Franchise
in sentence
296 examples of Franchise in a sentence
So what they currently run is truly and quite literally a
franchise
business.
And by saying yes to diversity, I honestly believe that ESPN is the most valuable cable
franchise
in the world.
And it started because a local
franchise
owner found that when he served his McDonald's on Friday, nobody came.
A few decades later, the suffragettes brought a spirit of theatricality to their fight, marching together in white dresses as they claimed the
franchise.
Especially in the wake of
franchise
successes like "The Hunger Games," "Pitch Perfect" or that small little indie film, "Star Wars: The Force Awakens."
In 1995, BMW paid the James Bond
franchise
three million dollars to have James Bond switch from driving an Aston Martin to a BMW Z3.
Sudhir got to know very well the guy who had the unfortunate assignment of trying to take the Iowa franchise, which, it turned out, for this black gang, was not one of the more brilliant financial endeavors they undertook.
Serious book stores are losing their franchise, nonprofit theaters are surviving primarily by commercializing their repertory, symphony orchestras are diluting their programs, public television is increasing its dependence on reruns of British sitcoms, classical radio stations are dwindling, museums are resorting to blockbuster shows, dance is dying."
You know, we just celebrated, this year, our general elections, the biggest exercise in democratic
franchise
in human history.
He wanted to create a franchise, a mechanism of delivery of eye care with the efficiency of McDonald's.
I believe that these tools that worked in these 42 pilot cases can be consolidated in standard processes in a BPO kind of environment, and made available on web, call-center and
franchise
physical offices, for a fee, to serve anyone confronted with a demand for a bribe.
And what you do when you go to any new site is you kind of roll out a
franchise.
They said, "We can give you a
franchise
on this for 3,000 bucks."
Back in 1994 the Power Rangers had become a huge
franchise
and t.v.
In this desperate and thoroughly silly attempt to keep Hammer's Dracula
franchise
alive despite having lost most of its power long time already, our legendary vampire is brought back to life in the swinging London of 1972.
Why then, have we now been treated to a fourth film in this
franchise
is beyond me.
If so, than the third part, which is also a prequel, would be in the middle of the
franchise.
Besides, by making Scream into a franchise, it ceased to become a parody of horror movies and simply became another one.
The plot involves a new, hipper
franchise
barbershop that is moving across the street from Calvin's barbershop.
A complete mistake and a sad attempt to capitalize on a once-proud
franchise.
One of the things that is quite shocking about the Cyborg franchise, is how the series has managed to have quite prolific and off beat actors in the cast.
How sad it is when a film as wonderful as "Jurassic Park" slowly nosedives into hackneyed and mediocre territory throughout its
franchise.
Part III was the definitive low in the franchise, yet someone must have thought the series still had some potential.
This is what happens when a
franchise
gets lazy, and no one can think of a new twist to add.
I am a fan of a few of the Vacation films, but when a movie
franchise
goes from the big screen to the TV screen, you know it's out of steam.
This outing is not nearly as fun as even the three previous films in the
franchise
(and yes I'm including SPM 2, that should tell you something) Furthermore how can you have a slasher film with this little gore???
I feel sure the
franchise
could have continued, but Harold Pinter complained that the screenplays made him look bad in comparison, and so no more were made.
By the time the Hellraiser
franchise
was reaching it's forth film the premise was wearing a bit thin.
Now I'll admit it I have a soft spot for classics such as Airplane and The Naked Gun but you know you've milked a
franchise
so bad when you can see the gags a mile off.
I'm a big fan of the "Vacation" franchise, and I love Randy Quaid as Cousin Eddie, and at least a couple of the behind-the-scenes names were involved in this project (most notably Matty Simmons, who produced or executive-produced all 4 of the theatrical releases, as well as "Animal House").
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