As the French say, there are three sexes - men, women, and clergymen.
I think that in the future, clocks won't say three o'clock anymore. They'll just get right to the point and rename three o'clock 'Pepsi.'
I'm a daughter, not a clone. So, of course, daughters often disagree with things their fathers say. But I share my viewpoints with him privately, not publicly. I'm not the candidate.
No diss to any of my homies, but I pay very close attention to what people say about me.
A close-up on screen can say all a song can.
I'm always teasing and clowning around and laughing and in the locker room I tend to always have something to say.
When I used to say I did dressage, I got blank looks. No one had a clue what I was on about.
I would say that I'm opinionated and clumsy and I am definitely led by my heart over my head.
We say that we will work with anybody and form a coalition with anybody that has revolution on their mind.
I guess I have a little bit of an ego. I'm confidently cocky, you might say.
I'm not talent. Not considered 'talent' by Lifetime. I'd like to say I'm their savior, but that would be cocky.
I skipped kindergarten because I was reading at a pretty high level. That's a weird and cocky thing to say, but I was real sharp, and I knew that early on.
To say that we mutually agree to coercion is not to say that we are required to enjoy it, or even to pretend we enjoy it.
I think when you have lawyers arguing over whether you can keep a detainee at 46 degrees... for two hours, that's not torture. It may be unpleasant, it may be coercive... but let's say what torture actually is, and that's not it.
I'm not that bothered about press nights as an actor or, particularly, by what people say about me, because I see myself as a reasonably small cog.
I'm proud to say I had a bet with a guy from Chicago who said Chicago is windier and colder than Wyoming. Wyoming dominated them.
Even if I did give a good talk, is what I have to say more important and interesting than what Colin Powell said?
One thing that I have thought ever since Temple of the Dog is that I would never say no to an interesting collaboration, and that's partly where Audioslave came from.
Probably, subliminally, I think of the reader as a kind of collaborator. I don't want to say something for the reader that the reader could have said for himself.
Though it might be invidious to mention individuals, yet I may be allowed to say how much I owe to the constant help of my wife, not quite my first, but much my most consistent collaborator, and over the longest period of years.