catbird

Related to catbird: catbird seat

be (sitting) in the catbird seat

To be in a powerful position. The phrase likely refers to the catbird's preference for high tree branches (which keep predators at bay). As the CEO's assistant, you are definitely sitting in the catbird seat. The retirement of the company's president left its vice president suddenly in the catbird seat.
See also: catbird, seat

(sitting) in the catbird seat

In a powerful or influential position. The phrase likely refers to the catbird's preference for high tree branches (a position that helps it to avoid predators). As the CEO's assistant, you are definitely sitting in the catbird seat. I know you were hoping to be elected president over Joe, but, as vice president, you're in the catbird seat if he resigns.
See also: catbird, seat

the catbird seat

A powerful position. The phrase likely refers to the catbird's preference for high tree branches (which keep predators at bay). As the CEO's assistant, you are definitely sitting in the catbird seat. I know you were hoping to be elected president over Joe, but, as vice president, you're in the catbird seat if he resigns.
See also: catbird, seat
Farlex Dictionary of Idioms.

in the catbird seat

Sl. in a dominant or controlling position. Sally's in the catbird seat—telling everybody where to go. I hold all the aces. I'm in the catbird seat.
See also: catbird, seat
McGraw-Hill Dictionary of American Idioms and Phrasal Verbs.

catbird seat

A situation of advantage or superiority, as in His promotion put Charles in the catbird seat. This term is thought to allude to that noisy bird's habitual high perch. It was popularized in the 1940s by sportscaster Red Barber.
See also: catbird, seat
The American Heritage® Dictionary of Idioms by Christine Ammer.

be sitting in the catbird seat

or

be in the catbird seat

AMERICAN, OLD-FASHIONED
If you are sitting in the catbird seat or are in the catbird seat, you are in an important or powerful position. He'd go broke tomorrow if I left him, and I'd be sitting in the catbird seat. If the campaign is quick, short and successful, both leaders will be in the catbird seat. Note: This expression became widely known in the 1940s and 1950s, when it was used by the baseball commentator Red Barber. Catbirds are North American songbirds. The expression may be explained by the fact that catbirds often sit very high up in trees.
See also: catbird, seat, sitting
Collins COBUILD Idioms Dictionary, 3rd ed.

in the catbird seat

in a superior or more advantageous position. North American informal
This expression is said to have originally referred to a baseball player in the fortunate position of having no strikes and therefore three balls still to play (a reference made in James Thurber 's short story The Catbird Seat).
See also: catbird, seat
Farlex Partner Idioms Dictionary

be in the ˈcatbird seat

(American English) have an advantage over other people or be in control of a situation: After his recent success, the president is sitting in the catbird seat. With prices falling dramatically, buyers seem to be in the catbird seat.
See also: catbird, seat
Farlex Partner Idioms Dictionary

in the catbird seat

mod. in a dominant or controlling position. I hold all the aces. I’m in the catbird seat.
See also: catbird, seat
McGraw-Hill's Dictionary of American Slang and Colloquial Expressions

catbird seat, (sitting) in the

Being in a position of advantage or superiority. The term originated in the American South, where the catbird is quite common. It is thought to allude to the bird’s habit of singing from a very high perch in trees. It came into common usage in the 1940s when Mississippi-born sportscaster Red Barber would use it, for example, for a pitcher who was almost certain to strike out all the batters. Barber said he himself first heard the term in a poker game where he had bluffed all but one player into dropping out, but the remaining player, who had said from the start that he was sitting in the catbird seat, proved to have an ace and an ace in the hole. James Thurber used the expression as the title of a short story about a mild-mannered accountant who was so irritated by a colleague using this and other terms that he planned to murder her.
See also: catbird
The Dictionary of Clichés by Christine Ammer

catbird seat

An enviable position, “sitting pretty.” Catbirds seek the highest limbs of trees on which to perch. The view from on high and the relative safety from predators puts them in an advantageous spot. The term is best known as the title of a James Thurber short story and from radio sportscaster Walter Lanier “Red” Barber's using it while broadcasting baseball games.
See also: catbird, seat
Endangered Phrases by Steven D. Price
See also:
  • be (sitting) in the catbird seat
  • be in the catbird seat
  • be sitting in the catbird seat
  • catbird seat
  • the catbird seat
  • in the catbird seat
  • (sitting) in the catbird seat
  • catbird seat, (sitting) in the
  • get (one's) ear
  • desert a sinking ship
References in periodicals archive
In tropical and subtropical forests, there is a correlation between food abundance and breeding seasons in frugivorous birds (Snow and Snow 1964; Crome 1975, 1976), including the Green Catbird (Donaghey 1981; Innis and McEvoy 1992).
In the gray catbird study: "80 percent of the birds killed were done in by predators, of whom cats represented 47 percent." Simply stated, of 100 birds, if 80 were killed by predators, then 37 (47 percent of 80) would have been killed by cats.
But that also puts newspapers in the catbird seat: They have an opportunity to steal momentum from major national and international brands that are now rushing into mobile.
"They are over-capitalized and under-leveraged"--in short, they are in the catbird seat.
A Group 2-winning sprinter in Australia, he is a brother to the Group 1-winning juvenile Catbird, who was leading first-season sire in Australia by individual winners in 2003-04.
Northern cardinal, gray catbird (Dumetella carolinensis), American robin, and blue jay (Cyanocitta cristata) accounted for 64% of the identifications.
This 325-page sci-fi adventure novel is the story of a small band of men and women on Genser's World, an earth-like planet of Alpha Centauri who encounter the degenerate descendants of another space-traveling species along with intelligent 'catbird' symbiots, two ancient cyborg intelligences, and a malevolent AI computer that will have to be destroyed before it can evolve into a form that will destroy everything our group of colonists have worked so hard to create.
And this is where Hirsi Ali's catbird seat was no longer safe: even the West's most vociferous parvenus are no longer needed to continue an increasing frontal assault against non-white immigrants.
Like the .220 Swift and super-fast wildcats such as Kenny Jarrett's .243 Catbird, the .204 seems to burn its way through wind.
On William Luke Marbury, Sr., see William Luke Marbury Jr., In the Catbird Seat (Baltimore, 1988), chapters 2, 3, 5.
in Red Barber's "Catbird Seat," we need Terry more than
Take "sitting in the catbird seat." The expression was popularized by Red Barber, the colorful broadcaster for the Brooklyn Dodgers, who also spread the likes of "tearing up the pea patch" and rhubarb, used to mean 'an argument on a baseball diamond.' The Mississippi-born Barber once explained that "sitting in the catbird seat" was a Southern expression for which he had literally paid.
The managerial revolution had long ago replaced owner-managers with professional managers, and a follow-on investor revolution in recent years had brought big holders into the catbird seat.
That should be about this time next year VW is sitting in the catbird scat for that day.
Now Schaitberger is the envy of all those other union leaders who wrote off Kerry and leapt onto the "Dean Express." "He's certainly in the catbird seat," says one official of the AFL-CIO, of which IAFF is a member.