How To Use Echo chamber In A Sentence

  • At times, the movie sounds like two excited mattresses making love in an echo chamber.
  • But by early 2009, ACORN was reeling from the attacks by conservative echo chamber and the Republicans, and had too few resources to adequately defend itself, exacerbated by the one-sided mainstream media coverage. Peter Dreier: Why ACORN Fell: The Times , Lies, and Videotape
  • If you read just a handful of these reactions, you will see that the contributors are not ensconced in any echo chamber.
  • Also at the CAC, ubiquitous HuffPost big man on campus Harry Shearer, an honorary native New Orleanian if e'er there were one, has installed a nine-monitor presentation, called The Silent Echo Chamber (thru June 6), of his ongoing "found objects" captures - political and media figures seen not on the air, but just before, as they prepare themselves for broadcast. Peter Frank: Blague d'Art: Apres le Deluge, Moi
  • Some say this happens in an echo chamber.
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  • Those teachings then reverberate within the echo chambers of the friendship networks formed within religious communities, where their political relevance is reinforced. American Grace
  • It's an echo chamber for the common wisdom of the subset of people who use the site more than anything else.
  • To test for the ringing acoustic signatures of tiny bubbles, physicist Helen Czerski of University of Rhode Island has devised a specially-designed echo chamber about the size of a soccer ball.
  • We have seen how politically relevant information can be injected into religious social networks and how the echo chambers of religious social networks cause such information to reverberate. American Grace
  • Most of the left and right live in echo chambers where their rhetoric can become ever more extreme and slanted and such extremism gets cheered and supported by likeminded people. The Volokh Conspiracy » “Of All the Liars, That Have Ever Lived, Since Lying Was First Invented, [Members of the Other Party] Are the Greatest Liars”
  • A metachamber, not ringing with echoes at all, but with the grand hubbub that is the sounds of the little echo chambers (occasionally with a population of one) singing into the void.
  • This is a refined, sweetly oaked, pleasantly old-fashioned red that lingers on the palate like a melody in an echo chamber.
  • But another early casualty is conscience, routinely smothered in the national media echo chamber.
  • And anything that involves drama, film stars, morality and controversy usually careens deafening-ly around the media echo chamber like the mythic call of the Horn Resounding.
  • Long distance telephony was also an option, but costs were very high and it often sounded as if the other party was speaking from inside some kind of echo chamber on a distant planet.
  • This is the civic equivalent of the echo chamber effect that in the previous chapter we found to be so important in amplifying the political effects of religion. American Grace
  • But after a week or two of negative reviews of his performance from commentators across the political spectrum - this is the sort of thing that begets the term "echo chamber" - the debate's effect on Mr. Perry was very much amplified, and he lost 10 or 15 points in the polls. NYT > Home Page
  • Long distance telephony was also an option, but costs were very high and it often sounded as if the other party was speaking from inside some kind of echo chamber on a distant planet.
  • Recently the Obama campaign put out an push trying to inform voters that if McCain wins the Presidency that will "imperil" abortion (an example in the echo chamber). Pseudo-Polymath
  • A democracy needs such "echo chambers, " even though their discussions inevitably appear like nothing but a bunch of homogenous supporters rah-rahing each other.
  • Also at the CAC, ubiquitous HuffPost big man on campus Harry Shearer, an honorary native New Orleanian if e'er there were one, has installed a nine-monitor presentation, called The Silent Echo Chamber (thru June 6), of his ongoing "found objects" captures - political and media figures seen not on the air, but just before, as they prepare themselves for broadcast. Peter Frank: Blague d'Art: Apres le Deluge, Moi
  • Without these core skills, the citizen journalist merely fills an echo chamber.
  • A democracy needs such "echo chambers, " even though their discussions inevitably appear like nothing but a bunch of homogenous supporters rah-rahing each other.
  • The audio from the tuner ("raw audio") is amplified and fed to an echo chamber, where the spirits manipulate it to form their voices .
  • Every captured Jihadist knows the form by now; Allege the most hideous crimes of torture and humiliation against US armed forces and a BBC reporter wanting to believe such pigswill will appear, microphone in hand, prepared to provide an echo chamber for the enemy. LEADING THE JIHAD
  • Buttermilk Lane is like a natural echo chamber, taking my crazy chords and loopy lines and reverberating them around from stone wall to shuttered window.
  • Reinforced by the echo chamber of a million always-on consumers, brands have seen their power expand and grow.
  • Waves can bounce back and forth across the central region , becoming successively amplified — a cosmic echo chamber.
  • Seasoned fairgoer Dennis Scholl said the echo chamber of the Internet allowed complaints about the virtual fair to resonate louder than they might at a physical fair, where a massive online audience isn't privy to world-weary collectors rolling their eyes and griping in the aisles. An Art Fair's Tangled Web
  • Yeah, I think the echo chamber.
  • But the media echo chamber guarantees further distortion.

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