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347 Sentences With "tenures"

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

Four vacancies — lifelong tenures — have opened since December 2016.
Graphic: Nifty 500 index rise during government tenures png tmsnrt.
Their tenures at Tesla collectively span from 2010 to 2019.
The property comprises 23,142 hectares of land with 77 mineral tenures.
So, you have done all these very impressive television journalism … tenures.
Now, their tenures are associated with the presidents who chose them.
Aware that their tenures will probably be short, bosses can be myopic.
Short job tenures are especially common within the growing gig economy workforce.
Mormons today face longer tenures in singledom and a skewed gender ratio.
OECD statistics show that average job tenures have fallen for young Brits.
This gives him one of the longest tenures in the show's history.
C.E.O. tenures are getting shorter, especially at consumer-goods and industrial companies.
Drama is baked into the job, and tenures often end in intrigue.
Layovers are enforced ellipses in life — temporary tenures in air-conditioned limbo.
Such long tenures often make directors weak voices for investors, he said.
He described Jobs' two tenures at Apple as Jobs 1.0 and Jobs 2.0.
Its members include lawmakers with a wide range of tenures, including three freshmen.
In America at least, average job tenures have barely changed in recent decades.
Juul cofounders Adam Bowen and James Monsees had short-lived tenures as billionaires.
Chefs who hold diplomas from the cafe regard their tenures as transformative experiences.
Juul cofounders Adam Bowen and James Monsees had short-lived tenures as billionaires.
My country of Iraq has suffered enormously under the tenures of American presidents.
They have both proven to be exemplary leaders throughout their tenures at Expedia.
And it will likely continue past their tenures and manifest in unforeseen ways.
To date, the tenures of all chief executives have ended in ignominy or failure.
None of the crimes involve either of the defendants' tenures on the Trump campaign.
Several years into their tenures, some of these leaders now face increasing domestic resistance.
Retired players with longer tenures can have access to additional benefits, including spousal coverage.
Vice Presidents Dick Cheney and Joe Biden both attended the forum during their tenures.
We've plotted the tenures of all 153 comedians who've been credited as cast members.
The bonds will be issued in three series with five-, seven-, and 10-year tenures.
The investigation into Gilbert's death dragged on through the tenures of two different district attorneys.
Presidents tend to start their tenures with high approval ratings that tail off over time.
More than 80 percent of those confirmed in the early 1800s died during their tenures.
Mannino is well-known in adtech circles and has worked at Amazon in two tenures.
Saint John's resume boasts tenures at some of the most successful companies in the world.
Both Obamas appeared on the daytime show during their tenures as president and first lady.
Political clashes, coupled with Methuselahn tenures, have eroded the institutional integrity of the Supreme Court.
The property comprises 23,142 hectares (57,200 acres) of land with 77 mineral tenures, Newcrest said.
That was well below the level of his two predecessors in comparable periods of their tenures.
Long-time tenures by male incumbents and a weak recruitment structure are among the stronger indicators.
He resigned after 182 days in office — among the shortest tenures ever for a press secretary.
The tenures of past three Fed chairs were all extended by presidents from the other party.
The report examined the tenures of the previous five secretaries of state, as well as Clinton.
We can benchmark against approval numbers for past presidents at the same point in their tenures.
KS: No. I think that would be one of the ugliest and shortest tenures in history.
Shortening the tenures of chief ushers is about a tradition slowly fading away, but also about management.
That's lower than any of the past six presidents at the 500-day mark of their tenures.
The soldiers are seeking raises, bonuses and shorter tenures of military service, among other issues, he said.
Mr Harrison made long-term shareholders in CP and CN rich, tripling profits at both during his tenures.
Presidents Ronald Reagan, Bill Clinton, George W. Bush and Barack Obama all visited the DMZ during their tenures.
The tenures of the former CIA chiefs who signed the statement span across every administration starting in 1987.
Both justices said that vacancies are so infrequent and tenures are so long that change will come haltingly.
But during their tenures, each either secured dozens of death sentences personally or led offices that won hundreds.
Today, I got started in the puzzle with EMIR/EWER in the southeast, which gave me TENURES/TENUOUS.
The governor's relationship with the mayor during their respective tenures has ranged from mildly unpleasant to downright nauseating.
He had also promised to reform labor laws, including lowering the threshold to hire workers for shorter tenures.
An article on July 9 about Marine recruits at Parris Island referred incorrectly to the tenures of Col.
During their tenures, Presidents Barack Obama and George W. Bush also sent National Guard troops to the border.
And during their respective tenures, Davies and his eventual replacement, Steven Moffat, took the show in opposite directions.
Meanwhile, none of the four recent Democratic appointees, whether "moderate" or liberal, have moved meaningfully rightward during their tenures.
Gallup notes that Ocasio-Cortez is more widely known than several other politicians at this point in their tenures.
Clinton, John Kerry and Barack Obama all had scores between 60 and 70 from their tenures in the Senate.
The only way to solve this is to build new homes across all tenures—to rent and to buy.
Jackson, however, put together several years of solid pitching between tenures with the Mets and the St. Louis Cardinals.
MAGAZINE An article on July 24637 about Marine recruits at Parris Island referred incorrectly to the tenures of Col.
A subsequent Intercept article reported that there was no overlap between Mr. Sirota's tenures as columnist and campaign official.
Broader market sentiment mirrored that view, as gauges for implied sterling volatility in different tenures eased off recent highs.
The lack of term limits left the technology industry with one of the highest average tenures, at 10 years.
It's now the age of Vestberg and Squirrel, may they have prosperous tenures before Yahoo finally shuts it all down.
Both George H.W. Bush and his son would adhere to the same view during their tenures in the White House.
That's roughly equal to the combined total from Janet Yellen and Ben Bernanke through the same point during their tenures.
The previous six presidents have all faced dwindling satisfaction with the direction of the country during their tenures in office.
Trump's new favorable numbers are still lagging behind her most recent predecessors at around the same time in their tenures.
I found much that was alarming about being a citizen during the tenures of Richard Nixon and George W. Bush.
At some point during the high school tenures of so many, that pressure releases in the form of An Incident.
Previously, he was executive chairman, prior to that he served two tenures as the company's chief executive officer and chairman.
When you submit your application, you must specify all types of employment tenures for which you wish to be considered.
Each of those administrations only led the Dow lower by less than one percent over the course of their respective tenures.
Matched with those tenures at top tech firms, meanwhile, is Liu, who has spent significant time working within the Singapore government.
