear what would have happened if Shkreli didn't make a point to let reporters photograph his Wu-Tang Clan album or invite them into his home where they could see that he owned a Picasso.
I've never been much of a shark guy, so I couldn't tell you, but Kenneth brought this line up once and had to explain it to me so he could make a point about something else.
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Like ODB and the booksellers of Harlem, Manto used Cooper's writing to make a point about colonial racism—but what South Africa needed from its government was not conspiracies but retroviral medicine and comprehensive sex education.
But White House spokeswoman Sarah Sanders effectively said that it did not matter whether the President was spreading genuine videos or not, since he was trying to make a point about the threat of Islamic radicalism.
The haunting works seem to conflate two separate killings of unarmed black males and the history of the Civil War to make a point about how violence seems to find black males, no matter the circumstance.
Some people use leaking to settle personal scores, or even worse to attack the President, but for me it was always to make a point about something that I felt was being unjustly ignored by others.
OD: Well, let's be clear, The Blaze is no InfoWars or Breitbart, it's more of a conventional and it was more of a conventional right-leaning website, but real quick, I want to make a point.
The court has not set a date for a hearing, but Mr. Jing said he hoped the case would make a point, even if the judge awards only token damages and orders Mr. Hu to apologize.
With that in mind, if you're looking to identify the most ambitious and smart Democrats in America today, look for the ones who make a point of meeting with Oprah and publicly asking for her support.
But, in closing her own studio early, Pavitt hoped to make a point: Despite the inevitable loss of money and the logistics of closing up shop, the choice was unavoidable — and essential for the greater good.
This year, for example, Amy said she prioritized places that were being threatened by climate change, to make a point that the world is changing and you better get going before some of these wonders disappear.
He made clear that he did not plan to respond to the missile attacks on two bases where American troops operate, which seemed calibrated by the Iranians to make a point without creating more human carnage.
In the clip above, The Late Show uses a parody of a Hot Wheels ad — coughing children included — to make a point about the effect this could have on the environment and the people inhabiting it.
When I meet a guy who is visibly uncomfortable with the idea of menstruation, I'll usually make a point to talk about bloating or cramps or the weird digestive issues that come with a shedding uterus.
Instead, he urged people to make a point of caring for others, taking risks, and investing in meaningful relationships so that they build on themselves over time, like money in a savings account gaining compound interest.
But, hey, look, this is history that this song even exists, and we will all make a point of enjoying it on this day, the Lord's day, the day in which Snoop Dogg is our national hero.
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"You know they wanted to make a point out of me that anybody that works outside of their agenda, they're going to stop supporting, if not outright oppose them," Rigell said of the NRA and the NGRA.
"While NBCU did make a point to speak about the safety of their networks and call out the trust factor, overall networks have put their premium content at the forefront, both current and historical series," she said.
She is, of course, in a position of power as a rich, white woman, but she is voluntarily reliving the emotional distress involved in the alleged incident to make a point about violations of autonomy and power.
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Just like "Kimmy Goes to a Play," it felt like 30 Rock was trying to flip off critics, but it almost immediately diverted from an actual issue to make a point that was ... well, beside the point.
On Friday, Tennessee police officials revealed that they essentially instilled unnecessary fear in the public by lying about the existence of meth-fueled alligators to make a point about the dangers of flushing drugs down the toilet.
Next -- Once McConnell has finally positioned to revote to break the filibuster, he will make a point of order that it should take 51 votes instead of 60 to overcome a filibuster of a Supreme Court nominee.
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It seems the actor was trying to make a point about the nasty side of politics when he posted an image by artist Nick Flatt of a girl making the "gag me" gesture with her middle finger.
Here, Kanye riffs, since the song's original approach of yelling "jumpman" helps him make a point about shoes, which is that Nike is bad, other than the fact his friends Drake and Don C work with them.
It's not that Shepard is wrong, exactly, and sure, there are liars in "Nosferatu" and liars in the Bush administration, but you can pull anything from anywhere to make a point if you ignore time and context.
I've also seen way too many Holocaust and slavery comparisons, and any attempt at trying to educate them on why you shouldn't be using things like that to make a point was always met with heavy backlash.
