People don't necessarily identify me with doing adult things.

Some people meditate, I like doing my makeup. It very much relaxes me.

After doing a film like 'Dangal,' people would assume things are easy for me.

I don't want to see old people doing rap or rock and roll. It makes me cringe.

The people I worked for before I was doing 'Vampire Diaries' were very generous to me.

How people themselves perceive what they are doing is not a question that interests me.

What I'm doing is a natural wonder. If not, there'd be 150 people behind me on the wire.

People used me, in a way, to achieve something, and I was glad of it. I was just doing my job.

People shouldn't be interested in me. They should be interested in me if I'm not doing what I promise.

While I was doing Hindi, people there laughed at me because I couldn't speak Hindi and English properly.

In my twenties, I was a bit of a worrier; it bothered me what people thought of me, what job I was doing.

Sometimes in golf I've got 10,000 people watching me. Cameras are easy. Doing the Jay Leno show was easy.

I've been doing my job well for 17 years. People must see something in me. Otherwise, I'd be over and out.

I loved doing my own stunts, and so, as much as the insurance people would allow me, I would get involved.

I don't cringe when I think of doing old material. A lot of the people have been with me through the years.

I can go from doing an electronic track to hip-hop to even folk songs. I think people like that variety in me.

If it was up to me, I'd get rid of Twitter to stop the fake profiles and people saying and doing what they want.

You get to the point where you're like, 'I'm just doing me, and if people don't like it, then it is what it is.'

I've been in situations, when I was younger, when I had people forcing me doing stuff that they don't want to do.

What interests me most are the emotional lives of the people. If I don't have that, it's not worth doing, frankly.

For some reason, I always get offered plays when I'm doing plays and then, if I stop doing them, people stop asking me.

I spent a lot of my 20s just trying to make other people happy, rather than trying to figure out if doing that made me happy.

People say I'm such a pessimist, but I always was. It never stopped me from doing what I had to do. I would say I'm a realist.

It's hard for me to trust people, and especially girls it's - I don't really like doing the whole opening-up thing with girls.

I never pushed the envelope of wanting people to know me, or be on the covers of magazines. I just want to enjoy what I'm doing.

I hated it when people tried to force me out when I wasn't ready. It was very painful, and it actually pushed me away from doing so.

When I came into boxing, I brought it to the next level with adverts and doing pantomime and people just got jealous of me doing that.

Some people say I'm conscious, some say I'm a gangsta rapper - it's just me doing me. I'm stomping in my own lane. I'm doing what I do.

People often ask me whether I prefer theater or film, and the answer is that I prefer the one I'm not doing: The grass is always greener.

People would ask me why I was doing what I was doing - but I always told them that I just loved to skate. There was no other explanation.

People have the right to call themselves whatever they like. That doesn't bother me. It's other people doing the calling that bothers me.

If it is not possible for me to go somewhere and to be willing to encounter people with different views, then I'm really not doing my job.

When I started doing Twitter, I realised there were so many people following me who were going through the same thing I was going through.

A lot of my solo albums were produced by different people who had their idea of what songs I should do, and they had me doing a lot of ballads.

A lot of people hear me attacking their certainty. I don't have any interest in doing that. I'm interested in penetrating the meaning of certainty.

Can I bond with people and live for 39 days without my Instagram account? Probably! But the real question for me is this: can I be happy doing that?

Because I was surrounded by so much negativity at some point that it took me going back and doing stand-up to realize, you know, people really like me.

There's been talk of YES possibly doing something on Broadway in New York. People have approached me with that idea, and there are discussions about that.

In my hometown, people I didn't even know started to recognize me: 'Oh, you're that kid that's doing well over there in Europe and with the national team!'

People ask me, 'Have you ever considered doing stand-up?' To me it would be less offensive if someone asked me, 'Have you ever considered dental implants?'

Whenever I perform, people get me because I'm talking about things that people can identify with and relate to. I'm not just up there doing jokey, jokey, joke.

Twitter seems just to be constant updates; it seems to me as promotional tool where people talk themselves up, and I don't want it to take over what I'm doing.

At a party recently I was introduced to Meryl Streep, and it took me a second to get my head around it. You know, that I'm meeting these people now. I'm doing it.

I'm up for doing a part if I thought the part was right and the people want to consider me for a part. If I thought the part was absolutely exciting... I would go for it.

It's almost like he's started to sound even more exotic the more people started doing him. I don't know why, but there's just something about Al Gore that makes me laugh.

It never really occurs to me that I'm doing cringe comedy. It's something that people tell me afterwards, and I say, 'Again? Really? I never set out with that intention.'

If I'm doing a play, 30 to 40 percent of the people that come to the stage door have pictures of 'Alien' for me to autograph. And usually, the photos are pretty gory ones.

I guess I'm not that aware of such a big fan base. I have a few core people who write me no matter what I'm doing, but I hardly have sacks of mail being dropped on my door!

People always brand me as this person who is anti-Brady, and I don't think that I ever have been, except that occasionally I would like to talk about something else that I'm doing.

A lot of people just send me beats, and I pick the ones I like. See, once I said I was doing my album - because I know everybody and they mama - everybody just got in touch with me.

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