Ranging in age from 18 to 35, many recall Clinton's tenures as senator, 2008 candidate, and secretary of state with clarity.
Joe Torre He finished his playing career and started his managing career with the 1977 Mets, and those tenures briefly overlapped.
Sanders and Biden are frontrunners but both men are in their 70s and their long tenures in DC will be problems.
Over our long tenures in Congress, it is difficult to count the number of times we personally disagreed over a policy.
EPA Administrator Scott Pruitt and Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke have both flown on private planes during their tenures in the administration.
Ithaca is a college town, so some of the most talented groups of the moment were formed during tenures on campus.
Tenures, though, are usually about a tenth that long — and reigns are shortening, especially in the consumer-goods and industrial sectors.
Neither has donated while they have been on the board, but their wives have donated a combined $52,000 during their tenures.
Maybe it's because designer tenures have gotten so short; maybe it's because of the constant need to feed the Instagram maw.
Kittsley's nearly two decades in the industry also included tenures in research-related positions at State Street Global Advisors and Morgan Stanley.
Scaramucci spent less than two weeks in his post, a stunningly short period of time by any measure of presidential staff tenures.
It's not totally abnormal for presidents to freeze out unfriendly media during their tenures, but it has certainly never happened this quickly.
Mike Krieger and Kevin Systrom's tenures at Facebook were longer than that of most Facebook employees, where the average is 2.5 years.
Sanders and Biden have had similarly long careers in Congress, but they have taken decidedly different approaches to trade during their tenures.
I met him for the first time in 2009, interviewing him when we were both about a year into our Qatar tenures.
Four of Mueller's 17 prosecutors have ended their tenures with the office, with most returning to other roles in the Justice Department.
But is it really bad when compared to the other recent presidents at this point during their tenures in the White House?
Officials say similarities in each leader's personality and disposition have led to a bond that's withstood a litany of challenges during their tenures.
Removing barriers to job-switching, for example by making benefits more portable, could shorten average tenures and help stop companies' cultures becoming ossified.
The announcement from the Fiscal Agency and Financial Advisory Authority, the island's primary fiscal agent, could bring the firms' tenures to an end.
There have long been questions about the conflicts of interests surrounding Jared Kushner and Ivanka Trump in their tenures in the Trump administration.
Washington chews up and spits out idealists, giving long tenures to politicians who abandon their promises once they take their oath of office.
But if he is to join another established label, it's likely to be to somewhere entirely different from either of his previous tenures.
Before that, Duquette enjoyed successful tenures with the Boston Red Sox from 1994 to 2001 and the Montreal Expos from 1987 to 93.
After all, a half dozen of her co-workers already had book deals for insider accounts of their tenures in the West Wing.
Walmart is attempting to match that success, with a phalanx of executives with tenures at Frito-Lay, Facebook, and of course Amazon Advertising.
During both of our tenures as HHS Secretary, we had the good fortune to have Azar serve in senior positions during challenging times.
He retired last week after covering the court for 58 years — the longest run, by far, in a beat known for lengthy tenures.
Average CEO tenures have dropped at large companies and there has been a record high number of CEO departures so far this year.
The races often attract little interest, and low voter turnout allows the favorites of the political machine to win, cementing long, unchallenged tenures.
England is one of the few countries that still allows property owners, called freeholders, to extend "leaseholders" residential tenures that can last a millennium.
Unlike presidents like Bush or Nixon, who found themselves massively unpopular toward the end of their tenures, Trump is beginning his term that way.
Which leaves us with looking back at the history of past presidents at this time in their tenures -- and comparing how Trump stacks up.
Presidents have always strained toward the end of their tenures to find a megaphone that can compete with the clamor of a presidential campaign.
More and more, it has become clear that tenures such as Alex Ferguson's (28 years at Manchester United) are a thing of the past.
He and Mr. Sessions had little in common beyond their lengthy tenures as federal prosecutors and shared views on gangs, drugs and violent crime.
The CEOs of Wall Street have to deal with litigation, regulation, and the relatively short tenures you have at the top of the pile.
Rosenstein's decision to appoint Mueller as Special Counsel thrust him into a spotlight that most deputy attorney generals do not experience in their tenures.
To be sure, the first 100 days of the Bush and Clinton presidencies bore only a modest resemblance to the rest of their tenures.
Clyburn and McSweeny had been in lockstep on issues like net neutrality and privacy throughout their tenures as minority commissioners in the Trump era.
Per Bloomberg, all of the companies saw their value drop by 763 percent, below $1 per share in each case, during Farnsworth's tenures with firms.
One reason that bloodless coups are so common is that Australian governments serve for three-year terms—one of the shortest tenures in the world.
Haley was confirmed shortly after Trump's inauguration in 2017 and has had one of the longest tenures in a White House fraught with high turnover.
Typically, one secretary announces a resignation at the same time a President announces a new nominee, allowing for little to no gap between their tenures.
And in South Korea, Defense Minister Han Min Koo said long tenures in their respective militaries will make it easy for them to work together.
CFOs have shorter job tenures than CEOs—a little over five years on average at American listed companies, compared with seven years for the boss.
The study also showed that at companies with more diverse boards, female chief executives had longer tenures than those at companies with less diverse boards.
For much of their recent tenures, Brazil under Mr. Bolsonaro and Saudi Arabia under Prince Mohammed have all ranked among the world's hottest stock markets.
The analyst noted Niccol's impressive tenures as an executive overseeing Taco Bell and Pizza Hut brands at Yum Brands and his experience at Procter & Gamble.
Some newer and more senior aides tried to block Ms. Hicks's access to the president, but her relationship with him outlasted most of their tenures.
That end could come Thursday, his eighth execution date in a case that has spanned the tenures of eight Alabama governors, starting with George Wallace.
It is no wonder Trump continues to carry the dubious honor of having the lowest approval ratings in history at this point in presidential tenures.
All three industries have above-average rates of people quitting or being laid off; retail and food services have some of the shortest average job tenures.
It is a mystery why European officials should have such long tenures so that prime ministers come and go but Jean-Claude Juncker goes on forever.
Chief ushers typically have long tenures, hence why there have only been nine, and it's unusual for an administration to fire one — especially without an explanation.
Those tenures did not last very long (with the exception of Thomas, who wore out his welcome with fans), nor did they bring the desired results.
The constellation of headline-driving drama in today's news recalls the machinations that engulfed Presidents Richard Nixon and Bill Clinton for years of their respective tenures.
