

2023 But the project of the book was always to talk about the audience experience, so adding that veers into that catalogue of monsters it was never meant to be. Scott Bradfield, The New Republic, 28 Apr. 2023 Mailer’s representation of events veers wildly from disconnected poetic blather to deeply confusing interior reflections. May 1 also marks the beginning of Asian/Pacific American Heritage Month. Andre Gee, Rolling Stone, The Met Gala is one of Manhattan’s favorite spectator sports, with celebrities walking the red carpet dressed in outfits that veer from elegant to outlandish and everything in between. Noun Throughout our hourlong conversation on the roof of mid-town Manhattan’s Starchild Rooftop, legendary rap producer Keith Shocklee veers through his encyclopedic knowledge of hip-hop history. 2023 Sondheim, himself a protégé of Hammerstein, took this to extremes in the ’70s, veering away from the traditional song form in favor of accretive harmonic shapes that provided rich subtext for his lyrics - so much so that critics began complaining of having nothing to hum.

Andrew Demillo, Anchorage Daily News, 1 Apr. 2023 One tornado veered just west of Iowa City, home to the University of Iowa, which cancelled a watch party at an on-campus arena for the women’s basketball Final Four game. 2023 With more spending power, car buyers are veering towards spacious four-wheelers, leaving global giants more desirous of a slice of the world’s third-largest car market. Jennifer Hassan, Washington Post, 4 Apr.

2023 The train, which was traveling from the city of Leiden to The Hague, veered off track in the village of Voorschoten at 3:25 a.m. Verb But between that and all this episode’s jokes about the headaches of democracy, the show is veering perilously close to being pro-Empire.
