Sentences Generator
And
Your saved sentences

No sentences have been saved yet

69 Sentences With "ran the show"

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

One of the owners, Lenny Sinatra, deftly ran the show.
We ran the show for about three months, maybe four months.
That figure dropped to 18 percent when men ran the show.
She ran the show for most of Sunday's episode, until she didn't.
It was Chapman, Craig, and Chapman's brother, Marchesa CEO Edward Chapman, who ran the show.
"It was the dog's photo shoot and she ran the show," Kennedy told ABC News.
But Aaron wasn't having it, so he threw on a director's hat and ran the show.
The hyper-nationalists who once ran the show at the Trump White House -- including Lt. Gen.
Was Donald like Ronald Reagan, impaired while everyone around him ran the show and covered up for him?
The PT is betting Lula's star power can remind voters of more prosperous times when he ran the show.
While the lieutenants were technically in charge, the sergeants ran the show—and could make or break a new officer.
Instead, Saru was relegated again and Cornwell ran the show — not that I have a problem with getting more Cornwell.
"Kushner kept an eye on things from behind the scenes but Pompeo ran the show," said the person familiar with the matter.
His unelected advisers, led by the national security adviser, Henry A. Kissinger, and Defense Secretary James R. Schlesinger, ran the show that night.
Me, I'm leaning toward the crab Newburg they used to serve at Cross Creek in Florida, when Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings ran the show.
Rehearsals started a month in advance at Cornerstone Institutional Baptist Church, in Los Angeles, where James Cleveland, a childhood mentor of Franklin's, ran the show.
Even before he ran the show, he wrote a sketch for Comic Relief that showed the Doctor regenerating into a woman (in that case, Joanna Lumley).
My father was born into a family of Indian merchants — Gujarati Jains, to be precise — in Rangoon, Burma, in 2100, when the British ran the show.
At the time of the prison atrocities, Coahuila was one of Mexico's most violent states and its jails were overflowing with cartel members who ran the show.
Zarif didn't have a huge amount of juice with the mullahs who actually ran the show in Iran, but Iran's hardline former President, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, certainly did.
Like you have a what are they calling ... What about that woman at Apple, the one who ran the show there on the job, what was her name?
ABOUT THE MAGIC (24-29): Ilyasova scored 1023 points before fouling out and Jennings ran the show in overtime, finishing with 18 points and four assists (two in OT).
There was a time when the patricians who ran the show could retreat to the safety of their neighborhood watering hole and contemplate the coarseness of the common man.
I was in awe of my son and his discipline and effort, and I supported every step but never ran the show or suggested any illegal or immoral actions.
Should Yemi Osinbajo, the technocratic vice-president (pictured, right) who ran the show while Mr Buhari was unwell, retain authority to drive policy changes, investors will probably keep on giving Nigeria the benefit of the doubt.
Sarah Uphoff, better known as Pantera Sarah due to her love of heavy metal music (Pantera is a heavy metal band), ran the show when it came to Los Angeles' club scene in the early 2000s.
He scaled up what had been essentially a mom-and-pop operation; his mother and his sister, Joanne, worked there, too, but he ran the show, increasing production capacity and acquiring large-volume food-service clients.
The cohort that preceded them arrived on tour back when Mr Federer ran the show on hard courts, so their tactics aimed toward defending against powerful serves and exposing a weak backhand, not neutralizing a strong one.
Unseld ran the show from the sideline in the absence of head coach Michael Malone, and he watched his team rain down 3-pointers in a 114-98 thumping of the Sacramento Kings at Golden 113 Center.
Put aside that there are those who say Steve Bannon is the president's puppeteer, or that Edith Wilson secretly ran the show while President Woodrow Wilson was incapacitated; the president alone is authorized to carry out these (and other) constitutional functions.
Eubank Jr. ran the show and dominated the contest, outclassing his opponent throughout—only truly getting caught by one clean Blackwell punch all fight while he was taunting in the direction of Saunders and Tyson Fury who were still vehemently backing their man Blackwell.
He ran the show during the Replacements reunion gigs, reminding Paul Westerberg of the lyrics and the chords, and kept his compatriot from going off the rails, and performed the same function at the Bowery Electric Wednesday night, holding the bottom down fiercely along with Clem Burke.
In Chicago, on the day he demonstrated the world's first controlled nuclear chain reaction—a prerequisite for the uncontrolled kind in a nuclear weapon—he ran the show like a circus ringmaster, ramping up the tension by calling for lunch just as things literally heated up.