With front-office tenures usually measured in years, not decades, executives are sometimes under pressure from ownership to produce results that "play" well in the press.
Approval ratings historically have experienced some turbulence during their first nine months, as honeymoon periods wear off and presidents face the first tests of their tenures.
And then, the researchers found, the women "often lacked the support or authority" to make the kind of changes the company needed, leading to shorter tenures.
In a surprising announcement on Tuesday, Iger said he would be stepping down as Disney CEO, ending one of the most successful tenures in media history.
In particular, he said Chipotle is looking at long director tenures and considering candidates with expertise in areas such as marketing, crisis management and corporate governance.
With this women will get the same opportunities and benefits as their male colleagues, including ranks, promotions and pensions, and be allowed to serve longer tenures.
Whether in broker commissions, new furniture or junk hauling, moving costs a lot of money, so longer home tenures are likely to weigh on consumer spending.
Earlier this month, Czech Justice Minister Robert Pelikan wrote to his Polish counterpart expressing "concern" about the changes, which includes terminating tenures of Supreme Court judges.
To make matters worse, the tenures of two principal defenders of the deal in Europe -- Federica Mogherini and Helga Schmid -- come to an end in May.
He also worked for Michael Bloomberg during one of his tenures as mayor of New York City and in 2009 ran Bloomberg's successful, third re-election campaign.
It was, after all, the expectation that Trump would appoint conservative justices -- whose tenures would long outlast his presidency -- that kept many moderate Republicans behind his candidacy.
Recording artists are not really considered core members, because their tenures within the union tend to be shorter than those of lifelong pit musicians and orchestra members.
He has been in his latest EPA job for more than 100 days, one of the longest tenures for an acting chief at the agency in decades.
The Reserve Bank of India withdrew a restriction that allowed foreign investors to only invest in corporate and government debt with tenures of three years or more.
Charney says he's still committed to paying his factory employees a livable wage, many of whom held significant tenures as the old American Apparel factory, RetailDive reports.
He was in office for a little over a year, one of the shortest tenures in modern history — and it was not, experts say, a distinguished one.
" Amit Segal, a political commentator for Israel's popular Channel 2 News, said that during the tenures of Presidents Clinton and Obama, Mr. Netanyahu could "disguise his worldview.
In all, four men have been on the Battery Park City board at least a year; three have donated personally or through their companies during their tenures.
On Wednesday, Mr. Jackson, 22014, announced that he would step down as chief executive next year, ending one of the longest leadership tenures among Fortune 220 executives.
Presidents Ronald Reagan and George W. Bush both cut taxes deeply on the promise of economic payoffs, putting aside concerns about deficits, which grew during their tenures.
Though most of his tenures have started with great success, including league titles in four different countries and two Champions League trophies, they have usually ended acrimoniously.
"Combining both their tenures, the father-son duo has advised nearly every Republican administration since Gerald Ford," Utah's Deseret News said in an Opinion piece last year.
No Pakistani prime minister has ever completed a full term since the state's inception in 1947, with most leadership tenures halted by coups, resignations, arrests, or assassinations.
Black and Latinx players like guitarist Rocky George, drummer R.J. Herrera, and bassist Louiche Mayorga played vital roles during their respective tenures in the band's 1980s heyday.
While Mulvaney is trusted by key members of Trump's inner circle, the two men have little chemistry and interact less frequently than during other chiefs of staff's tenures.
The former cabinet members Jeff Sessions, Alex Acosta and Scott Pruitt all attended the study during their tenures in the administration; Jim Bridenstine, who leads NASA, also attends.
Predictable Institutional Framework A solid legislative framework defines Italian regions' responsibilities and revenue predictability, including access to subsidised loans with long-term tenures/maturities from the central government.
The question of truthfulness has been asked of all press secretaries at one point during their tenures, including Spicer, who also pledged to never lie from the podium.
The first director was not named until 1971, and some directors since then have had short tenures: In one three-year period, the post changed hands 14 times.
Microsoft&aposs overall revenue grew exponentially in the early Gates years as Microsoft established its dominance, and continued to steadily grow through Ballmer&aposs and Nadella&aposs tenures.
For many years Trump, has heaped high praise on both Bill and Hillary Clinton throughout their tenures at every major office they have held since the 1992 campaign.
Business Insider spoke with five engineers with tenures at some of these household names to understand what's expected of candidates looking to break into a big tech company.
And Lee is well-qualified to dissect the topic given his past tenures as the founder of Microsoft's research center in Asia and the president of Google China.  
Former President Barack Obama's had moved 18 points, George W. Bush's had moved 39 points and Bill Clinton's had moved 22 points to this point in their tenures.
Mr. Tillerson has been largely shut out of the usual back-and-forth between Israelis and Palestinians that many secretaries of state spent much of their tenures conducting.
A review of tenures of Arthur Burns, Alan Greenspan and Ben Bernanke by economists Alexander Salter and Daniel Smith showed all three implemented policies they opposed before taking office.
Dr. Doom also wasn't trusting Wall Street's rally since Trump's election, nothing that Presidents Ronald Reagan and Herbert Hoover also began their tenures with huge rallies, followed by crashes.
Biden and Sanders have sought to flip the narrative surrounding their age, arguing their tenures in public service show that they have experience to handle the job of president.
Several of these witnesses are still working in senior positions at the White House, while others have moved on from the Trump administration after tumultuous or short-lived tenures.
During the two producers' respective tenures, the Ninth, Tenth, Eleventh, and Twelfth Doctors were played by a succession of men: Christopher Eccleston, David Tennant, Matt Smith, and Peter Capaldi.
Not only are professional tenures at jobs getting shorter, but companies themselves don't always know exactly how they are going to adapt to new market demands and technological innovation.
Several other lenders including Punjab National Bank, Union Bank of India, Kotak Mahindra Bank and Dena Bank also cut their lending rates by 45-90 basis points across tenures.
Of the 24 female CEOs in the S&P 2226, 2175 have led their companies' stocks to outperform the index in terms of cumulative total returns during their tenures.
He has been in the job in an acting capacity for more than 100 days, one of the longest tenures for an acting chief at the agency in decades.
Over the years I have often spoken to audiences about my tenures as an FBI SWAT team leader and as a member of the elite Hostage Rescue Team (HRT).
His five-year term expires on June 5, but SEC commissioners are allowed to extend their tenures for up to 18 months if the Senate hasn't confirmed their successor.