She waved her hands around when she was excited, slapped them on her thighs when she was amused, beckoned toward an invisible man to make a point, pushed that man away when the point had been made.
The Palestinians trying to tear down the fence are risking their lives to make a point, knowing that the protests amount to little more than a public relations stunt for Hamas, the militant movement that rules Gaza.
Mr. Trump did make a point of saying that "no one owns the ocean," a reference to the long-running and tense dispute in East Asia about China's efforts to control access to the South China Sea.
It was not Mr. Espinosa's first time employing mass quantities to make a point; a year prior he had dumped 2,000 pennies in front of a Republican gubernatorial candidate to protest the lowering of Minnesota's minimum wage.
Now I put a bag in between me and the next person, and the first time he tests the waters, even if I'm not sure he has bad intentions, I make a point to overreact a little.
It's therefore doubly important, Dr. Kane said, for dads not only to strive to loosen the restrictions on the kinds of men their sons can be, but also to make a point of calling out gender stereotypes.
Victorian novels, certainly, are filled with high-hearted young people defying their parents' ideas about social hierarchy (especially when it comes to who qualifies as a suitable match), and sometimes smashing an heirloom to make a point.
Instead of trying to apologize for her boss's tweets, White House press secretary Stephanie Grisham went on Fox News and defended Trump's decision to amplify the tweet, stating he did what he did to make a point.
"Iran had to make a point: that it can respond, even if it's a weak response," said Joshua M. Landis, a Syria expert and director of the Center of Middle East Studies at the University of Oklahoma.
Most of those falls were with some kind of case on, but I abandoned all cases in 26 after an argument that ended with me foregoing the case in order to make a point I no longer remember.
An objectively perfect pop song, it empowers while twisting the knife; it encourages you to move on but also make a point of looking back, knowing full well how buff you look in those jeans, and feeling smug.
"Even though we can laugh now about how silly the caffeine pills were, there's a reason that so many young adults make a point of telling me that 'Jessie's Song' was, hands down, their favorite episode," Engel said.
Spend time with your friends if you've been too wrapped up in your art or your lover, or make a point to do some networking so people can actually see all the awesome stuff you've been making lately.
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He or she would make a point of visiting the many not-well-known employee-owned companies around the country—growing international manufacturers like Web Industries in Massachusetts, for example, or big construction firms like TDIndustries in Dallas.
Already, a vigorous national debate had arisen over players, led by quarterback Colin Kaepernick of the San Francisco 49ers, who chose not to stand for the national anthem, to make a point about issues of race and justice.
He has more and deeper creases in his forehead now — they especially emerge when his eyebrows flare to make a point — but he is the same hard-charger he was in the 1980s as his father's top lieutenant.
To make a point about the long-awaited German car's sustainability, the Taycan was unveiled simultaneously on Wednesday at Niagara Falls in Canada (representing hydropower), at a solar farm near Berlin, and at a wind farm in China.
AND WE GOT TO MAKE A POINT I THINK THAT THAT'S NOT WRONG BECAUSE IT'S BEEN GOING ON, I MEAN LISTEN, AS YOU ASKED ME, TRYING TO AVOID IT YOU ASKED ME ABOUT SOME OF MY STOCKS, MICRON.
As if to make a point by his own example that Mr. Caughman had been transformed by events into an Everyman of New York City, Mr. de Blasio remained for the entire funeral, which lasted almost two hours.
But what you can do is let people know it's easier to reach you by email — and if you make a point of being highly responsive on email, over time people may start contacting you there more frequently.
A White House official said Kushner didn't intend for the comment to be taken seriously and was only trying to make a point, according to the Journal, which reported that the remark "wasn't taken lightly" inside Time Warner.
Burger King is trying to make a point Thursday about how women are charged more for some products that are almost entirely identical to the ones for men, whether it's deodorant, jeans or having a shirt dry cleaned.
"If the prior-prior year tax information isn't reflective of their current financial situation, the child or parent should make a point to contact the school where the student will, or would like to, attend," Griffin Rubin said.
