Subtitle What Women Want
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Adding subtitles is where an author can hone in and pack a punch with an artful turn-of-phrase. The subtitle has a distinct role apart from the main title. While your book title clearly tells your intended audience what the book is about, the job of the multi-faceted subtitle is to speak to the precise benefits readers will receive from your book.
Highlight the benefits that grab the most attention. Ultimately, you want your subtitle to jump out at prospective readers, so focus on any listed benefits which do the same. List all jaw-dropping, attention-grabbing benefits; these may be future subtitle gold.
If you have any possible subtitles kicking around in your brain, write out these ideas. Free write whatever else comes to mind, and let it flow. If you're coming up empty, use a book title generator to help you come up with attention-grabbing subtitle ideas.
What women want is very simple: A man willing to listen when they're speaking to him. They also want a lot of other things, but that will do for starters. This we learn from "What Women Want," a comedy about a man who is jolted by electricity and develops the ability to read women's minds.
You would assume that this ability would make him the world's greatest lover, since he would know precisely what to do and when to do it, and indeed the movie's hero does triumph in that area, although not without early discouragements. (Extreme detumescence can result when a man discovers that during the throes of passion his lover is asking herself, "Is Britney Spears on Leno tonight?") Mel Gibson stars as Nick Marshall, an ad executive who thinks he's next in line for a top job at his Chicago agency. But his boss (Alan Alda) passes him over for Darcy Maguire (Helen Hunt), a hot steal from another agency. Nick declares war at about the same time he develops the ability to read women's minds. His knack of stealing Darcy's best ideas is a dirty trick, but he's ambitious and shameless.
To change the default subtitles language in Settings, go to Settings > Video and Audio > Audio > Subtitle Language, then choose the language you want. If you don't want automatic subtitles and you're using an Apple TV, go to Settings > Video and Audio, then turn off Automatic Subtitles. If you're using a smart TV or streaming device, go to Settings > General, then turn off Automatic Subtitles.
If you can't see subtitles or language options, they may not be available for that TV programme or film. Check the show or film descriptions page in the Apple TV app to find out what subtitles or languages are available.
Thomas Hardy sees her as a pure woman, from the point of view in which she never want to hurt someone, he understands what she thinks, her feelings and how a countryside, a simple girl can through all of this pains of life.
Following a conversation can be a challenge for the deaf and hard of hearing. But what if you could pop on a pair of glasses and have subtitles appear in real time? That's the promise of a newly released app called XRAI Glass. It works with augmented reality glasses called Nreal Air (sold separately by a different company) to subtitle conversations.
The last 4 words of the real subtitle knock it out of the park: from Profits to People. They tell the reader what the book is about, targeting the right audience by grabbing people who are interested in that idea.
These are all relevant reasons for subtitles, but Netflix has not (yet) implemented a fully working solution for subtitles in its streaming engine. Only a limited selection of movies in the streaming library have closed captioning available within Netflix. And there is no multi-language availability. So if you want to display subtitles in Spanish for one of the Hollywood movies on Netflix, you are out of luck. Or at least so it seems on the surface.
I have a PS3 and I signed up for Netflix through my PS3. Regarding subtitles; I download my subtitles on my computer (following above instructions) and then attach a HDMI cable from my computer to my TV. You can then watch whatever is on your computer on your TV. Remember to change your TV input to the HDMI setting.
From the rise of streaming services to an increase of screens in the home, we wanted to explore the reasons behind the obsession with subtitles in the United States and how it relates to how we consume content today. To find out, we surveyed 1,200 Americans on their use of the feature.
Methodology: On May 12, 2022, we surveyed 1,265 Americans on their use and opinions of subtitles in entertainment. 49% identified as men, 48% identified as women and 3% identified as nonbinary or preferred not to indicate their gender. Of the respondents, 16% were Baby Boomers, 22% were Generation X, 46% were Millennials and 16% were Generation Z.
Gen. GONZALEZ GONZALEZ: [subtitles] Chavez has Cubanized, or is trying to Cubanize, Venezuela. Hes created an image of differences and divisions among the population, making lower-class people believe that what they dont have was taken away by the upper classes.
MIGUEL OTERO: The real revolution that Chavez has done is not his revolution. Its the revolution that is coming after him. Because he has politicized people so much that anybody who comes to power after Chavez will be obliged to talk to people every day, to make decisions in terms of what people want. He wont be able to govern like people before Chavez. I mean, thats a big revolution.
AMIT PRADHAN: [subtitles] I try to portray the facts about bin Laden to people who may not know about him. Is he really this vicious terrorist or just a devout Muslim? I just want to make them understand that.
If fail-safe contraceptives were widely and inexpensively available and their use encouraged through conscientious sex education courses delivered to everyone, would the need for abortions disappear? No, says Henry P. David, founder/director of the Transnational Family Research Institute in Bethesda, Maryland, and author of this important new resource about reproductive behavior. Some unplanned pregnancies would still occur, since "some women cannot always negotiate the use of contraception with their partners" (p. 21) - certainly rape victims rarely can - and some of those women will want to terminate those pregnancies at all costs. Yet, as the low rate of abortions shows in a country like the Netherlands, where contraceptive use and sex education are encouraged, the numbers of abortions can be kept to a minimum. Conversely, as was (and to a large extent still is) the case in Central and Eastern Europe, an uncertain and expensive supply of contraceptives combined with societal reluctance to talk or teach openly about sex leads to high rates of conception and no real choice other than abortion for women who wish to end their pregnancies. As the subtitle suggests, the book demonstrates the complex interaction between governmental policies and personal behavior. Furthermore, where the procedure is lawful, it is done safely and legally; where not, women will seek out illegal means. This, of course, is not startling new information, but the amount of data and analysis presented here for countries that have not been thoroughly researched by the West is quite impressive.
Eva Fontenot: When I was younger, I thought it was a great thing to be on earth and be alive and be healthy. Because you know the meaning of every day, what it meant. If it was a holiday, the family would get together and they'd stick together. You see, one of my grandmothers, she would cook a big gumbo in a wash pot outside under the trees. She'd hang some meat in front of the fireplace and just broil it. And all the children was playing one side. The men was outside smoking their pipe, their homemade tobacco, and talking. And the women was cooking, baking and cooking in the fireplace and the wood stove. And we had fun. We'd lie on the floor anywhere we could find a place, and we would sleep, get up the next day and just sit around and talk, talk about life. But now we don't have time to do that anymore. If you go somewhere, you've got the television on or put the record player on. But now, the way-life is too fast. If you get together for a holiday or something, they put the women and the children in one place, and the men's leaving to go drinking and come back. You can never say whether I'm going to set the table at eleven o'clock or twelve o'clock. I can't find-half of the family's not there. There's too many cars and too many-it's too fast. If you could bring the old days back-they say old days is past. If I could bring them back, those I remember, I'd bring them back. Because you would enjoy that time. But today-to me, you don't enjoy it because everybody [wants to go further down]. If you stay in one place, they don't want to stay. They want to go [somewhere to see something] else. It's just go and come. But as they grow up there's no jobs here or nothing to do. They're leaving one by one. 781b155fdc