So Business Insider spoke with nine former Netflix employees who rose through ranks or had long tenures at the company to learn what it takes to get ahead there.
In his 14 years as the Cardinals' manager, including his two tenures as an interim manager, he took a low-key approach, refraining from public criticism of his players.
It makes sense: Employees who feel like their company is invested in them are more likely to be engaged in their work and have longer tenures within the company.
He's kept a relatively low profile since Trump removed him from his position via Twitter back in 2018 after one of the shortest tenures at Foggy Bottom in history.
Dwight Eisenhower, Richard Nixon, Ronald Reagan and George W. Bush all saw recessions begin in the first year of their tenures, but end by the close of their second year.
The government is currently working on the tenures of the bonds and could come up with 10-year benchmark bonds in the special category as well, said the first official.
In New York, where long coaching tenures have become rare because the pressure to win is so great and the news media scrutiny so intense, Coughlin's substantial legacy is assured.
Zhu said that there was a gap in the market for them to fill as they were willing to make long-term loans with tenures of at least 10 years.
Kodak never unionized, and their employees were known for lifetime tenures—and for their tendency to remain involved in the Kodak community long after they stopped punching their time cards.
Since becoming the Kings' lead announcer in 21980, Miller, a Chicago native, has become a legend in a city that has seen transcendent broadcasters enjoy long tenures with local teams.
And even in the highly unlikely, far-fetched scenario in which the 2020 presidential election didn't happen at all, it wouldn't automatically extend Trump and Vice President Mike Pence's tenures.
He added that mayors of either party in major cities don't always translate into viable statewide candidates, but can become household names if their city hall tenures are well-regarded.
The only Met general managers with longer tenures than that have been Giulio Gatti-Casazza (who held the post for 27 years beginning in 1908) and Rudolf Bing (3123-72).
As part of their tenures as Theorist in Residence, Povinelli and Hartman will be delivering two public lectures in the Los Angeles area in late January, 2020, and 2021 respectively.
There is a government that endures beyond the transition of one presidency to the next: career civil servants, appointees with long tenures, and the policies and rules that bind them.
During the tenures of Eric Holder and Loretta Lynch, the Justice Department has been proactive in applying oversight measures to local law enforcement outfits found to have committed civil rights violations.
"You have these firebrands that are at the helm, and their tenures have been marked by really bold decision-making, and it has come bundled with really big personalities," Acevedo said.
Cook, a global supply chain executive with 15 years of experience in retail and consumer brands management, was hired at MedMen in October following tenures at Sam's Club, Target and Apple.
Looking across the entire 17-year period, the study found that the women CFOs' companies, during their tenures, generated a combined $1.8 trillion more in gross profits than their sector averages.
During his tenures the Italian economy declined, urgent reforms were announced but not carried through and he was virtually shunned by other European leaders by the end of his last premiership.
While past presidents have faced similar obligations in the waning days of their tenures, Obama is more popular -- and thus in higher demand as a campaigner than his most recent predecessors.
Things look bleak, especially considering former presidents Barack Obama, George W. Bush, Bill Clinton, and George H.W. Bush all had positive approval ratings at the start of their White House tenures.
Top members of his party like Pelosi, House Democratic Whip Steny Hoyer and Assistant Democratic Leader Jim Clyburn -- all senior leaders in their seventies -- have had long tenures in their positions.
Democracy advocates have expressed alarm at the reemergence of a trend by leaders in the region to seek to change laws, delay elections or use other tactics to extend their tenures.
JIM CRAMER: Because of your fabulous work at Danaher, which was one of the remark-- most remarkable tenures I've ever seen a CEO have, you deserve the benefit of the doubt.
"It's not up to me to decide how long I can do this job, but the one thing you see at Roche is very long tenures at the top," he said.
McMaster and Kelly are gone, after rocky tenures during which it was widely known that they disagreed with many crucial security policies and were poorly treated by the commander in chief.
La Volpe has had little success in his last few tenures in Mexico, and in recent years has been an underwhelming coach who typically doesn't last very long in a job.
Sushila Karki, a former chief justice, said that during her tenure she had made it mandatory for judges to submit their academic records to discourage justices from illegally extending their tenures.
His last three predecessors had tenures of between 16 and 19 years, but Chief Justice Roberts is likely to stay in office much longer and to leave a correspondingly larger mark.
Many classic Boston Symphony recordings made during the tenures of Munch, Erich Leinsdorf, William Steinberg and Seiji Ozawa, the music directors under whom Ms. Dwyer served, featured her luminous solo playing.
But speculation that Durkin's trip southward might have been a prelude to his joining the program was understandable, since several high-profile Alabama assistant coaches began their tenures after similar visits.
During the tenures of the four previous presidents, Republicans and Democrats, the Census Bureau worked to reduce the relatively high number of people of color and urban residents who went uncounted.
In seven seasons, through 103, encompassing the full tenures of two coaches, it went 46-42; in the final two years of that run, it was 7-6 and 5-7.
Owner Brian England supports raising the state's minimum wage to $15 an hour because he says better wages and benefits lead to more productive employees, longer tenures, and higher quality service.
The prime minister claims that the investigation focuses on his family's decades-old private businesses and cannot find any proof of financial scandal or corruption in his current or past tenures.
The leadership swap also signals that executive chairman Bill Ford Jr. will play a more active role in the company than he did during Fields' and Alan Mulalley's tenures as CEO.
Shine is the latest in a string of communications directors who have had short tenures in the Trump White House, where the president in many ways serves as his own communications chief.
Last, but not least, data show that employees at Amazon and Google have among the lowest job tenures of Fortune 500 companies, indicating the job churn that characterizes a vibrant, competitive industry.
This act was partly intended to preclude lengthy tenures like J. Edgar Hoover's forty-seven-year reign, but also to provide the director with a measure of independence from the incumbent Administration.
Why it matters: Smith has one of the longer CEO tenures in Silicon Valley, with Intuit saying it generated more than a 600% shareholder return during his 11 years at the helm.
Though the chronology is a little unclear regarding the end of his time at Yale and beyond, his odyssey includes tenures in Massachusetts, New York, Washington, D.C., and back home in Texas.
The reason employers tend not to like short tenures is because they want to amortize the hassle of hiring, training, and everything else that goes into bringing a new employee on board.
Pritchard and the other former Americore executive, who spoke on condition of anonymity out of fear of retaliation, each said James Biden was actively involved in the company during their tenures there.
