I don't care how people judge me.

I don't care what people say about me.

I don't care what people think about me.

I really don't care what people think of me.

I don't care what people's myths are about me.

People who don't take care of their drums really annoy me.

People care about such bizarre and specific things about me.

I don't care when people use the term 'one-Slam wonder' with me.

I don't care to belong to a club that accepts people like me as members.

I don't care what other people think any more about me writing my own parts.

I don't care what people think of me now, so why would I care when I'm dead?

As for what other people think of me, I don't care. I don't care and never have.

Why on earth should I care whether people read me with their eyes or their ears?

I don't care if people I admire criticize me because their opinion is valuable to me.

I've failed those I care most about and let down the people who elected me to represent them.

I don't really care if people think I'm good-looking or not; it doesn't define me as a person.

Inside, I really do care what people think about me and it can make me nervous and very anxious.

As far as I'm concerned, I don't really care anymore what people think about me. I'm just gonna be me.

I knew people liked me on 'American Idol,' but I didn't think they'd care to come see me sing at my own show.

I know what to say, how to say it, how to bring profile to the issues I care about and people want to listen to me.

A lot of people say they don't care about the belt, but that's not true. For me, when I say it, I really mean that.

People don't really compare me to anybody. They just say I'm a mumble rapper. I'm fine with that. I don't really care.

Before my mum passed away, I was a very extroverted person; I was very outgoing. I didn't care what people thought about me.

Honestly, I don't really care what people say on Twitter or what they say if they are cheering for me or not cheering for me.

Some people see me as a rabble-rouser. Some people see me as someone who does not care about what other people think about me.

For me, it depends only on the script, the part I'm doing, and the people around me. It could be in Greenland or the Sahara. I don't care.

President Trump can't vote for me. The people that sent me up here sent me up here to repeal and replace, 100 percent, the Affordable Care Act.

I couldn't care less about what people think of me! I do what I do, and I don't care about what other people think is cool. I don't care about image!

I don't care whether people like me or dislike me. I'm not on earth to win a popularity contest. I'm here to be the best human being I possibly can be.

Let me say this, to all of the chattering class that so much focuses on those little tiny, yes, porky amendments - the American people really don't care.

I don't care about my character here on earth. I don't care about what other people think or say about me, all I care about is my standing before the Lord.

You can say whatever you want about me, I'm not really bothered. But when it starts to upset people I care about or I hear about it from my mum, then that's a problem.

People in the U.K. are passionate about the 'X Factor' - it's their show, so you have to care. It's brought out a more emotional side to me. It's actually made me softer.

The issues that matter to me are the social safety nets for people, health care, middle-class concerns. We need to take care of the middle class and the poor in our country.

I want my channel to be a place people go even if they don't care about Lilly. I don't want them to have to know about Lilly or care about me as a person to enjoy my content.

I don't react to a tragic happening any more. I took so many bad things as a kid and some people think I don't care about anything. It's just too hard for me to get emotional. I can't cry no more.

I really don't care what people think of me. I've got my family. I've got my friends. Yes, I have been trained to be a little more aggressive if I need to be, but I don't go around thumping people.

To me, it's never about the trick. I don't care about how something works. I care about how people feel when they watch it. You know, that - that connection - that emotional connection is true magic.

Because I've been around forever and ever, like wallpaper, people ask me for secrets... it's the same with my skin care range; that's out of necessity. As soon as I saw the first signs, I bought everything in the market.

For me, there are a lot of people that want to hear what I have to say. There are a lot of people who want to talk to Lil B, and they care about Lil B. Without the people I wouldn't be able to reach that magnitude of engagement.

I found a nanny/child care position in Beverly Hills taking care of a 3-year-old and a 17-year-old. They had a large, wealthy house. I learned that I liked the way rich people lived. I learned that they were not smarter than me.

This era is like, 'Oh, I want to win championships, and how many rings do you have?' I've said that's what I play for: to win. But I'm not as overly consumed by that as how I treat people around me. And how I care about the people around me.

That's the thing: when I'm on stage, I don't care; there could be ten people there, there could be ten million people there. But if I'm offstage, I'm, like, counting the people. I know exactly where everyone's standing, how far they are from me.

It's my belief that I was a writer - a very hardworking writer - well before I was published. I did care what others thought, and it was embarrassing when people asked me what I had published, so I didn't talk much about writing; rather, I just kept writing.

In a nutshell though, it's just all about opening up to the people that really care about my career and really listening to everybody who is listening to me. It's just made me stronger, to really be able to open up that door and listen to everybody else's opinions.

Most writer's blocks come from people second-guessing to the point where they get discouraged, and they just quit. For me, if I write something and it's not amazing, I don't care because even if I feel like it might not be amazing, it could still be a number-one hit.

I wasn't really geeky. In terms of the high school hierarchy, I was very much in the middle ground. You have the really popular guys, you have the nerdy guys, and then you have the people who really don't care - and that was me. I wasn't really picked on or anything like that.

You'd have to go all the way back to 1972 to find a version of me who didn't care about theater, who didn't read Playbill and watch the Tony Awards, or get why Bob Fosse's choreography was so groundbreaking that all you need to say is 'Fosse hands' and theater people know what you mean.

The fact that there's people out there that care about what I'm eating for breakfast or care about a tweet that I posted in 2012 that they pulled up because they were searching on my Twitter and things like that - it's hard to understand, because it's just me, and I just think, 'What's so interesting about me?'

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