I don't regret doing 'The Living Daylights'. If I hadn't done Bond, I wouldn't have been in America doing my series, and I would have had a different life.
Basketball, in America, is like a culture. It is like a foreigner learning a new language. It is difficult to learn foreign languages and it will also be difficult for me to learn the culture for basketball here.
I've always been a fan of country music. It's America's music - I love the songs, love the lyrics.
America has a love-hate relationship with celebrity. We love to follow celebrities, but we also love to mock them. And secretly, we believe we're better than they are.
When once I got to America I fell in love with hippie culture, and I've always wanted to live in the country and grow organic vegetables.
I just read that 81 percent of Americans are ready to vote for a woman. So it sounds like America is ready.
America tends to worship the modest talent because it doesn't put us in an uncomfortable position vis-a-vis the artist.
I was born in Cambridge but brought up in and around Winchester, in Hampshire. I've also lived in Hong Kong and America.
I was born in Sarnia, Ontario; a small town, it's where oil was pretty much discovered in North America.
Our points of reference in America aren't steeped in literature; they're steeped in that five minutes between commercials.
Look at the world. There is no pure competitor to the United States of America.
I could have been a superstar in America - I was certainly taken out there. But I said, 'No way, Jose, I'm not staying here in this madhouse.'
San Francisco has just blown us all away. I also understand Angels in America didn't do well there.
I wanted to bring something to 'Celebrity Apprentice' to let America know that you don't have to be back-stabbing and mean-spirited in order to a challenge.
I don't believe in quotas. America was founded on a philosophy of individual rights, not group rights.
America is the civilization of people engaged in transforming themselves. In the past, the stars of the performance were the pioneer and the immigrant. Today, it is youth and the Black.
Consumerism is at once the engine of America and simultaneously one of the most revealing indicators of our collective shallowness.
If you paid Americans a living wage, they would be able to pay for products made by Americans in America.
Something is clearly wrong with Kansas and the rest of Middle America when it comes to letting economic self-interest guide their voting.
For an Italian peasant a telegram from anywhere is a wondrous thing; and a cable from the terrestrial paradise of America is not lightly to be disregarded.
Furthermore, America suffers not only from a lack of standards, but also not infrequently from a confusion or an inversion of standards.