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So far General Anupong is backing Mr Samak, who shrewdly built bridges with the army chief.
He believes that the mindset of the individual participant — including cultural influences — is less important than the "situational features" that Professor Milgram shrewdly built into his experiment.
But CW, which may be short on time, cash and confidence, is not dumb, and for "The Game" it has shrewdly built strong, straight black female characters (à la "Girlfriends") who are nonetheless divas and therefore somewhat "above" race (à la "America's Next Top Model").
With little fanfare outside the insular Latino media community, for 16 years she and partner Luis Balaguer have shrewdly built up their company, Latin World Entertainment, from a Miami talent-management firm into a licensing, marketing, production and new-media powerhouse.
It's all very well to talk about the show's command of its visuals and the tough morality at its core (which I'll get to in a minute), but one of the greatest things about recent seasons of "Breaking Bad" is that almost every episode functioned as a taut, cannily constructed thriller, and each season shrewdly built to an inevitable yet incredibly tense conclusion.
As Detroit started losing market-share to foreign competitors, many of those competitors shrewdly built new factories in the U.S., allowing them to sell cars that were made here, rather than continuing to build them abroad and ship them to America.
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David Chase, its creator, shrewdly builds on that in the new episodes.
Mr. Burger, who wrote and directed "Interview With the Assassin," slowly and shrewdly builds Walter's credibility.
Raine shrewdly builds a dense canopy of sound around her deaf hero, Billy (well acted by Russell Harvard), in order to make the narrative of his oppressive solitude and his subsequent liberation from it more than just a problem play.
Raine shrewdly builds this dense canopy of sound around Billy's silence in order to make the narrative of his oppressive solitude and his subsequent liberation from it — when Billy meets and falls for Sylvia (the compelling Susan Pourfar), a strong, no-nonsense woman who is losing her hearing and who does use sign language — more than just a problem play about the hearing-impaired.
In "Scotch on the Rocks," her cinematic structure (with sharp cuts away from a repeated scene in which a man slaps a woman) builds shrewdly into a nonlinear narrative about an unhappy couple living behind a social facade.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com