Quotes of All Topics . Occasions . Authors
It's always best to stay out of other people's divorces. And their civil wars.
I'm always friendly and encouraging on set. I want people to be at their best creatively.
It's a matter of taking the side of the weak against the strong, something the best people have always done.
The best thing I learned from Manute was to be selfless. He was always about his people. He was about helping others.
I'm a guy who is going to go out there and do his best, and I'm a guy who has always gone out there and proved people wrong.
Owners never paid my salary. I always recognized that it was the people in the seats who did. I always wanted to give my best.
It was there that, through a mutual friend, I met John Waters - proving what I've always said: you meet the best people on field trips.
I always get amazed as to how we always need to have someone as the best of something. Why can't we have two people as the best at something?
Being on a film set, you are always around such fantastic people. And I feel like I've been lucky. I feel like I've worked with the best of the best.
I wanted the audience to write stories and then read them out if they wanted to. It's always the best part of the show because people are so imaginative.
I'm aware of the fact that people that are watching to see what I do next - It's challenging to make the best decisions, and I don't always get it right.
We've always connected musically in Fleetwood Mac because we're the only people who play more than one note. I'm not the best pianist, but I know how to interlace around what Lindsey's playing.
There are two way of establishing a reputation, one to be praised by honest people and the other to be accused by rogues. It is best, however, to secure the first one, because it will always be accompanied by the latter.
I think we've done that. But it's not something you really notice, 'cause I've always thought the people here have always done their best, and they continue to do their best. They just might do it a little bit differently.
The genius of the United States is not best or most in its executives or legislatures, nor in its ambassadors or authors or colleges, or churches, or parlors, nor even in its newspapers or inventors, but always most in the common people.
I can't say that the ending of a story is always the best part of the story, and yet there's sort of this implicit idea that the finale is somehow supposed to be the mind-blowing best episode of a show. The question is: Why is that? Why do people make that assumption?