So in the wake of a season finale that tossed every element of the show to the wind (and made several major changes to the books), I wanted to talk to Sera Gamble, who both co-developed The Magicians for television and ran the show along with John McNamara.
Alfred Knopf and his wife, Blanche, still ran the show when she started in the company's dingy former offices at 501 Madison Avenue, a girl from "across the river" in New Jersey who hoped to work an editorial job by day and write the Great American Novel by night.
September 3, 2018 – October 14, 2019 Start TV ran the show in the early morning.
Styles then quit in storyline, however, on the following Monday's' Raw, meaning Grisham ran the show alone.
Wells took over as show runner of The West Wing in 2003 for the fifth season. He ran the show for three seasons until its conclusion in 2006.
They also hired J. Michael Straczynski as story editor and, later, co-producer. Taylor and Moessinger ran the show for two years before finally leaving in a dispute over control over the show.
Butler ran the show concurrently with the 1996 Democratic National Convention, echoing the last time the DNC was in Chicago: 1968.Burghardt, William (August 1996). "Butler brings Hair back for convention ". Copley News Service (michaelbutler.com).
Jade's Salon was Jade Goody's first ever reality show, depicting Jade's opening of her first business "Ugly's". It aired on Living television and was a hit for the channel. Living re-ran the show all weekend following the death of Goody on 22 March 2009.
The show received solid ratings during its original run, then grew in popularity during decades of syndication, especially in the 1970s and 1980s when many markets ran the show in the late afternoon. Today, the title character of Gilligan is widely recognized as an American cultural icon.
George Cann took on the show in the 1919 and the Cann family ran the show thereafter. Snake bites were an ongoing hazard. John Cann was awarded an OAM in 1992 for service to the community, conservation and the environment. The area surrounding the snake pit has been named Cann Park.
ABC in Australia currently has no plans to re-purchase the rights to the series, and only ran the show four times, not in order. In France, Gulli cancelled it only last year, ending on episode 14. On the 29/03/13, the children's TV channel, KiKa (from ZDF), finished airing the series. They also concluded on episode 14.
Rookie Blue is distributed by E1 Entertainment. NBC Universal Global Networks (also known as Universal Networks International) purchased broadcast rights in all markets except Canada (country of origin), France, Germany, and the United States. Ion Television acquired the off network rights to the series in the United States. Ion ran the show starting in December 2014 on Friday nights at 10:00 p.m.
They worked there for 13 years and ran the show for the final seven seasons. In 2008, they formed Ternion Productions, a film and television production company with Mike Judge. In 2009, Altschuler, Judge, and Krinsky co-created the show The Goode Family. In 2011, they executive produced and wrote several episodes of MTV’s return of Beavis and Butt-head.
An episode normally begins with a cold open sketch that ends with someone breaking character and proclaiming, "Live from New York, it's Saturday Night!", properly beginning the show. In 1980, Michaels left the series to explore other opportunities. He was replaced by Jean Doumanian, who was replaced by Ebersol after a season of bad reviews. Ebersol ran the show until 1985.
After running the show in 1939, Mrs Cruft sold the show to The Kennel Club, however due to World War II, it wasn't until 1948 when they ran the show for the first time. The show would remain being called Cruft's until 1974, when during a rebrand the apostrophe was dropped, resulting in the show being called Crufts, which it continues to be called at the present.
The play was performed in Argentina from 1983-86 with Virginia Lago in the role of Piaf. Lago won the Premio Estrella de Mar award in 1984 for Best Actress and in 1984 the Prensario Award for Best Actress. The play was also performed in Brasil in 1983 with Bibi Ferreira in the role of Piaf. Bibi won several awards in 1984 and ran the show for more than 10 years.
She studied journalism at the University of Warsaw, where she obtained a research degree. For a year she studied at the Sorbonne at the Department of Culture and Civilization of France. She made her TV debut as a child, leading the program 5-10-15 on TVP1. For six years, until 2001, she worked on Radio ZET as a presenter of morning news, and ran the show Not to see.
Douglas started all four years he played at the University of Illinois. He ran the show at point guard to four consecutive NCAA tournament appearances. In the 1983-84 season, the Illini won the Big Ten championship, and went to the elite eight. The team came just short of its first final four since 1952, losing a controversial game to the University of Kentucky, which was played in Rupp Arena.
