Audience
in sentence
3750 examples of Audience in a sentence
But more importantly, I think, is the fact that a very significant proportion of people in this
audience
are under 30, and there are many, of course, who are well over 30.
And if had been a horror movie, people in the
audience
would have started saying, "Don't go in there.
And most of our
audience
was representative of the 82 percent African-American population in the city at that time.
The
audience
members who come and talk to us that night tell us the stories of what it's like to live in a city with such depleted population.
Now some of our
audience
members also tell us about some of the positive things that are happening in their communities, and many of them are banding together to take control of some of the vacant lots, and they're starting community gardens, which are creating a great sense of community stewardship, but they're very, very clear to tell us that this is not enough, that they want to see their neighborhoods return to the way that their grandparents had found them.
And how should we communicate this new research to a large
audience?
Again, I'm going to turn to the men in the audience: Please raise your hand if you've been asked, how do you do it all?
Musicians also communicate with their bodies, with other band members, with the audience, they use their bodies to express the music.
A lot of bobbing heads in the audience, so we can still see robots influence people.
I'm embarrassed, the
audience
is clearly uncomfortable, they're focused on my discomfort.
By having a song that explained what was happening to me, while it was happening, that gave the
audience
permission to think about it.
By thinking about my audience, by embracing and exploiting my problem, I was able to take something that was blocking my progress, and turn it into something that was essential for my success.
So why am I standing up here, telling this wonderfully intellectual
audience
about nun pee?
I apologize to the men in the
audience.
And so those of you in this
audience
who have helped build those applications and those platforms, as an organizer, I say, thank you very much.
In the shape of an amphitheater that's scaled to the size of an
audience
as perceived from somebody from the stage.
So from where I'm standing, each of you appears to be this big, and the
audience
sort of takes the entire field of my vision.
Seated in this
audience
are 996 small figures.
So when the viewer steps in front of the audience, there will be a response.
It could be a few claps or a strong applause, and then nothing happens until the viewer leaves the stage, and again the
audience
will respond.
It could be anything from a few feeble claps from members in the audience, or it could be a very loud ovation.
So to us, I think we're really looking at an
audience
as its own object or its own organism that's also got a sort of musical-like quality to it, an instrument.
So the viewer can play it by eliciting quite complex and varied, nuanced musical or sound patterns, but cannot really provoke the
audience
into any particular kind of response.
I'm going to go off script and make Chris quite nervous here by making this
audience
participation.
But really, with this and a lot of my art projects, I want to ask the
audience
a question: When biotechnology and DNA sequencing becomes as cheap as, say, laser cutting or 3D printing or buying caviar from a vending machine, will you submit your sample of DNA to be part of the vending machine?
CA: So let me show the
audience
a couple of examples of what you revealed.
This is a slide of the PRISM program, and maybe you could tell the
audience
what that was that was revealed.
CA: So I'd actually like to get some feedback from the
audience
here, because I know there's widely differing reactions to Edward Snowden.
We need to encode our values not just in writing but in the structure of the Internet, and it's something that I hope, I invite everyone in the audience, not just here in Vancouver but around the world, to join and participate in.
But it's been argued, and someone here in the
audience
has talked to a former NSA analyst who said metadata is actually much more invasive than the core data, because in the core data you present yourself as you want to be presented.
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