Audience
in sentence
3750 examples of Audience in a sentence
And every
audience
I've ever had, past and present.
Because while computers can learn to detect and identify fraud based on patterns, they can't learn to do that based on patterns they've never seen before, and organized crime has a lot in common with this audience: brilliant people, relentlessly resourceful, entrepreneurial spirit — (Laughter) — and one huge and important difference: purpose.
We tend to forget, though, the other
audience
that's influenced by our nonverbals, and that's ourselves.
Suddenly, what we're finding with these concerts, away from the stage, away from the footlights, out of the tuxedo tails, the musicians become the conduit for delivering the tremendous therapeutic benefits of music on the brain to an
audience
that would never have access to this room, would never have access to the kind of music that we make.
We thought very hard about how to present this unknown subject to a modern audience: the dark colors to set off the colors that remained in objects that were often faded; the placing of lights to bring out the silk and the gold thread; the labeling.
We had to draw our
audience
in, get them to slow down, to explore the objects.
These were images of the world in the past, and that it was the same for our
audience.
It's a TED
audience.
Our target audience, it's not just the producers of terrorism, as I've said, the terrorists.
Africa has immense opportunities that never navigate through the web of despair and helplessness that the Western media largely presents to its
audience.
Does any one of you in the
audience
have that person?
And the trick here is to use a single, readable sentence that the
audience
can key into if they get a bit lost, and then provide visuals which appeal to our other senses and create a deeper sense of understanding of what's being described.
Take your science, subtract your bullet points and your jargon, divide by relevance, meaning share what's relevant to the audience, and multiply it by the passion that you have for this incredible work that you're doing, and that is going to equal incredible interactions that are full of understanding.
And then the final reason, which I mention, especially to a TED audience, with some trepidation, has to do with what I call "techno-trances."
Those probably made a lot of you in the
audience
feel very, very disgusted, but if you didn't look, I can tell you about some of the other things that have been shown sort of across the world to make people disgusted, things like feces, urine, blood, rotten flesh.
You could probably see it in the
audience
members when I showed you those disgusting images.
Joker: Whoa, whoa, whoa, oh! (Music) MT: But today, I am performing for a different kind of
audience.
Ah, I can see half the
audience
agrees with me, and I have a lot of work to do to convince the rest of you.
Having put the product into practice, we are actually now on the verge of selling the product onto a multinational to take it to the retail market, and one question I have for the
audience
today is, on the gravel roads of Limpopo, with an allowance of 50 rand a week, I came up with a way for the world not to bathe.
The first time I told these stories, a man in the
audience
raised his hand and said, "All these artists talk about their work, not their art, which has got me thinking about my work and where the creativity is there, and I'm not an artist."
How many fascists are there in the
audience
today?
And that's changed, because we've had a huge shift in the balance of power from the news organizations to the
audience.
And the
audience
for such a long time was in a position where they didn't have any way of affecting news or making any change.
We're not in a position where the
audience
is reacting to news.
We're reacting to the audience, and we're actually relying on them.
To give an example of how we rely on the audience, on the 5th of September in Costa Rica, an earthquake hit.
Given a couple of clues, I could probably find out a lot of things about most of you in the
audience
that you might not like me finding out.
Or would I go on television to demonstrate, in front of a live audience, that comfort foods really do make you feel better?
With complete control of everything the
audience
can see, moviemakers had developed an arsenal of techniques to further their deceptions.
And he says, "I was just thinking that maybe we could take care of it here in Fargo," which everyone, including the audience, interprets as a veiled bribe.
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