My childhood hero was Roy Rogers.

I grew up as a Roy Rogers fan, of course.

I never met a man I didn't like until I met Will Rogers.

The thing about Steve Rogers, again and again, is sacrifice.

As a poet, Will Rogers just had this natural conversational style.

I just never fantasized about Mr. Rogers, but I like his whole vibe.

People would say I really loved Buck Rogers until the Hawk guy came on.

I'm really 95 percent Mr. Rogers, and only 5 percent Oscar the Grouch.'

Roy Rogers, Gene Autry, John Wayne - these men had the code of the West.

Star Wars' was derivative of 'Buck Rogers' and 'Flash Gordon,' wasn't it?

I think Edmonton's Rogers Place is still the nicest arena I've ever been to.

We were only allowed to watch Sesame Street and Mr. Rogers and 3-2-1 Contact!

Will Rogers was an American hero - someone you could get your teeth into and love.

Once upon a time, a man named Fred Rogers decided that he wanted to live in heaven.

Inside my heart, there's a 12-year-old girl who has always wanted to be Ginger Rogers.

Ed Rogers is a career insider who has personally enriched himself off of what he decries.

I am George Rogers Clark. You have just become a prisoner of the Commonwealth of Virginia.

Buddy Rogers and I never liked each other to be honest, however I take nothing away from him.

I really missed what I'd done on Rogers Cable, which was shooting and editing all my own stuff.

My favorite 'Mister Rogers' episodes were always the ones where Mr. Rogers would go into the community.

In a way, I'm like Will Rogers, never having met a man I really disliked. I'm not a vamp. I just like men.

Rogers and Hammerstein were such a genius pair. They were able to touch on subject matter so far ahead of its time.

When Ginger Rogers danced with Astaire, it was the only time in the movies when you looked at the man, not the woman.

I really want to be the black Mr. Rogers - that's my goal. I would do everything the same but with a hip-hop feel to it.

The first thing I saw was that Brett Rogers had his way very quickly - in 20 seconds - with a UFC champion, Andrei Arlovski.

Gene Autry, Roy Rogers, Dale Evans - these people are giants, legends; their names are household words. Of course, so's Jell-O.

In terms of Rogers, I can't comment on how other fighters in the UFC would fare with Brett Rogers because that's just speculation.

I'm looking forward to becoming a marvelous - excuse the word marvelous - character actress. like Marie Dressler, like Will Rogers.

Prince Rogers Nelson was the most gifted artist of the rock era. Not the greatest genius - just the most musical in the broadest sense.

What Mr Rogers was offering to children were lessons we all need in our world right now: patience, kindness, acceptance and true self-reflection.

When I was really little, I listened to Dolly Parton, Loretta Lynn, Barbara Mandrel, Crystal Gayle, Kenny Rogers, Willie Nelson, and Patsy Cline.

I had never been much of a science-fiction or Buck Rogers fan. I was more interested in what was going on right now than in the centuries to come.

I'm the oldest of three kids and I remember my brother and sister still watching Mr Rogers while I felt too big and too sophisticated to watch it.

When I was a kid, we didn't have a TV until the late '50s, but I can remember watching Hopalong Cassidy, Roy Rogers, Steve McQueen, and 'Gunsmoke.'

Unfortunately, I had to pull out of Vancouver. I'm really sorry; I didn't expect to go this far in Rogers Cup, and I just wanted to say, just apologize.

When I was living in the projects, I had a mop stick for my horse. I wanted to be Gene Autry or Roy Rogers, so I would ride my mop through the projects.

I had an AM radio and listened to Al Green, Kenny Rogers, Stevie Wonder, Charley Pride and Cheap Trick - sometimes in the same hour on the same station!

He was very commanding, and you had to know what you were doing to work for Mr. Rogers. I learned how to ride very quickly with him as my riding teacher.

Those five Rogers Cup matches were physically tough, and there were late nights, up until 2 or 3 A.M. - how could I fall to sleep after beating some of my heroes?

Once upon a time, a long time ago, a man took off his jacket and put on a sweater. Then he took off his shoes and put on a pair of sneakers. His name was Fred Rogers.

I love a good Roy Rogers or Shirley Temple, and I had to give those up. And Philly cheesesteaks. I love Philly cheesesteaks, and now they really aren't around anymore.

In those days I was new to covers; merely felt pleased that a story of mine had been honored. I later met Rogers who did some of my early covers and I was impressed with him.

It's funny because you start watching Mister Rogers so young, it's sort of in this subliminal part of your brain. I think that's why people have such a visceral reaction to him.

John Rogers has an encyclopedic mind. Having John as our showrunner is the gift that keeps on giving. He knows more trivial information than anyone I've ever met in my entire life.

I live in a wonderful world of make-believe. A world of Ginger Rogers and Fred Astaire. A world of Winnie the Pooh and Edward Bear. Things like that. Wonderful things. Funny things.

I was born and raised in Rogers Park in Chicago. My father sold furniture, and my mother was a Chicago public school teacher and proud member of the Chicago Teachers Union for decades.

I grew up with the television product being old Western serials like Roy Rogers, and John Wayne and Gary Cooper, and many others were my favorites when I was a young person going to films.

As a kid, I loved any guitarists, whether it was Elvis Presley, Lonnie Donegan, Chuck Berry or even the cowboy guitarists like Gene Autry and Roy Rogers. The image of the guitar appealed to me.

As far as my contribution to this industry, I want to be like Dean Devlin, John Rogers, and Chris Downey. I want to give people jobs and put them on great shows. I want to create careers for people.

It's always been a dream of mine to be Ginger Rogers or Cyd Charisse, and here I am performing alongside Robert Lindsay and being directed by a major Broadway producer. Who said dreams don't come true?

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