He ran the show on his channel until he was confronted by a copyright claim from the distributors of Nail Gun Massacre. Then, Jones moved his videos to its own website, TheCinemaSnob.com, in 2009. For this new site, Jones also created several more series, such as Kung Tai Ted, The Big Box, The Bruno Mattei Show, and Brad & Jerrid, and uploaded two of his feature films (Freak Out and Cheap) to the site that same year.
Typically, this time slot is reserved for carefully calculated and heavily tested programming. Wink 104 saw tremendous success with the format, however, and aside from a few brief interruptions, ran the show live from 1995 until 2002. In 2002, Bruce Bond was fired from the station and the show was canceled. Wink 104's official explanation was that the show, which typically featured subject matter geared towards a mature audience, was not compatible with their new "family friendly" programming.
Hillenburg no longer wrote or ran the show on a day-to-day basis, but reviewed each episode and delivered suggestions. He said, "I figure when I'm pretty old I can still paint. I don't know about running shows." In November 2004, Tom Kenny, Bill Fagerbakke, and the rest of the crew confirmed that they had completed four new episodes for broadcast on Nickelodeon in early 2005, and planned to finish about 20 total for the then-fourth season.
Celtic's response two weeks later in the return match in Glasgow saw them produce a performance described by The Herald as "quite brilliant". Tommy Burns ran the show for Celtic and opened the scoring on 17 minutes with a headed goal. Shortly before half-time, Tom McAdam levelled the tie with a powerful shot. On half-time, Brian McClair took a pass from Frank McGarvey, ran 30 yards before shooting in to put Celtic ahead on aggregate.
"New York Times", DEC. 30, 2005 by Alessandra Stanley In 2007, Melvoin was hired as executive producer on Army Wives, produced by ABC Studios for the Lifetime Network. He ran the show in its first season, then left for other opportunities, returning to run the show for season’s three through seven, ending its run in 2013. In its day, Army Wives was the most successful one-hour drama in the history of the Lifetime network.“Military TV: Showrunner Jeff Melvoin - Deadline.
Ruck Zuck is the German version of the short-lived U.S. game show Bruce Forsyth's Hot Streak. It premiered on January 11, 1988, and ended on October 20, 2000 and four years later it came back to Tele 5 on October 25, 2004 and ended on June 3, 2005. Like its American counterpart, the series was packaged by Reg Grundy's Worldwide television empire. During its 1988-2000 and 2004-2005 run, Tele 5, RTL II and tm3 in its original incarnation, ran the show.
Meaning to quell what he saw as a civil war, President Martinus Steyn of the Orange Free State begged Kruger to agree to a peace conference in Bloemfontein. Due to his loyalty to Kruger and his knowledge of the British demeanour, Smuts sat with Kruger in the Transvaal delegation. In the event, Smuts ran the show. As the only man of the Transvaal delegation fluent in English, he jumped in at every opportunity, speaking for the entire country in his refusal to grant political rights to the Uitlanders.
The Grace family "ran the show" at Gloucestershire and E. M. was chosen as secretary which, as Birley points out, "put him in charge of expenses, a source of scandal that was to surface before the end of the decade". W. G., though aged only 21, was from the start the team captain and Birley puts this down to his "commercial drawing power". In 1878, Gloucestershire made its first visit to Old Trafford Cricket Ground in July to play Lancashire and this was the match immortalised by Francis Thompson in his idyllic poem At Lord's.
Later, in the fall of 2003 Arnold was hired by the production company Endemol to launch their US Hispanic division. During her time there, she ran the show and executive produced Vas or No Vas for Telemundo. Today, Stephanie Arnold currently serves on the board of directors for the AFE Foundation, and was named one of Today’s Chicago Woman’s 100 Women of Inspiration, and speaks on patient advocacy to organizations like The American Society of Anesthesiologist and featured in their campaign "When Seconds Count". She talks to clinicians and students at the Association of Women's Health Obstetrics and Neonatal Nurses (AWHONN).
Subsequently, Kirya became Bukedi North's representative to the LEGICO when the first batch of Ugandans was elected in 1961. He was among the Ugandan leaders, who went to London for the constitutional conference, which Uganda inherited at independence. In Kirunda Kivejinja's book Uganda: The Crisis of Confidence, Kirya Balaki Kebba features as one of the politicians, who ran the show on the eve of Independence and in the early Post-Independence years. In History of Uganda (1962-71), Kirya Balaki Kebba was appointed minister without portfolio but after two years, Milton Obote moved him to head the mineral and water resources ministry.
