Word: screens
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...best strut their stuff at the All-Star game in Las Vegas, the league will unveil what it hopes will become the next-best thing: a live, three-dimensional high-definition broadcast of it, which they will show to 3,500 viewers on a 45-foot screen at the Mandalay Bay Hotel and Casino for the first-ever live sports event filmed...
...mostly empty Science Center lecture hall, the tall dean of the little institute on Garden Street sat by the wall and listened. She took notes on a legal pad in an overflowing leather binder. Occasionally she checked her e-mail on a large, vintage BlackBerry with a green monochrome screen. The dean of Radcliffe, Drew Gilpin Faust, was a quiet observer at the sometimes-contentious Oct. 10 town hall meeting held by a University-wide science planning committee. At the meeting, a handful of Faculty of Arts and Sciences (FAS) professors pushed back against the committee’s proposal...
...match, first to seek vengeance against those who have cheated on them, and second, to pair up successfully with the object of their affections.Kapusta plays the clever Figaro superbly, with expression that rivals any skilled comedian’s. His diction is so good that the screen flashing the aria’s lyrics–well-placed to the side of the stage–becomes superfluous. Most memorable of all is his energy and playfulness, which shines in “If You Are After a Little Amusement.” Gerlach, as the wronged Countess, displays amazing...
...other producers didn’t think the show would make it past 12 episodes.“Everyone thought the pilot was amazing, but we didn’t think it would keep going,” said Cuse, who was at Sanders Theatre last Monday night to screen an early premiere of the seventh episode of the show’s third season—a long-awaited episode coming after a three-month hiatus. SECRETS AND LIES“Lost,” which attracts over sixteen million viewers every week, is about a group...
...Brian Cox, star of the original 1986 “Manhunter”), his Oscar-winning performance in “Silence of the Lambs” disgusted and horrified viewers, and the cult-status villain was born. Ulliel, the third actor to portray Lecter on the big screen, takes a more psychological approach to the character, exposing a “degree of sympathy” in the otherwise repellent doctor. “The audience has always been seduced by this man,” he reiterates, emphasizing that Lecter’s history needed to be explained...