Word: bandwagoneers
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...have a midterm on Monday and I don’t have any animosity towards Yale ,” said Melanie D. Napier ’05, who is going to the game anyway. “I’m just jumping on the bandwagon with everyone else...
...former-Houston-Oilers-now-Tennessee Titans had a devious way of making an entire city leap on the proverbial bandwagon in anticipation of a championship and then stomping upon the heart of every single individual who ever shouted, “Luv Ya Blue...
...bandwagon in anticipation of a championship and then stomping upon the heart of every single individual who ever shouted, “Luv Ya Blue.” Year after year, my older brother and I would start wearing only periwinkle and white (much to my father’s dismay and confusion) towards the end of each season, hoping that our terrible fashion faux pax would be viewed as a heartfelt offering to the football playoff gods...
...time wasted, and decided that they must carefully plot every moment of the next eight months if they are not to walk out in cap and gown turning around to see what they should have done. Unfailingly, there is a columnist every year that decides to jump on the bandwagon, to uproot a scribbled to-do list from his bulletin board and replant it on the editorial page of The Crimson, transformed into a 750-word published ultimatum of things that must be accomplished before one can graduate Harvard with a clear conscience/ peaceful spirit/ understanding of the importance...
...American category. In the immediate aftermath of the attacks, once it became clear that it was time for grandiose societal assessment, Graydon Carter, editor of Vanity Fair and co-founder of Spy magazine (a now-defunct ’80s irony pioneer), and the rest of the Carter bandwagon declared irony defunct. Carter announced to the media magazine Inside.com in mid-September that “it’s the end of the age of irony.” Which made sense as a prognostication when missing-person posters and soot covered Manhattan...