These are word's examples related to captive-audience. Click on any word to go to its word's detail page. Or, go to the definition of captive-audience.
Hate speech that does not involve a captive audience would not fall within the scope of such a regulation.
Theatre foyers have wall space and a captive audience.
Johnny maintains a presence in the household, occasionally appearing to the benefits of free meals and the captive audience that the estranged adolescents provide at the kitchen table.
Finally, we might consider restricting hate speech to speech that is suitably hard to avoid and so involves a captive audience.
They are a captive audience, let us make the most of them.
Personal and political agendas were often bound up together, and a captive audience over a dinner table was too good an opportunity to pass up.
This hucksterism speaks to a captive audience in industrialized societies that increasingly appears to believe that something can and should always be 'done' to counter disease and death.
Children are a captive audience—even in these days—in their classrooms.
It has a captive audience for the commuter service it provides in the south-east.
Here is a captive audience, and good use could be made of modern methods of getting ideas across to it.
The curse of the concertgoer is when well-meaning programme makers push in a piece which the captive audience would otherwise have avoided.
A public service cannot thrive on a captive audience.
They admit that they are a sort of captive audience.
Primary schoolchildren are a more captive audience; they are less likely to vote with their feet and leave the dining room than secondary school pupils.
Prison does at least provide the setting for a much more pro-active approach to a literally captive audience.