Political Memo Former Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr.'s presidential campaign was forced into a defensive posture this week after he invoked his work with Southern segregationist senators to make a point about bygone comity in Congress.
Some citizens who were already xenophobic grew a bit more anti-Muslim in their behaviour; but voters who oppose the president would make a point of greeting women in Muslim garb and saying they were very welcome in America.
"Qualcomm has confirmed publicly that this lawsuit against our clients is intended to make a point about Apple and punish our clients for working with Apple," Theodore J. Boutrous, a lawyer for the four companies, said in a statement.
And then there's a new question, one being asked publicly by some of Trump's harshest critics: Is there a racial component to the president's demands that an outspoken black man like Ball make a point of showing public gratitude?
This is significant (or maybe it isn't and I'm just manipulating numbers to make a point) because the last goaltender to make at least 70 starts in a season and win the Stanley Cup was Martin Brodeur in 2003.
While the whole event is mostly about the films, fashion, glitz, and glam, the stars also make a point to take a break every once in a while and sunbathe along the French Riviera (usually on a yacht, natch).
"Qualcomm has confirmed publicly that this lawsuit against our clients is intended to make a point about Apple and punish our clients for working with Apple," Theodore J. Boutrous, a lawyer for the four companies, said in a statement.
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All political buffs should make a point of checking out the toll-booth entry lanes to the G.W.B. in Fort Lee—the lanes that two of Governor Chris Christie's allies recently received jail terms for closing, back in 2015.
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We make sure alignment is carried out through weekly team-building activities and after-hours sports leagues, and make a point to bring in regular speakers for educational seminars that help the company stay united on a shared vision.
That's not to say that their posts weren't filled with Chanel, Antibes beaches, or Michelin Star-rated restaurants — it's that for the most part, they didn't make a point to mention them like those who live the Sponsored Life.
If there was a time to make a point, it was Sunday morning, during a meeting of the Big Four, where Democrats made clear their concerns with the standing proposal and showed a united front in opposition to it.
The first is organized to make a point about a certain subject, like how money affects relationships, and delivers a variety of deep dives — assigned to prevent repetition or irrelevance — that aim to lead us toward more comprehensive understanding.
Inspired by real people and events in the decades leading up to the foundation of Israel, Mr. Inverne wants to make a point about the vital role of music in establishing a culture and knitting together a new nation.
In an internet-free world, they would have had to run it by management first, or make a point of going on TV or radio to make a statement—all of which are options likely to end in roadblocks.
You might also have to be extra careful about sex, and make a point of leaping up to go to the bathroom right after—just another fun way that sex can be painful and dangerous for people with vaginas.
The series knows what it wants to be, and in so doing, it provides an object lesson in how to make a point about flat characters, and which gender is disproportionately asked to play them, by showing, not telling.
Turning your back on your entire values system to make a point in our country's anti-establishment political moment, and in consequence, elect a candidate who stands against everything you've ever fought for, is giving up complete power and agency.
"I make a point to share the news of upcoming launches as soon as I can on social media, so it was a natural next step to actually make these sneak peeks shoppable," Von D said in a press release.
Scott Disick and his ex Kourtney Kardashian always make a point of prioritizing their family, and while Sofia Richie may be bothered by the dynamic from time to time, she does her best to handle it, a source tells PEOPLE.
The first one I picked just to make a point about his statement on nonhuman main characters, because in "The Cartographer Wasps and the Anarchist Bees," most of the story is actually told from the point of view of these insects.
Again, conservatives should be careful about using the irrational, racist backlash to the presence of a little black girl to make a point, when the pathology that inspired that backlash is arguably exactly what got Trump elected just last year.
If you are a person who tends to bury your feelings about things (not that I know anything about that), make a point of opening up to people you trust who know you well enough to give more personally tailored wisdom.
Where everyone else only seemed to aspire at playing at ear-splitting levels, he would make a point of doing it with utmost respect, elegance and delicate restraint, in a manner that would always let music's natural beauty shine through.
Two puppeteers in Spain trying to make a point about aggressive prosecution of antiterrorism laws were themselves arrested this month, giving rise to one in a string of cases that critics say demonstrates a chilling effect on protest and free speech.
