The newsprint thesp celebrity interview as a middle-brow art form suffers from desperate overproduction. There'll be at least 10 in the broadsheets today and every Sunday hereafter.
I've been sober for two-and-a-half years, My children are happy. In August, my wife and I will celebrate our fifteenth wedding anniversary. My band is back together with a sold-out tour.
There is no blueprint to leadership, quite the conundrum in a business world where standardization is celebrated.
A kind of banalization of celebrity has occurred: we are now offered an instant, ready-to-mix fame as nutritious as packet soup.
It is a matter of mere coincidence that there is often a real individual who corresponds with a celebrity, signifies them.
I thought we were celebrating being richer and cleverer than everyone else!
Celebrity mentality sometimes misguides us to make wrong choices. That’s why T.V screens sometimes lie to us!
An anniversary is the perfect time to celebrate all the missed opportunities to correct a mistake, and even take vows to renew it.
Storyboarded by the West Coast’s finest, the ceiling celebrated the exploits of that most durable of action heroes—God.
He’s dead. I don’t celebrate who he was, but who he isn’t. He isn’t alive, and that is a great reason to party.
If you are reading this, I'm dead. Don't celebrate too much. Jesus is watching.
To live is to change, to acquire the words of a story, and that is the only celebration we mortals really know.
A true friend finds a way to celebrate—even in the worst moments of life—and forces it upon you.
If Congress can move President's Day, Columbus Day and, alas, Martin Luther King's Birthday celebration for the convenience of shoppers, shouldn't they at least consider moving Election Day for the convenience of voters?
If we celebrate Martin Luther King Jr.'s birthday at a time of presidential inaugurals, this is thanks to Ronald Reagan who created the holiday, and not to the Democratic Congress of the Carter years, which rejected it.
When you have a celebrity who is willing to shine his personal spotlight on the non-profit and can also speak articulately about the mission, that's really the best of both worlds.
When you're jumping, it's just an aggressiveness, but I think the exhilaration and the fun comes after you make the bar and you're falling. That's the best part - a few seconds to celebrate and relax.
It was a weird mix of emotions. One day, your best friend could be killed. The day before, you could be celebrating him getting a brand-new bike.
It's great to see that celebrities can be just like us - that they too have their highs and lows, that they don't always wake up looking their best, that they have bad habits and annoying traits.
Some people enjoy celebrity. I admire those who do, because if you're going to go through it, you might as well enjoy it.
And from that nineteen sixty four, this was my goal to go to Olympic Games. And I realized what does it mean, Olympic Games, like big celebration.