Whether these innovations will put the Met on a new trajectory is unclear, but one aspect of the institution remains steadfast: the ushers, an eclectic group whose tenures can stretch back decades.
This article originally appeared on VICE Sports UK. When we look back on the tenures of the most recent England managers, we can pinpoint the exact moment that their careers went to shit.
Third, managers of the Dutch national team tend to have short tenures: since 1990 the coach of the German national team has changed five times, whereas the Dutch coach has switched 12 times.
Tillerson's Democratic predecessors John Kerry and Hillary Clinton gave public comments on the report in 2013 and 2009, their first years in the post, respectively, and continued to present it throughout their tenures.
Well, it's one of the most iconic handbags ever, thanks in part to noted carrier Princess Diana, and was designed in 1995 during the gap year between Gianfranco Ferré and John Galliano's tenures.
In those early moments of both our tenures, I recognized a subtle shift was taking place, one toward service, something Microsoft hadn't been known for under his predecessors Steve Ballmer and Bill Gates.
The Leuthold Group's Doug Ramsey notes when companies become the most valuable company in the and approach 20163 percent of the benchmark's market cap, their tenures at the top are very short-lived.
On the one hand, one party always will have a 85033-4 majority, and the vagaries of electoral politics and length of tenures may result in a party maintaining control for many years.
Can there be any doubt that, with lifetime tenures and the power to rule on our most significant constitutional issues, Supreme Court justices are indeed special and their appointments justify a special rule?
Four former and current White House medical unit employees -- all of whom requested anonymity to discuss behavior they witnessed and were aware of during their tenures -- said prescription medication was handed out readily.
During their tenures at American Apparel (Alonzo was the brand's creative director and Crespo its graphics and childrenswear director), they transformed V-neck tees and high-waisted jeans into a bona fide movement.
He served as a law clerk to Justice Kennedy in 1993 and 1994, early in the tenures of the two longest-serving members of the court, Justices Clarence Thomas and Ruth Bader Ginsburg.
If she were to step aside by the end of 2020, she would have had an 18-year run as her party's House leader — one of the most successful tenures in modern politics.
He just concluded his 27th season in two different tenures with the program, and there has been plenty of speculation that the 79-year old might retire at the conclusion of the season.
In light of Mr. Murphy's long-awaited homecoming, we plotted the tenures of all 153 comedians who had been officially credited as cast members — those who lasted, and those who flamed out. 10.
But House Democrats with shorter tenures tend to stay out of the running for such a coveted chairmanship, leaving the panel's most-senior members to fight for the seat at the very top.
But, both Vitali and Wladimir Klitschko, Lennox Lewis, Mike Tyson and Larry Holmes all benefitted from the splintered state of heavyweight boxing to enjoy long tenures as world champions so this is nothing new.
While some CEOs who left their positions had very short tenures (Margo Georgiadis left Mattel after just one year), others have led their respective companies for much longer and seemed ready for new challenges.
Among these are that lifetime tenures are preferable to even long term limits, that the regularized appointment process would be even more political, and that every presidential election would be about the Supreme Court.
Pence's predecessors from both parties -- Republicans George H.W. Bush, Dan Quayle and Dick Cheney and Democrats Mondale, Al Gore and Joe Biden -- all performed work that mattered during their four- or eight-year tenures.
Although Trump wasn't specific about what the troops' scope and authority would be, both Presidents Barack Obama and George W. Bush oversaw temporary deployments of National Guard troops to the border during their tenures.
His move follows that of his boss, the S.E.C.'s chairwoman, Mary Jo White, who last month announced her plans to leave, as Wall Street overseers under the Obama administration wind down their tenures.
Trans-Atlantic trouble has been brewing for years, as evident in the German-American fallout over the Iraq War and the National Security Agency's activities in Europe during the tenures of Trump's two predecessors.
Jeffrey Brez, a spokesman for the U.N., disputed that the campaign had ended early or as a result of the protest, as some reports have suggested, citing other honorary ambassadorships with much shorter tenures.
The revised interest rate applicable for 12 and 18 months deposits shall be 7.00 per cent per annum, and for 24 and 36 month tenures, the rate shall be 7.25 per cent Further company coverage:
While the Marquette poll found that only a minority, 43 percent, support packing the court, a surprising 85033 percent backed the idea of ending lifetime tenures for Supreme Court justices in favor of fixed terms.
If humanity survives another 50 million years (a reasonable length of time compared to other species' tenures), then the total number of people who will ever live is about 3 quadrillion, or 3 million billion.
Market had speculated that the new tenor would fit between the 28-day reverse repo and the three-month, which is one of the common tenures of central bank's medium-term lending facility (MLF) loans.
But, you would have a tough time justifying cutting either guy from a bulging UFC roster with their respective popularities and the quality of opponent both Sanchez and Miller have faced throughout their UFC tenures.
We came from different backgrounds: I was prior military and a member of the FBI's tactical resolution teams; Metrinko had been a Peace Corps volunteer and served two lengthy tenures in the dovish State Department.
Bloomberg made the comments in response to a question from CNN's Anderson Cooper about why Democratic voters should trust Bloomberg, who only rejoined the party in 2018 after tenures as both a Republican and independent.
In his tenure as chief executive of the federally subsidized railroad, Richard Anderson has sought to bring many business practices from his tenures at Northwest Airlines and Delta Air Lines to the deeply unprofitable railroad.
First ladies in Africa Africa is a continent also favored by Trump's most recent predecessors, first ladies Michelle Obama, Laura Bush and Hillary Clinton, all of whom visited several countries there solo during their tenures.
It also follows the impending departure of Chairman Mark Williamson, who in February announced that he would step down once a successor was found, citing new British guidelines on the length of board chair tenures.
It should be noted that of these candidates, Sanders, Biden, Warren and Klobuchar are, or have been, senators in Congress for many years — and have studiously ignored Puerto Rico's status issues throughout their respective tenures.
"There is no silver bullet but we welcome the proposals to overhaul the housing system, embracing different tenures such as Build-to-Rent and supporting innovation in the form of modern methods of construction," Leech added.
Estimates of how many Venezuelans have left their home country during the tenures of former President Hugo Chavez and current leader Nicolas Maduro vary widely, with some opponents and academics putting the figure at 4 million.
During his tenures as prime minister and president, he has changed Turkey dramatically, and his efforts to stay in power are likely to have a lasting impact on the country, according to Turkish historian Soner Cagaptay.
She has to date served 1,044 days in office, one of the shortest tenures of any postwar prime minister, and her government has passed fewer pieces of legislation than any other in the last three decades.