But — at a very basic level — what the "Ambush" episode really shows us is that the producers of UnReal have no problem borrowing from Black devastation to make for dramatic television, without intending to follow through and make a point.
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Crucially, these songs make a point not just of privation proper but of worry and insecurity—including "Aleppo," which begins "Bombs are falling/In the name of peace" and then describes the everyday wretchedness of the lives still braving the ruins.
Carson, it seems, was trying to make a point about the amazing abilities of the human brain—and it is amazing, in addition to being so complicated that we still don't understand a whole lot of detail about how it works.
A detailed blog posting in the company's machine learning journal makes public the technical effort that went into its "Hey Siri" feature — a capability so banal that I'd almost believe Apple was trying to make a point with highbrow mockery.
If you value your company and your role, you should also make a point to appreciate its growth and culture — and that starts with you not ignoring someone in hopes your colleagues will shoulder the responsibility of befriending him or her.
Artist Kristen Visbal's figure was first placed on a traffic island near Wall Street on March 7, on the eve of International Women's Day, to make a point: There's a dearth of women on the boards of the largest U.S. corporations.
Many make a point of sharing their concerts for free, bristling at the term "bootleg" because of its associations with the profit-driven releases of yore that they believe leech off an artist's work and give their community a bad name.
Now after a group of trans male actors even posted their auditions for some of Johansson's famous roles to make a point about taking parts that would be better suited for other actors, the four-time Golden Globe nominee has reconsidered.
" Zen, who at times knocked his knuckles on the table to make a point, stopped short of calling on Pope Francis to step down, saying: "I would not come out to fight the Holy Father, that is my bottom line.
But as I lingered, taking things in by myself up close and from farther points of the room over the next half hour, five passersby did make a point, some more obvious than others, of looking up at Palmer's work.
In response to a shareholder question, he said he would "make a point" of asking AB InBev to issue shares as part of a share swap, in order for SABMiller shareholders to have a holding in the newly merged company.
Ubisoft's limited pre-E3 meetings for Beyond Good and Evil 2 weren't really a preview; instead, they served to make a point: this game is happening, and you're going to see more of it — in some form — sooner than you think.
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She and others sounded the loud sirens to drown out the embassy's residents and have slept in a green tent behind the mission not only to make a point, but also to keep watch so no one enters the building.
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Mr O'Brien did make a point of criticising Chinese "intimidation" in the South China Sea, where, ignoring rival territorial claims from smaller South-East Asian countries, China has for years been building its military presence, partly by fortifying artificial islands.
It should not be necessary to be crass and mean-spirited to make a point or to express an opinion — even when doing so on some issue that sparks intensely-held views, or with someone with whom you strongly disagree.
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A few people—less tattooed, often university educated—make a point of turning the other way, intent upon thrashing out a stroke against the current, never advancing, instead holding their place, if only for a moment, as the others float past.
" Obama brought up the memory in order to make a point that... "at the end of our lives, whatever else we've accomplished, the things that we'll remember are the joys that our children, and hopefully way later our grandchildren, bring us.
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It does mean that you should make a point to be a friend to your neighbors in the coming days and weeks, especially those who live alone (even if they are on the younger side—Millennials get lonely and depressed too!).
But he will also make a point of meeting two French veterans of the Kieffer Commando, aged 100 and 97, and of visiting a prison in Caen where the Germans executed more than 80 French resistants on June 6, 1944.
She was concerned about the way the act was being interpreted in legal rulings, and although most of her writing was as a scholar and not as someone affected by polio, she would play that card to make a point.
At the time, Vice President Dick Cheney and others in the George W. Bush administration argued that the United States should have bombed the reactor itself, to make a point about its seriousness in stopping the export of bomb-making technology.
Only in declaring victory late Tuesday night did Ms. Handel make a point of offering "special thanks to the president of the United States of America," a line that set off a boisterous chant of Mr. Trump's name by the crowd.
WASHINGTON — Mark Sanford, the former Republican governor of South Carolina who once brought squealing pigs into the State Capitol to make a point about pork barrel spending, is running against President Trump because of his failure to cut government waste.
