The grotty old East End : Victorian ghetto, killing ground for Jack the Ripper, working-class Cockney redoubt, unbowed survivor of ferocious World War II bombing, and more recently home of the British TV soap " EastEnders, " is now _ blimey ! _ a nascent hot spot.
42.
Fletch and his children are evicted from their home and stay overnight in the hospital basement before staying in a grotty B & B . Fletch agrees to help Clifford until he discovers that the drugs are going to dealers and the van driver is a friend ( Ray MacAllan ) who had offered him money.
43.
The working man used to nursing a pint of ale at a grotty pub with sticky carpets and soot-covered ceilings is finding that the carpets are new, the ceilings painted and in his place are young men in double-breasted pinstripes or torn T-shirts ( sometimes on Rollerblades ) and women in minimalist granny dresses.
44.
Very few of the articles on my watchlist seem to be being edited using VE, and even when stub-sorting I don't seem to be finding many VE edits, but if use of the current VE becomes more common I fear that there will be a lot of cleanup to be done, or a lot of grotty edits going past un-noticed and damaging the encyclopedia.
45.
Most vendors seem to be in the naff memento and grotty corporate gewgaw market ( rather than scientific or technical imaging ) so many will take real objects which they digitise and convert themselves-if you plan on generating a pointcloud yourself, from scientific data, you should talk to whatever vendor you pick and see what they specifically want .-- Talk 13 : 42, 1 June 2013 ( UTC)
46.
"The Guardian " s Caroline Sullivan commented that " though the duo now incorporate spasms of grotty, Nine Inch Nailsy guitar [ . . . ], " Exile " is still defined by its synth-pop froideur ", noting that Hurts have " a gift for striding, anthemic choruses that turn even the most overwrought songs into unshakeable earworms . " Chris Saunders of musicOMH complimented Hurts for " making stadium sized pop music with a darker underbelly, without forcing it, in the same black vein as Depeche Mode ", while remarking, " " Exile " isn't a bad album, and Hurts do what they do well [ . . . ] Yet " Exile " is found wanting when they try too much to be the stadium band rather than allowing the drama to play out . " Tom Hocknell of BBC Music opined that, although " Exile " " occasionally takes itself so seriously that it's hard not to smirk ", the album " genuinely builds upon its predecessor " and " reinforces the feeling in modern pop that no other group sounds quite as hurt as Hurts . " " The Observer " s Hermione Hoby faulted the album for lacking a " killer single " and wrote, " It's all laid on thick the violins, the choir-sung, stadium-friendly choruses but the songwriting isn't sturdy enough to hold it all up . " In a review for PopMatters, Maria Schurr characterised the duo as " style over substance " and found that musically, the album is " rarely memorable enough ".