Texans know how to make people feel welcome.

I feel like I'm one of the happiest people I know.

People know accuracy when they read it; they can feel it.

I don't know how many people feel strongly about what I do.

I just want people to know it's OK to really feel their feelings.

I just feel like people need role models, you know, that are dressed.

There is something special about breakfast TV in that people feel like they really know you.

I know people I feel are extremely talented, but I don't know that I've ever heard any geniuses.

People don't know. People are ignorant. They feel that if you stutter, then you're slow or whatnot.

I kind of feel like with a musical, there's so few original musicals that people just don't know what to expect.

One of the things about writing fiction is that you create people that you feel, more or less, as though you know.

If I feel that somebody is hurting other people, then I'm going to make sure other people know - other people know about them.

There has been a lot of emotion back and forth around moving from Panathinaikos. Most people know what I feel about that club.

I try to talk about things I know about. But my characters are more of a combination of people or how I imagine people would feel.

Voters don't just want to see detached and distant faces on TV, they want to feel that they know the people that they're trying to vote for.

I was raised a Catholic, so I can even feel a little, you know, embarrassed or guilty if I'm really offending people's sensibilities. To a degree.

I'm a fairly upbeat and happy guy, you know? I don't like people that feel sorry for themselves, and I traditionally stay away from people like that.

You know, people at Wal-Mart are standing there with their uniforms on. I feel like I'm putting on a uniform to do a movie. I don't feel like it's dressing in drag.

You don't know what people are looking for. What you know is what you feel like might be missing. It's up to the people to agree with you or disagree with you, and you'll know in their reaction.

I feel like human beings cover up their scent with all these different things and products. I feel like we've given up our ability to engage with people because we don't know how people smell anymore.

A lot of people want to not wear a tie when they go to a restaurant. They feel they don't have to wear a tie. I think it's kind of a statement they're making. I don't know what that statement is. I haven't quite figured that out yet.

I think the audience is getting it right, you know what I mean? And that's kind of rare when the artist feels like their audience understand them. But I feel like people are understanding exactly what I'm going for. And that's awesome.

I think people are getting into these 'Empire' songs because of the emotional investment they have in the characters. You kind of feel like you know the songs already because you just watched them play out in front of you with these characters.

You know, since the reviews have come out and people have reacted to it, I've realized that is in a sense what has happened. But as I was writing them, I didn't feel a part of any tradition. I think that would have been too overwhelming, in a sense.

I'd say for those people who don't feel like they fit in, I'd want them to ask themselves why they want to, who they are trying to please, and whether or not those people are worth it. You know what they say: 'If they don't want you, then they don't deserve to have you.'

I know people are pretty well embarrassed just at the mention of colon cancer. Sticking a tube in you to find out what's wrong is not a nice thing. But I can tell them, a 30- or 40-minute test is worth it. We have to make them feel more comfortable about getting screened.

Religious people know deep down that that is the most vulnerable area of their lives, and when others question it, they are liable to hit out and feel insulted. You know it is absolutely without proof, yet people still commit themselves totally to this belief. They cannot refute it because it is so central to their lives.

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