When her three stepchildren walked in and saw her breasts, Buchanan explained she was a feminist and wanted to "make a point that everybody should be fine with walking around their house or elsewhere with skin showing," according to court filings.
I fell for its clean lines and perfect proportions the first time I saw it — if you look closely here, you can also see its intricate mosaic floor — and I make a point of stopping by whenever I'm in town.
Now, it's easy for some to rubber stamp a yes vote, because it's an easy idea, it's a one house bill, they know it's not going anywhere but they just want to make a point that they support that topic.
If you fit one of these categories, make a point of revisiting your withholding: The child tax credit has been broadened to include higher-income households, and there's a new $500 tax credit for "other dependents" who reside with you.
The old farmers like Ronnau blame the new land grabbers and make a point of distinguishing themselves because they say they came to Apuí encouraged by the government of the day, and not pushed by the expanding agribusiness in neighboring states.
Now that he's sitting and peeing in a kid potty, I have come to realize that toddler penises (all penises?) point every which way, and if he doesn't make a point of aiming downwards, pee goes all over the bathroom.
The apartment is less than half a mile from the town but the driveway is up an incredibly steep hill, so they make a point to pick up guests in town and drive them up with their luggage, which is really nice.
A lot of actors make a point of leaving their characters behind when they finish a film, but for Sophie Turner, there was at least one thing about the title character in Josie that she wasn't ready to let go of: her tattoos.
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I'm simplifying years of painstaking and unnecessary literary criticism to make a point here: a mash-up of famous Vine clips set to the "Blessings" reprise from Chance the Rapper's third mixtape, Coloring Book, has moved me to tears at my desk.
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No, there's another, much bigger narrative reason for the writers to make a point of Jon's honesty here — particularly his honesty in a situation where telling the truth puts his friends, his queen, his war, his beloved North, and his future in jeopardy.
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Not until, say, an energetic Aunt Nora storms into town and insists on visiting the Statue of Liberty does a longtime New Yorker make a point of paying personal tribute to that grande dame — with or without an indulgent roll of the eyes.
Mediakix came clean to the press last summer about its stunt to make a point about how far a fake influencer could go and show how brands and advertisers aren't savvy about looking out for fake followers or fake engagement on Instagram.
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When he wants to make a point, his flashes an extreme expression of disgust, rage, revulsion or glee and holds it for a few beats so that everyone in the audience, and the cameras recording the moment, get what he wants to communicate.
And although you have since changed your statement to say that female tourists should only cover up in religious places, I feel I need to make a point, based on previous degrading comments that you and others in positions of power have made.
When his vice president, Dick Cheney, advocated bombing a secret nuclear reactor in Syria in 2007, partly to make a point to Iran, Mr. Bush rejected the proposal out of hand, a tale Mr. Cheney tells with some bitterness in his memoir.
CONVERSATIONS AT THE International Meeting on Origami in Science, Mathematics and Education often pause for a hand to dart into a pocket, emerge with a square of plain paper and fluently fold it up to make a point—both geometrically and rhetorically.
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While Linklaters largely glosses over the chequered origins of the Streams project, the law firm does make a point of agreeing with the ICO that the original privacy impact assessment for the project "should have been completed in a more timely manner".
Cruz won the votes of those who described themselves as very conservative: he is despised by the Washington elite, is anti-ethanol subsidies in a state that deifies them and has a reputation for shutting down government just to make a point.
Larry Hogan: I have to take into consideration my state and does it make sense to go running around the country to make a point or to do something for the greater good that then takes me away from my day job.
Carlin reads piles of books to prepare for his episodes, and presents his extensive research in the engaging persona of an erudite and rambling man who will, eventually, make a point, but likes to take a leisurely trip in order to get there.
Murray wouldn't comment on Osborne or any other bidder, but did make a point of knocking down a report that another consortium, which includes motivational speaker Tony Robbins and billionaire Dan Gilbert, was in "final negotiations" to buy Fortune, Money and Sports Illustrated.
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Here's an idea: If President Trump really wants to make a point about the failings of his opponents, he should go big and grant commutations to the thousands of deserving petitioners who were denied or not ruled upon during the Obama administration.

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