Being on Disney, a lot of young people look up to me.

For me, I actively look for projects that showcase people of color.

I have an impact and people look up to me now. It's more than the money.

People think of me and think, 'Ibiza and hippy look.' I'm trying to expand.

People look at me and they don't see what they think is a typical Aboriginal.

It's a whole team of people working 24 hours around the clock to make me look like this.

It really bugs me the way people criticise how actors look. We're not models. Models exist.

I'll tell you one thing, since I'm married, single people look absolutely ridiculous to me.

When you look at me in the beginning of '96 and at the end of '96, I'm two different people.

I can't belong to groups. I've tried. I behave normally, but people don't look at me normally.

When people look at me outside, they think, 'She's so lucky,' but no one's exempt from tragedy.

For me the question was, do I want my paycheck to be dependent on how other people think I look?

Many people said that I shouldn't have worked alongside Noman Habib as it made me look much older.

I wish people would look at me and think, 'Well, someone like that exists!' Accept the difference.

I want to be an inspirational model. I want people to look at me and say, 'Wow, she looks healthy.'

A lot of people look at me as such a nice guy; they don't understand how dangerous I can actually be.

When you dig down and look at the people who are vocal in their criticism of me, it's a small number.

Different people are attracted to me depending on how I look. I have a very broad spectrum of attraction.

People don't tend to hassle me because when I've got a hat on, I look like a banker. I'm just a plain guy.

People just usually think I'm someone else. They'll look at me twice, and I'll just say, 'Not Ellen Page.'

I know people look at me and try to make conclusions about me immediately, based on the obvious, let's say.

I don't like it when people don't look me dead in the eye. I move my head around trying to catch their eye.

I want people to look at me in the future and feel that there's this Asian hip-hop artist who's fresh and hot.

I had people think I was brilliant, then 'Half Baked' bricked. They literally look at me like a homeless person.

Look, bro, you mean to tell me that Elon Musk not a alien? C'mon, brah, he's trying to get people to go on Mars.

Nobody notices me. Nobody thinks I'm me. But then I look less like me than most of the people coming to our concerts.

I think people look at me different when they see I'm dressed well. They pay attention. They know I'm about something.

It's interesting to take a look at people who deal with prejudice on a daily basis - it's been a real eye opener for me.

People look at me like YG the turnt-up dude, hit singles and all that. And, yeah, that's me, but I'm for my people, too.

In the adverts, I look like I do because 150 people have spent seven hours making me look dazzling. That's not me at all.

I think that when people look at me, and they look at my height and my voice and my coloring, they automatically think, 'Tough.'

I'm not an idiot; I try not to look, but I see what people say about me on Facebook. I see other things written. But I don't care.

I'm a lot luckier than most people, although I used to look at it the other way around-that so many people seemed luckier than me.

I envy people who can just look at a sunset. I wonder how you can shoot it. There is nothing more grotesque to me than a vacation.

I want people to feel the emotion, try to relate to the way that I look or want to be like me in the way that I'm living or whatever.

Occasionally people will look at me and do a double take and they'll look at me like they're trying to think where they know me from.

I act, but I'm not necessarily an actor. Acting is just the first thing people see when they look at me. So I'd like to do more things.

I did not join the resistance movement to kill people, to kill the nation. Look at me now. Am I a savage person? My conscience is clear.

Watch me when people say deaf and dumb, or deaf mute, and I give them a look like you might get if you called Denzel Washington the wrong name.

Normally, I have a lot of alpha readers on my books. These are people that, once I finish a novel, I let them look at it and give me a reader response.

Prison was tough on me. I saw people in prison that made me ashamed I was a human being. Some make Qaddafi and Idi Amin look like Sunday-school teachers.

Being a gal, people can be a bit patronizing. 'Oh, look at you using the computer.' They would never say that to a boy. And I don't let them do it to me.

There's such an adrenaline rush for me on stage and having all these people look at you. There's an adrenaline rush from not having things written down, too.

Being from the countryside gave me a spine, and it's why I'm so accepting - I don't judge people for how they look or how they talk... I just accept everyone.

There are people who are blond and blue-eyes who are walking through airports that are terrorists. There are people who look exactly like me who are terrorists.

I'm comfortable, culturally I'm American, my perspectives are American, but from an aesthetic perspective do other people look at me and think that I'm American?

People never used to look at me twice. That was my superpower: When I met someone, I could decide whether to care about them based on whether they cared about me.

When I look at my daily schedule, I feel like a trout flopping about on a dock, drowning in the air. Some people are ruthless with their schedules. Not me. I wing it.

Dancers are not like movie actresses. People look at our bodies, not our faces. They only recognise me when I sign my name on something and they say, 'Ah yes, Sylvie.'

Like people coming up to me like, 'Nobody ever told you that you look like Lil Baby?' But I'll be like, nah. Or like, somebody told me that. I'll never just say, it's me.

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