[the Ghostbusters HQ blows up] Louis: This is it! This is the sign! Janine Melnitz: Yeah, it's a sign, all right - "Going out of business".
James Bond: [speaking to a woman when another spy arrives to talk business] Run along now, man talk...
George Bailey: Look, we're still in business, we've got two bucks left!
The Bride: You and I have unfinished business. Bill: Baby, you ain't kidding.
Prime Minister: [on the phone to his sister] I'm very busy and important. How can I help you?
Papa: You could have been my son, but you're not. Remember that. We'll do business, but you're not family.
Calvera: Now, to business! I could kill you all. You agree? [Dead silence] Calvera: Well, you don't disagree!
Mr. Park: [hands Dae-Su a business card while grinning a big gold-toothed grin] This dentist is really good.
Stella: Mr. Kowalski is too busy making a pig of himself... Your face and your fingers are disgustingly greasy.
Emma Newton: What does he do? Oh, he's just in business, you know, the way men are.
[Bone is smoking a cigarette with his friends] Bone: You got business here, Rookie? Jake Hoyt: I'm here for Alonzo.
Principal Zito: You got no business in the ring with those animals. Tom Conlon: Actually, I used to be one of those animals
Hansuke: What happened? Why so glum? Your business should be booming. The Cooper: No. When the fighting gets this bad, they don't bother with coffins.
Paul Avery: What's your angle, here? This is good business for everyone but you. Robert Graysmith: What do you mean, "angle"?
It's really Democrats who are fighting for working families and small businesses and trying to address the biggest problems that we have, which are huge disparities in incomes and wealth and money influencing the Democratic process.
For me the greatest source of income is still movies. Nothing - stocks, financial speculation, real estate speculation or businesses - makes more money for me than making movies.
All businesses and jobs depend on a vast number of people, often unnoticed and unthanked, without which nothing really gets done. They are all human and deserve respect and gratitude.
While other industries have suffered, the nonprofit arts world continues to build in strength while it encourages the growth of innumerable small businesses on its periphery, thereby creating more jobs.
In certain businesses, I would say 10 failures to one success is a perfectly acceptable ratio. Because the failures die pretty quickly, they're not that expensive, and the successes can be really huge.
Internet entrepreneurs are using technology at every level of their company - from a one-person agency to a small firm, the newest technological advances are interwoven throughout every aspect of Internet-based businesses.
I love to be busy. I'm envious of people who are able to take their spare time and relax. All I like to do is work. Perhaps it's lingering Calvinist guilt?