I observe the world and the people surrounding me.

There's a lot of people all over the world that talked about me.

I had a world of people raising me; it was like a little village.

I travelled the world because of the way people saw me at the Olympics.

People don't hassle me. It's always very friendly anywhere in the world.

Entitled people drive me insane. The world owes you nothing! Get over it!

I had a world of people who were raising me; it was like a little village.

I mean, obviously, a lot of people know me around the world. Kids know me.

I'm interested in stories that help me, people navigate in this broken world.

I don't belong in the world. That's what it is. Something separates me from other people.

I'm aware that people I have loved and have died and are in the spirit world looking after me.

Everywhere I go in the world, people know me and recognise me and really show affection for me.

Some people stay in the academic world just to avoid becoming self-aware. You can quote me on that.

I have worked with some of the meanest people in the world. You can't do anything to intimidate me.

The people of Somalia just do not have a voice. They are to me the most forgotten people in the world.

Remorse for what? You people have done everything in the world to me. Doesn't that give me equal right?

Nas really introduced the world and a lot of people to me - that was ideal as far as me first coming in.

There are 7 billion people in the world, but there's only one heavyweight champion of the world, and that's me.

I have over a hundred clocks. I've got fancy clocks and clocks from all over the world that people made for me.

I don't like people recognizing me all around the world. I really don't like that, as it's breach of my privacy.

People who never get anxious always amaze me. The world could be breaking up, and they're saying, 'Everything's fine!'

For me, the world that I inhabit in reality is probably a very different world than the one people expect that I would be in.

I live in a world where there's magazines and blogs, and people feel like they are allowed to criticize me, and in the meanest way.

I started using YouTube when I really wanted to reach out to the world, and I found a group of people who had the same interests as me.

I want validation. I'm not ashamed to say that I need the world to validate me and for people to say, 'You are what you think you are.'

I'm obviously aware that most people don't agree with me, that people like to escape into a coherent world that is apart from their own.

People say to me, 'You're so lucky. You get to see the world.' But I don't. I go to the hotel and to the pools and back again. That's it.

I like writing about places, about people and environments. When I create a world, it lets me go in and define the details of that world.

I don't expect people to get me. That would be quite arrogant. I think there are a lot of people out there in the world that nobody gets.

Daniel Bryan is one of the few people in the world I would stand toe-to-toe with in any situation and know that we would do the same for me.

These days, there are many people around the world who listen to the songs that made me infamous and read the books that made me respectable.

The Himalayan glaciers, China's trade surplus, Olympic ice hockey - the world is full of pressing subjects that people never consult me about.

Wherever I go in the world, people all know about Scotland Street and are always asking me about what's going to happen to the characters next.

'Johnny' was always a lone wolf when he got on stage. Him against the world, whereas suddenly, when I got into acting, people were relying on me.

I feel like if I got a blessing, then it's up to me to share that blessing with the world any way I can with other people less fortunate with me.

I didn't realize what an impact having a No. 1 single would have. It connects me with people of different ages, and I get to travel all over the world.

I know people come to my shows expecting me to give voice to some of the frustrations that nice, happy, progressive people like me have with the world.

I could go anywhere in the world and people would stop me in the street and talk about 'Fringe' and how much they adored it and asked questions about it.

An album, for me, is not just a commercial product. It's about presenting a world to people, for them to explore and enjoy. How they do that is up to them.

We are a breathtakingly alienated people... One of my props is the world's largest underpants. I've had the president of Costa Rica in my underpants with me.

I'd learned a lot in the Army. I knew that above all things in the world I had to become so big, so strong that people and their hatred could never touch me.

I connect with just plain old everyday people. Human behavior fascinates me, the people who are the nuts and bolts of this country who help hold up the world.

To me, there's so much we don't understand about our world, and I think it's really fascinating to see these people come up with the stuff that they come up with.

Leaving the house is a big enough occasion for me, so getting on a plane and flying across the world and playing to a room full of people is just out of this world.

If someone offered me a hundred million dollars to make a movie? I would first remind him that there are 850 million people in the world who don't have enough to eat.

I have travelled all over the world and one thing that amazes me is that I can communicate with people. My story may be different but emotionally we are all the same.

I was very conscious of the world being this very crazed place that demanded explanation. I didn't see a whole lot of people who looked like me doing it on television.

Anywhere in the world I have travelled to, people would tell me 'Yeh Vaada Raha' is one of their favourite songs. People would even convey the same on Insta and Twitter.

I was tempted my junior year to go out of college and forgo my eligibility. I had broken several world records. I did have a lot of people telling me that I should go pro.

All over the world I'm known. Whenever I go out on the street people come up to me and say... 'Hi, Beave,' and that doesn't bother me at all. It's something that I embrace.

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