"That said, it breaks my heart as a Latino who has fought for our community nationally in my two White House tenures," said Vela, a former advisor on Hispanic issues to then-Vice President Al Gore.
Meanwhile, Simons is best known for his own eponymous line, his collaboration with Adidas, and his creative director tenures at Jil Sander (2005 to 2012), Christian Dior (2012 to 2015), and Calvin Klein (2016 to 2018).
Early on Saturday, Alain Richard Donwahi, the country's defense minister, arrived in Bouaké, where the uprising appeared to have started, for talks with the rebellious soldiers, whose demands included raises, bonuses and shorter tenures of service.
One person close to Trudeau said the liberal leader doesn't feel slighted by Trump's late RSVP to the invite he extended in November, despite the practices of past US presidents to visit Canada early in their tenures.
Lyft and Uber, which both recently debuted with losses, have fallen short of expectations in their brief tenures on the public market so far due to concern about their ability to close their margins in the future.
Bündchen was with the brand from 2000 until mid-2007, while Klum worked with the lingerie giant from 1999-2010, and the models had many appearances at in-store events and runway shows together during their tenures.
India's central bank said it is withdrawing a restriction that limited foreign investors to only investing in government and corporate bonds with tenures of three years or more, a move that could bolster the domestic bond market.
Two ministers in the cabinet of Prime Minister Shinzo Abe have resigned in the last week, less than two months into their tenures, after they were accused of the less-than-monumental offense of giving produce to voters.
He also claimed, without merit, that his predecessors hadn't written or called the families of slain American troops during their tenures, though the tradition of presidents reaching out after US servicemen are killed in action is long-established.
He was on the bench when the new term opened three days after his speech, went on to serve for 34 years, one of the longest Supreme Court tenures, before retiring in 1971 at the age of 85.
Westerhout was a Trump staffer with one of the longest tenures before her resignation this week, The New York Times reported, as the 28-year-old began working for the president during his transition into the White House.
To get the most well-rounded perspective on what CMOs are prioritizing in 2020, eMarketer polled those of different industries and tenures to find out what should be top of mind as we propel into the future of marketing.
The report issued by House Democrats said the poor executive behavior continued after Mr. Stumpf's departure, into the tenures of the bank's next two leaders: Timothy J. Sloan, who resigned last year, and his interim successor, C. Allen Parker.
Four out of eight pollsters show him to be (just) more popular than François Hollande, his much-derided Socialist predecessor, at this point in their respective tenures; two show him level; and another two have him as more unpopular still.
That means doubling congressional committee staff and making those positions into career civil service posts like those in the Congressional Budget Office, and improving all staffer pay to lengthen tenures and reduce the temptation to quit and join lobbying firms.
Mr. Monaldi said that while the company had not been transparent during the tenures of Mr. Del Pino or Mr. Martínez, transgressions such as filing inflated production figures were most likely ordered by the government itself to improve its balance sheet.
WASHINGTON — The State Department has discovered a dozen emails containing classified information that were sent to the personal email accounts of Colin L. Powell and close aides of Condoleezza Rice during their tenures as secretaries of state for President George W. Bush.
He joins a long list of former Spanish bankers - such as ex-IMF chief Rodrigo Rato accused of misusing credit cards for personal expenses - that face trial for lining their pockets during their tenures, as public anger against such scandals continues to build.
Under the moderate Hasina, the country has maintained some of its secular roots, while Zia's tenures have been characterized by a mercenary alliance with Jamaat-e-Islami, South Asia's oldest and purest radical Islamist party with ties to extremist groups like ABT.
Throughout their long tenures at the firm, they have led some of the firm's most successful investments in a range of portfolio companies, and each served on the boards of many of Goldman Sachs' public and private portfolio companies around the world.
While it is true that fewer people have very long tenures at a single company, she said, that trend has been swamped by a countervailing one: People are not moving as much out of what used to be entry-level and temporary jobs.
Nevertheless, he is considered a member of the Hu Jintao faction, and his career even mirrors that of the elder Hu with lengthy stints both in Tibet (where the two had overlapping tenures) and in the Communist Youth League headquarters in Beijing.
After him came Mr. Rangel, a man with many accomplishments and a few ethical scars, who will have completed 262 years in the House by the time he steps down next year — one of the longest tenures in the history of Congress.
MUMBAI, Jan 1 (Reuters) - State Bank of India, the country's biggest lender by assets, said on Sunday it had cut its lending rates by 90 basis points for maturities ranging from overnight to three-year tenures, after experiencing a surge in deposits.
Early in their tenures, for instance, justices are less apt to dissent, according to data compiled by Lee Epstein, a law professor and political scientist at Washington University in St. Louis, and Kevin Quinn, a political scientist at the University of Michigan.
Press, who spent more than four decades in the auto industry, including tenures at Toyota, Ford Motor Company, General Motors and Chevrolet, as well as serving as co-president and vice chairman of Chrysler, said nothing good comes out of trade wars.
Could she actually share his view that the President is in some way unhinged, but believe it is best to retain one of the longest tenures in a volatile White House in order to continue exerting her influence over the President's behavior?
It is confounding that of 338 NASA astronauts, two of these African-American women, of stellar accomplishments and tenures of over 10 years each, are the only American astronauts who have been denied or pulled from a spaceflight assignment without any official explanation.
It has been widely reported that similar strikes against the Iranian general were rejected by President Obama and President George W. Bush during their White House tenures because of fears that such a move would escalate tensions and potentially spiral out of control.
He said several factors could influence the election date, including dealing with the banking crisis, the summit of the G7 nations scheduled in Sicily in May, and the need to name chiefs for a raft of state-owned companies as tenures run out.
Dean also cast doubt on the way that Kavanaugh's review has been handled, and he noted that what he saw as shoddy reviews of both Justices William Rehnquist and Clarence Thomas during their confirmations ultimately hurt both of their tenures on the court.
Shareholders, frustrated with the long tenures of Chipotle directors and their cozy ties to management, have agitated for a major corporate overhaul as the chain fights to recover from a string of food safety stumbles in late 2015 that battered its reputation and stock price.
"Our new Managing Directors have demonstrated an outstanding commitment to our people, clients and culture during their tenures at the firm, and we wish them continued success as they take this important next step in their careers," CEO Lloyd C. Blankfein said in a statement.
