That feeling is suffused through every note of the film’s elaborate soundscape, which mesmerically combines a wealth of ambient noise with 20 original songs from DIY artists, all of them played diegetically across a meshwork of Bluetooth speakers and passing cars.
—
David Ehrlich,
IndieWire,
8 June 2026
The items are a perfect sample of Cohen’s dense meshwork of celebrity interests.
Trump had been touting the emerging deal for weeks and the continuing conflict threatened to overshadow the UFC mixed martial arts extravaganza, where combatants inside a wire-mesh Octagon tried to punch, kick, chop and pummel each other into submission.
—
Will Weissert,
Twin Cities,
15 June 2026
Strain tomato base through a fine-mesh sieve into a pitcher, pressing on solids with a wooden spoon or rubber spatula to extract as much juice as possible; discard solids.
—
Nina Moskowitz,
Bon Appetit Magazine,
15 June 2026
Part of those valuations comes from an increasingly complex, interconnected web of deals as AI companies invest in one another.
—
Jarrod Barry,
NBC news,
11 Dec. 2025
In recent months, OpenAI has been busy rolling out new shopping features, a web browser, an AI-centric social-media app, and, to top it off, group chats.
The connection, Drew and his colleagues determined, is the vertebral venous plexus, a network of veins that connects the abdomen to the spine in mice and humans alike.
—
Los Angeles Times,
Los Angeles Times,
7 May 2026
The word complexity comes from the Latin plexus, which means intertwined.
—
Carlos Gershenson,
The Conversation,
11 Dec. 2025
The wildfire spread to the roof of an eight-unit apartment building at the complex and caused significant damage.
—
Katie Langford,
Denver Post,
11 June 2026
Within the same complex, the luxe boutique hotel Tortuga Bay, designed by the iconic Oscar de la Renta, offers an exclusive experience with private villas, personalized service, and privileged access to beaches and ecological reserves.
—
Condé Nast Traveler,
Condé Nast Traveler,
11 June 2026
Trump has a job approval rating of just 38%, according to an aggregate of polls by The New York Times.
—
Margie Cullen,
USA Today,
9 June 2026
What followed were decades of growth that looked fine in the aggregate and felt hollow in practice—punctuated by brief spurts of genuine buoyancy that raised expectations before collapsing them.
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