I love researching, I love interviewing.

One of the joys about acting is researching.

I like historical things; I like researching things.

I spend about eight months researching and outlining my book.

I love researching. That's one of my favorite parts about school.

I love spending time researching a character and reading about them.

I love to get in the library and just spend days researching characters.

I don't sit inside the studio all the time. I travel around researching music.

Researching Magic Johnson, I realized I clearly haven't done enough with my life.

Most of the time, working as a stylist, you're at home, working on your own, researching.

I really enjoy researching, and for almost every piece, I research enough to write a book.

I'm not really into researching my opponents or other fighters other than the ones that I like.

I'm always reading the next book. Taking notes. Highlighting, researching, studying. It doesn't stop.

Human spirit, things that aren't tangible, fascinate me, so I'm always researching mind, spirit, soul.

My family lives in Vermont. I'm a law professor and I spend summers researching and writing in Vermont.

I spent more than 20 years of my professional career researching and developing renewable energy sources.

I've actually spent a lot of time researching beauty products, how they are produced and how they are sold.

I spend a year at the Hoover Institute at Stanford, researching market approaches to air pollution control.

As you mature, you start reading and studying and researching, you start to really know what life is about.

I spend eight months outlining and researching the novel before I begin to write a single word of the prose.

I've been studying mutual funds since 1949, when I began researching my senior thesis at Princeton University.

I finished 'American Born Chinese' in 2005, so after that, I started actively researching the Boxer Rebellion.

It's difficult to just let go of a character. Especially after you've been preparing and researching for weeks.

One of the best parts of being a writer means that researching all kinds of cool stuff actually counts as work!

One of the things I enjoy most about writing historical romance is researching inspiring backgrounds and settings.

As a heart surgeon I am on constant call, and when not researching or giving lectures, I like to be with my family.

I was researching my family tree, and I was deeply hoping I was going to turn out to be Eastern European, but I'm not.

I love researching all sorts of weird stuff. I always say, 'God help me if the FBI came across my Internet search history.'

There's an awful temptation to just keep on researching. There comes a point where you just have to stop, and start writing.

If I'm researching something strange and rococo, I'll go to the London Library or the British Library and look it up in books.

I'm always practicing lines, researching, trying to be fresh, and fully trying to become the characters I play. That's how I roll.

Researching and writing about the Klondike Gold Rush of 1897-98 was one of the most exciting and involving projects I've undertaken.

When I was researching the Victorian anti-vaccination movement, those activists often used a vampire as a metaphor for the vaccinator.

I slept in the bedroom used by Sabine Baring-Gould's wife when I was researching 'The Moor,' and later the Jamaica Inn on Bodmin Moor.

If I had kids, I'd probably be way over-protective, researching everything they begged to see to make sure the content was appropriate.

Sometimes if I can't sleep and I am up in the night, I will start researching things - it could be an image I've seen, or a book I am reading.

Once I engage in something, I really engage in it, and I love the process of reading and researching because I come from an academic background.

During the day, if I don't have any other commitments, I'm usually at my desk writing, revising, or researching anywhere from four to six hours.

Planning to write is not writing. Outlining, researching, talking to people about what you're doing, none of that is writing. Writing is writing.

One can spend too much of one's life locked in stuffy rooms seeking out obscure truths, searching, researching, until one is too old to enjoy life.

Outlining is not writing. Coming up with ideas is not writing. Researching is not writing. Creating characters is not writing. Only writing is writing.

In 2016, I worked on a film called 'Love Sonia,' which was based on human trafficking. While researching on it, I came to understand how privileged I am.

While researching my ancestry I have unearthed many skeletons. It would seem that I come from a long line of ne'er-do-wells, especially on my mother's side.

Now, I - for several years while I was researching this book, I felt quite obsessed by thoughts about sentencing, punishment, how judges arrive at their decisions.

I enjoy the act of research. I'm researching as a means to an end, but I literally just enjoy reading about how people lived in the past and understanding it better.

When you spend a year or two researching a subject, and you're still fascinated by it, that's a good indicator that what you're doing will appeal to others, as well.

Whenever I am acting, it's everything, you know. If I'm researching a role, I'm completely consumed in that and, between action and cut, I live in this suspended time.

I began researching natural healing, which is how I came to change my diet. Overnight, I gave up refined sugar, gluten, dairy, anything processed or refined, and meat.

When you're researching something for a movie, you get a very different kind of reaction than when you're researching something for an article for 'The New York Times.'

Whether it's buying products or researching what you're buying, or just becoming aware of what you're buying, you're saying so much with the money that you're spending.

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