During Kondo's tenures across promotions such as the UFC, Pride, Sengoku, Bodog and again in Pancrase, Kondo fought the likes of Wanderlei Silva, Dan Henderson, Josh Barnett, Igor Vovchanchyn, Tito Ortiz, Paulo Filho, Ikuhisa Minowa, Vladimir Matyushenko, Mario Sperry, Phil Baroni and Roger Gracie.
Around 31 people or organizations were involved in the deal, and Adrian Hanauer, Drew Carey, and Jody Allen will all continue their committed tenures with Sounders FC. The Seattle-based soccer club isn't revealing how much the ownership group invested to make the deal happen.
With the Philharmonic in a transitional year, between the tenures of Alan Gilbert and Jaap van Zweden, it falls to the recently departed conductor to lead a program that ought to be in the purview of a formal music director: the orchestra's 175th-birthday concerts.
If successful, they do the role for a few years before moving on elsewhere and starting again: a recent study by Korn Ferry, a consultancy, found that even top executives have brief tenures, with CEOs remaining in place for an average of eight years.
Darrell Hammond was to the late '90s and '00s what Keenan Thompson is to now: Both are best known for their impressively long tenures on Saturday Night Live (Thompson only recently trumped Hammond as the longest running cast member), rather than breakout, leading roles.
The California lawmaker has skillfully navigated fraught political waters over the past few years to reclaim the gavel, and her return to power says something about her ability to run her caucus and her staying power during a time when speakers' tenures are often limited.
"  Schultz, who built Starbucks into a global powerhouse during two tenures as chairman and CEO, said in an interview that aired on CBS' "60 Minutes" on Sunday, that he was "seriously thinking" of running for president "as a centrist independent, outside of the two-party system.
Staff in relevant institutions will be given contracts and tenures with term limits, allowing their performance to regularly come up for review, and helping to further shrink the number of people given an "iron rice bowl" of cradle-to-grave work and social care by the state.
Other research has shown female CEOs in the Fortune 1000 outperform the S&P 500 over their tenures; yet, only 5 percent of the Fortune 1000 companies have female CEOs, and the "double bind" problem for female leaders persists even today, according to research from Catalyst.
It exceeds the Dow's performance for everyone else, including three Republicans who were known for being pro-business and for tenures that coincided with strong stock markets: Ronald Reagan, with 11.3 percent; Dwight D. Eisenhower, with 10.4 percent; and George H. W. Bush, with 9.7 percent.
On one of the most difficult days in both of their tenures, President Trump and Prime Minister Boris Johnson of Britain, stars of an emerging trans-Atlantic buddy story, met in New York to talk global affairs only to have to fend off troubles back home.
Strzok and Page became become right-wing punching bags and the subject of conspiracy theories after it was revealed that while in the course of having an affair with eachother during their FBI tenures, the two shared personal text messages in which they expressed anti-Trump opinions.
Other rushing quarterbacks have thrived in the league before, but their tenures have generally been short: it turns out that running around on a field with 300-pound (136-kg) men chasing after you can be hazardous to one's health (just ask Robert Griffin III or Michael Vick).
Given that Ms. Pelosi; Mr. Hoyer, who is in line to be the majority leader; and Mr. Clyburn, who is set to be the whip, have already served two terms in the top three posts, it would put a hard cap on their tenures, forcing them out by 2022.
However, multiple current and former officials said Price and Verma clashed on numerous occasions from the very start of their tenures atop the massive federal health department in early 2017, establishing a competitive dynamic that has only worsened under Azar, who has helmed the department for nearly two years.
Commercial International Bank (CIB) slipped a further 1.1 percent; it had dropped 1.3 percent on Thursday after the central bank placed a time limit on the tenures of chief executives of commercial lenders, a decision which is expected to force managers including CIB's Hisham Ezz al-Arab to resign their positions.
In the case of one of us, progress spanned the tenures of two governors (the first was Democrat Phil Bredesen) from different parties, and there were plenty of lengthy conversations with concerned teachers, parents and communities along the way But the Volunteer State is reaping the benefits of sustained cooperation.
While not unusual that a first lady would be weighing in on West Wing staffing issues -- something Nancy Reagan and Hillary Clinton both did, behind closed doors, during their tenures -- it was historic for a first lady to so openly call for the dismissal of a member of the President's administration.
Their political fortunes remained intermingled while both were in office—when Patrick handily won a second term in 2010, a year in which Democrats dropped 11 governorships nationwide, it augured Obama's own successful reelection two years later—but that's where the similarities end; their tenures as executives do not bear comparison.
Mulvaney also did not travel with Trump on his four-day swing out West last week either, which aides took as a potential sign he likely wouldn't remain in the job much longer because both of his predecessors stopped traveling with the President near the end of their tenures, too.
"Unless there is a specific clause in Icahn's settlement with AIG that stipulates Merksamer needing to step down should his contract with Icahn Enterprises expire, directors' tenures are usually are not tied to employee terms," said Dan Marcec, director of content and marketing at Equilar, a database that tracks board directors.
Over the course of my 30 years in Congress — and especially during my tenures as chairman and ranking member of the House Judiciary Subcommittee on Courts, Intellectual Property, and the Internet — I had the opportunity to work with several Registers, all of whom I relied upon for independent, expert counsel.
That can often obscure the fact that she is still expected to be an adequate leader — that she wouldn't have been able to put together a successful presidential campaign at all (much less her well-regarded tenures as senator and secretary of state) if she had been seen as too conventionally feminine.
But taxpayers are likely to suffer from various kinds of reputational risks, which are real even if difficult to measure, and more-concrete risks in terms of future litigation against the cities and higher borrowing costs as well, adverse effects likely to emerge after the current officials' tenures in office have ended.
Assuming Pelosi is right -- and she is very rarely wrong when it comes to counting votes -- the passage of the massive rescue bill will be yet another major moment for the country during Pelosi's two tenures as speaker of the House, the first woman to hold that role once, much less twice.
Prime Minister Khan's Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf party introduced legislation in the Parliament that would give Mr. Khan and any future prime minister the power to extend the tenures of the chiefs of staff of the army, navy and air force, and the largely ceremonial post of chairman, Joint Chiefs of Staff Committee.
Obiang's trial came after two non-governmental organizations targeting corruption and an association of Congolese citizens living abroad launched a lawsuit in France nearly 20143 years ago against leaders in nearly a half-dozen African countries, charging they used state funds during or after their tenures to buy properties and luxury goods in France.
