We cannot be indifferent to people's life and business.

I've worked with and talked to poor people my entire life, being in the pawn shop business.

A lot of people say I'd miss show business if I quit. I'd miss some of it. Now it's the only life I know.

I've learned that life is very tricky business: Each person needs to find what they want to do in life and not be dissuaded when people question them.

I think the thing about business is that it's not completely separate to life. You're selling to people so it's all about life skills - and common sense.

I never talk about my private life. When you're in this business it becomes so precious. I don't understand when people open up about themselves to the press.

The people and opportunities your business needs are out there, but the only way to uncover them is to take an active role in bringing your social network to life.

I'm a layperson. I barely got out of high school. I have no business telling people what to do or my big philosophy on life. I'm certainly not going to write any sort of memoir.

All the people who were on WSX Season 1 are the life blood of the alternative wrestling business, and now the mainstream wrestling business as well. That is what Lucha Underground is doing.

If you go out to Hollywood you'll find a lot of fantastic plastic people there in the business and a lot of people in life generally. They find it so hard to be themselves that they have to be plastic.

How many deaf people do you know in real life? Unless they live in a cave, or are 14, which seems to be true for most people in this business, what could I possibly tell them that they don't already know?

We appreciate quiet living. It's not exactly a Hollywood way of life - I couldn't stand living out in Hollywood because you can never escape from the business. All people ever do is talk about movies. At least in New York you can have some other life.

In business, when you can meet an unmet need that is this primal, even meeting it in a superficial way can create a multi-billion-dollar business - e.g., the chat rooms in AOL when it first came out, or the lounges in Starbucks, or the billion people who are on Facebook - even though these are hardly the most intimate of life experiences.

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