People want to see real women on screen.

You see who the real people are when they're challenged.

What do people want? Contact. People want to be able to see you and touch you. Are you real?

I want to see Christian fiction speak to the hard and real issues that tear people's lives apart.

It's people's worst fantasy to see their partner kissing someone else, even though it's a job and it's not real.

I would like to see sexiness sort of embodied in people's real bodies, as opposed to those bodies that are just full of narcissism.

When you're famous, you don't get to meet people because they want you to like them when the present themselves to you, and you don't see the real people.

We thus see that the Greeks of the early ages knew little of any real people except those to the east and south of their own country, or near the coast of the Mediterranean.

Daytime has been successful all these years because it caters to a very real need in the audience - to see something that's not nighttime fantasy. People watch daytime because it's like their lives.

Because trans people are marked as artificial, unnatural, and illegitimate, our bodies and identities are often open to public dissection. Plainly, cisgender folks often take it as their duty to investigate our lives to see if we're real.

One of the first things I said to my kids and we all agreed upon when we first started shooting the show was if we're going to do this, we're all in. We're not going to worry about editing ourselves. So that's what you see. It's raw, and it's real, and it's footage that hopefully people learn from some of our experiences.

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