Krinsky began his career as a writer for the humor magazine National Lampoon, together with John Altschuler, whom he met and began collaborating creatively with while at UNC Chapel Hill, which became a collaboration that continued in the years to come. After selling their screenplays to Warner Brothers, Universal and Studio Canal Plus, they moved to Hollywood and began working as assistant producers for the HBO series The High Life. In 1997, Altschuler and Krinsky became writers on 20th Century Fox's King of the Hill. They worked there for 13 years and ran the show for the final seven seasons.
The show was moved again in the spring of 1982 to 6:30 am, a time when few children (or adults) were awake. In the fall of 1982, it returned to an hour format, but was moved to Saturday mornings at 7:00 am ET and 6:00 am in other time zones. Reruns from the previous season were offered to CBS affiliates to run Sunday morning in place of the cartoon reruns offered before, but most declined. One-third of affiliates no longer ran the show at all after 1982, and it was again reduced to a half-hour in the fall of 1984.
His widow ran the show for four years until she felt unable to do so due to its high demands of time and effort. To ensure the future and reputation of the show (and, of course, her husband's work), she sold it to The Kennel Club in 1942. In 1936, "The Jubilee Show" had 10,650 entries with the number of breeds totalling 80. The show was again interrupted by the Second World War therefore the 1948 show was the first to be held under the new owner and was held at Olympia in London, where it continued to gain popularity with each passing year.
Described by the New York Journal in 1893 as "Neither dancing of the head nor the feet",Stencell, A. W. Girl Show: Into the Canvas World of Bump and Grind ECW Press, 1999. . p. 605 it was a dance performed by women of, or presented as having, Middle-Eastern or Eastern European Gypsy heritage, often as part of traveling sideshows. The hoochie coochie replaced the much older can-can as the ribald dance of choice in New York dance halls by the 1890s. Since the dance was performed by women, female impersonators or drag queens, a goochie man, or hoochie coochie man, either watched them or ran the show.
"The First World Festival of Negro Arts", African Film Festival, New York. In 1969, following soon after the 1968 assassination of Martin Luther King Jr., public broadcasting syndicate National Educational Television (a direct predecessor to the modern-day PBS) began to air a show called Black Journal with a mission to present news by African Americans, for African Americans, and about African Americans. After a tumultuous opening during the first few tapings, the NET network promoted Greaves (a co-host at the time) to executive producer of the show. Greaves ran the show until 1970, winning the show and himself an Emmy award for his work on the program in 1969.
Striker Horst Hrubesch may have scored two goals to secure final victory for West Germany, but for many the outstanding player of the tournament was the Belgian central midfielder with the seemingly boundless energy. He ran the show in most every game he played, scheming, prompting and holding the ball, never wasteful his performances were as dynamic as they were inspirational as Belgium went all the way to their only major Final. Van Moer was arguably the most influential player in the tournament and indeed at 35, his performances earned him 4th place (equalling the best ever showing by a Belgian) in the Ballon d'Or poll. Karl-Heinz Rummenigge, Bernd Schuster and Michel Platini finished ahead of him.
Jane Nebel and Jim Henson worked together on the live 1950s television show Sam and Friends, where Jane collaborated with Jim in performing Muppets and devising several of the show's technical innovations, including the use of television monitors to watch their performances in real time. When, in the late 1950s, Jim took a year off from Sam and Friends to travel in Europe, Jane ran the show, with the help of a UMD classmate. "Among the first of his assignments at WRC was Afternoon, a magazine show aimed at housewives. This marked his first collaboration with Jane Nebel – the woman who later became his wife"Finch, Jim Henson – The Works (1993). p. 15.
" John Ortved wrote in his book The Simpsons: An Uncensored, Unauthorized History that "Scully's episodes excel when compared to what The Simpsons airs nowadays, but he was the man at the helm when the ship turned towards the iceberg." The Simpsons under Scully has been negatively labeled as a "gag-heavy, Homer-centric incarnation" by Jon Bonné of MSNBC, and many fans have bemoaned the transformation in Homer's character during the era, from sweet and sincere to "a boorish, self- aggrandizing oaf", dubbing him "Jerkass Homer". The Simpsons writer Tom Martin said in Ortved's book that he does not understand the criticism against Scully because he thinks Scully ran the show well. He also commented that he thinks the criticism "bothered [Scully], and still bothers him, but he managed to not get worked up over it.

No results under this filter, show 69 sentences.

Copyright © 2024 RandomSentenceGen.com All rights reserved.