If 'The Blacklist' taught me anything, it was kind of open-ended intrigue and leaving questions unanswered. Creating this kind of mystery by virtue of depriving the audience of these easy answers was what I was kind of into.
If I had an unlimited budget, I would really be probing that question of life because we know what the questions are, and we know what the destinations are.
I was not involved and am not involved in the questions about the rules governing detention of combatants.
If I'm interviewing someone I need to know everything about them - I do these massive spider diagrams. Everything under different categories, and certain questions in other categories.
People from different backgrounds approach a subject in different ways and ask different questions.
There are always different roles and questions to be asked about certain characters.
Society during the last hundred years has been alternately perplexed and encouraged respecting the two great questions: how shall the criminal and pauper be disposed of in order to reduce crime and reform the criminal on the one hand and, on the other, to diminish pauperism and restore the pauper to useful citizenship?
By nature's kindly disposition most questions which it is beyond a man's power to answer do not occur to him at all.
This country must be governed, and can be governed, simply on questions of policy and administration and the French Canadians who have had any part in this movement have never had any other intention but to organise upon those party distinctions and upon no other.
I never try and do the same show, ever. The audience controls the dynamic of the shows. Sometimes they listen, and sometimes they ask a million questions.
I even asked Eleanor Roosevelt difficult questions and she loved it.
There have been a lot of questions since the 2016 U.S. election about Russian interference in the electoral process.
I fell in love with the elegance and precision of genetic analysis and experimentation to answer profound biological questions.
Whatever you can say in a meeting, you can put in an email. If I have questions, I'll tell you via email.
I'm self-taught and emailed photographers I knew if I had questions I couldn't figure out from the manual or online.
I've come to recognize that social purpose must be embedded into the core DNA of a company. The questions 'Why do we exist as a company?' and 'How do we make a difference?' need to have the same answer.
It's a very powerful, emotional thing to read a book, and to reduce it to a series of questions in a test strips something away from the book.
Wellbeing is a notion that entails our values about the good life, and questions of values are not ultimately scientific questions.
Environmentalists get in the way. They often ask the right questions, but they're chasing the wrong answers - often hypothetical or uneconomic solutions.
Writers on etiquette receive a continuous flow of questions on subjects such as 'When is it too early in the season to wear white accessories?' and 'What is the proper gift to send to a family in mourning?'