"As I look at what we might have expected from a President Mitt Romney, a President Marco Rubio or a President Jeb Bush at the beginning of their tenures in office, I can't see much difference between what a President Trump is doing and what they might have done," McConnell told reporters this month.
RELATED - Officials: Anthony Scaramucci accepted offer to be White House communications director The resignation marked the end of one of the most tumultuous tenures for a White House press secretary, one that saw Spicer repeatedly undermined in his role as the White House's public-facing spokesman by the President's own public statements and tweets.
Read more: Trump talks tough about the military, but he hasn't visited a war zone where US troops are fighting — unlike his predecessors The president has also faced ongoing criticism for not yet visiting US troops stationed in a war zone, which is something his two most recent predecessors did early on in their tenures.
Both of Mulvaney's predecessors — Kelly and former Republican National Committee (RNC) Chairman Reince PriebusReinhold (Reince) Richard PriebusMulvaney faces uncertain future after public gaffes Politicon announces lineup including Comey, Hannity, Priebus Sunday shows - White House stresses Trump's determination in China trade fight as GOP challenger emerges MORE — exited after tumultuous tenures in the Trump White House.
Nazi Germany's withdrawal from the League of Nations in 1933, the Soviet-led construction of the Berlin Wall in 1961, the Gulf of Tonkin incident in 1964 -- all were among the most daunting tests of US foreign policy in the past century, and all came less than a year into the tenures of new US administrations.
He's a white man at a time when the Obama administration is aggressively trying to make the federal bench more diverse, he's 63 at a time when presidents are trying to pick justices in their 50s to maximize their tenures, and he's very pro-law enforcement at a time when the administration is looking to rein in the police.
Through his tenures at Miramax, Disney, and finally the Weinstein Company, which he co-founded with his brother Bob in 2005, Weinstein ruled Hollywood through a combination of friendship, fear, and money — and, it turned out, intimidating and humiliating women, some of whom were finally able to go on the record about their experiences with the producer.
He's a white man at a time when the Obama administration is aggressively trying to make the federal bench more diverse, he's 63 at a time when presidents are trying to pick justices in their 50s to maximize their tenures, and he's very pro–law enforcement at a time when the administration is looking to rein in the police.
Three chiefs of staff had shorter tenures than Skinner's 252 days, but one was James Baker, a well-regarded chief of staff to Ronald Reagan who came onboard to help Bush after Skinner's departure, and the other two were short-lived because their bosses' terms expired — Jack Watson under Jimmy Carter and Kenneth Duberstein under Ronald Reagan.
The shareholder votes on proposals that included renewing some directors' tenures and a mandate to issue new shares pitted the $27 billion hedge fund firm founded by billionaire Paul Singer against BEA's chairman and former politician David Li, whose grandfather founded the bank nearly 0.93 years ago and whose family is among the Hong Kong's best connected.
In a job where burnout and short tenures are the norm, reports abound that President Donald Trump, frustrated by the new administration's numerous missteps, may replace Priebus in what would be a record-breakingly short tenure for a chief of staff in the nation's history (save for those chiefs that finished out the end of an administration).
Saturday's game will also serve as a referendum on the tenures of Harbaugh, the former Wolverines quarterback who in his fourth season has yet to fulfill his big promises, and Ohio State's Urban Meyer, who was suspended for the first three games of this season and has lately appeared to show symptoms of stress on the sideline.
During the tenures of both George W. Bush and Barack Obama, some of the most influential dealmakers in the Senate — Edward M. Kennedy, Democrat of Massachusetts, and John McCain, Republican of Arizona, among them — tried repeatedly to forge a compromise that would increase border security and provide a path to legalization for millions of undocumented immigrants.
With the founding of programs such as an artist residency, a Social Practice MFA in partnership with Queens College, Tania Bruguera's Immigrant Movement International, and the recent acclaimed tenures of Laura Raicovich as Executive Director, and Prerana Reddy as Director of Public Programs and Community Engagement, the museum has hosted vital conversations about what cultural institutions can offer local communities.
" Adam White, in a 2017 Telegraph piece about how the film "seduced a generation," pointed out that "in an era where even the best young adult actors were usually found playing stock roles such as The Bitchy Prom Queen or The Handsome Jock in between their tenures on teen television, Cruel Intentions offered rising stars an opportunity to prove their range.
Supporters of the status quo claim the reason why MMA has exploded in popularity over the last decade, even as boxing has fallen largely out of favor, is because promoters like the UFC and Bellator have the kind of power they do—to make fights, to set contracts and pay, to establish promotional tenures, and to arrange for sponsorship: to establish efficiency through control, which the Ali Act is designed to chip away at.
John CornynJohn CornynThe Hill's Morning Report - Trump on defense over economic jitters Democrats keen to take on Cornyn despite formidable challenges The Hill's Campaign Report: Battle for Senate begins to take shape MORE (R-Texas), is required to step down at the end of the year because of term limits in the conference rules that cap the tenures of all members of the elected leadership except for the Senate Majority or Minority Leader.
After tenures with the Toronto Raptors and the Phoenix Suns, Mr. Colangelo was put in charge of the 76ers in 2016 following the resignation of Sam Hinkie, a statistics wonk who had navigated the team through one of the boldest experiments in pro sports history: the so-called "Process," which entailed purposely losing a lot of games over several seasons to collect as many top draft picks as possible and build for the future.
This article has been updated to correct the year that the Metropolitan Museum instituted a pay as you wish policy, to more fully describe the exception from the required admission fee given to students from or studying in Connecticut and New Jersey and to note that efforts to improve the museum's financial standing have been ongoing since 2016, under the tenures of both former CEO Thomas Campbell and current CEO Daniel Weiss.
But if I were to highlight the difference between the tenures of Russell T. Davies (who oversaw Doctor Who from 2005 to 2009 and was responsible for the Christopher Eccleston and David Tennant eras) and Steven Moffat (who's run Doctor Who since 2010 and is responsible for the Matt Smith and Peter Capaldi eras), it would be that Davies was primarily interested in the humans around the Doctor, while Moffat is most interested in the Doctor himself.
Dan Quinn************** Pat Shurmur Adam Gase****** Freddie Kitchens********** Zac Taylor Jim Spanfeller Doug Marrone Matt Nagy Mike Vrabel Bruce Arians Matt Patricia (*—possible midseason firing) There are four first-year coaches on that list and I know that seems like a generous amount but I can't remember a year where so many of these new guys, Bruce Arians included, did such a visibly shitty job of coaching in what was supposed to be an exciting kickoff to their respective tenures.

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