Audience
in sentence
3750 examples of Audience in a sentence
I've just alienated half the audience, I know.
What quality of mind, as I leave this audience, has enabled you to think about the future and at the same time change the present?
I'm a writer, and fellow writers in the
audience
will know that we love stories.
He's friends of many of you in this audience, and seven years ago, Aaron came to me with a question.
Right now there is also a person who has an entire
audience
rapt with attention, a person that is weaving a powerful narrative about a world that the people who are listening have never imagined or seen before, but if they close their eyes tightly enough, they can envision that world because the storytelling is so compelling.
Right now there's a person who can tell an
audience
to put their hands up in the air and they will stay there till he says, "Put them down."
The folks who know the skills about how to teach and engage an
audience
don't even know what teacher certification means.
You go to a black church, their preacher starts off and he realizes that he has to engage the audience, so he starts off with this sort of wordplay in the beginning oftentimes, and then he takes a pause, and he says, "Oh my gosh, they're not quite paying attention."
So why does teacher education only give you theory and theory and tell you about standards and tell you about all of these things that have nothing to do with the basic skills, that magic that you need to engage an audience, to engage a student?
There are teachers who, despite all their challenges, who have those skills, get into those schools and are able to engage an audience, and the administrator walks by and says, "Wow, he's so good, I wish all my teachers could be that good."
Months later, maybe about two months later, I started about getting my job back, which is something, when you become this primary caregiver person, which some people in the
audience
here have certainly been in that position, it's a challenging role but at some point you've got to figure out when you're going to get your life back, and at the time, I couldn't ask Gabby if she wanted me to go fly in the space shuttle again.
Because this is the TED stage, Gabby, I know you worked very hard to think of the ideas that you wanted to leave with this
audience.
She has heart failure, and I'm sure many of you guys in the
audience
have parents, grandparents, loved ones who have chronic diseases.
I don't know what to call myself now, because I have really my Chinese identity, but my kids, they are American-Chinese, but it's difficult to try to express myself in front of
audience
of people like this.
But before I get started, I have a quick question for the
audience.
So as a designer, it's absolutely key to have a good understanding of the visual and cultural vocabulary of your
audience.
A recurring discussion I have with magazine editors, who are usually word people, is that their audience, you, are much better at making radical leaps with images than they're being given credit for.
If there are editorial decision makers here in the audience, I want to give you a piece of advice.
And so the very next lecture I gave in a conference, I talked about my science, and then I talked about the importance of the subjective and emotional aspects of doing science and how we should talk about them, and I looked at the audience, and they were cold.
It makes us afraid to talk to each other, which is no fun, because we came to science to share our ideas and to learn from each other, and so I do a blues song, which — (Applause) — called "Scooped Again," and I ask the
audience
to be my backup singers, and I tell them, "Your text is 'Scoop, Scoop.'"
Smart
audience.
Okay, good, because I need somebody smart here because now I'm going to demonstrate with the help of one of you just how deeply rooted your urge to solve is, just how wired to solve all of you really are, so I'm going to come into the
audience
and find somebody to help me.
And my favorite example of this is a question that came from the
audience
in a Republican debate prior to the last election.
And when we did, the whole
audience
collectively exhaled, and a few people actually wept, and then they filled the auditorium with the peaceful boom of their applause.
So we informed our
audience
that what they will just now hear will be a random paper, a mixture of the two papers which we didn't know what each was writing.
Now, you will be surprised that a majority of our
audience
did not think that what they'd just listened to was a completely random paper.
Or at a more local level, does an integrated group like the
audience
at a TED conference, are we right now having a collective TED consciousness, an inner movie for this collective TED group which is distinct from the inner movies of each of our parts?
And I've no doubt there are five Einsteins in the
audience
tonight.
I think that Brian Greene is in the audience, and he has written a book called "The Elegant Universe."
Imagine, in the empty desert, you come upon a huge wheel ringed in skeletons, and someone invites you to come pull a series of heavy ropes at its base, so you walk to one side, where a team is waiting, and you all throw your backs into it, and you pull in turn, and eventually, the wheel roars to life, lights begin to flicker, and the
audience
cheers, and you've just activated Peter Hudson's "Charon," one of the world's largest zoetropes.
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