Computers don't create computer animation any more than a pencil creates pencil animation. What creates computer animation is the artist.
Doing a movie about computers between 1978 and 1982? You can't get much less sexy, less active than that.
I can live without endless television programmes and films just centered around computers. I can sort of live without that.
Everybody jokes about that old story about the world only needing five computers, but when you think about it, that's where we're heading.
People are on their computers more than watching TV, because you can only watch voyeur TV, which is basically what reality shows are, for so long.
I had never been able to get a car that said how much I cared about the environment until I drove electric.
I'm a car singer, in fact sometimes I pretend to take my dog out for a walk, and I'll just drive him around and start singin'.
I have a car in Nebraska. When I bought it, they gave me a satellite radio, and there's an 'indie-rock' station. It's just nothing I'm interested in.
I went to junkyards, abandoned car lots. I asked supermarkets for the big jugs they put pig guts in, to make cabinets for my bass speakers.
I think we have to act like stars because it is expected of us. So we drive our big cars and live in our smart houses.
Is fuel efficiency really what we need most desperately? I say that what we really need is a car that can be shot when it breaks down.
Whenever I have bid a hasty goodbye to a loved one, I've always made sure that my record collection was safely stored away in the boot of the car.
The ought to be a worldwide cultural taskforce that just stops you when you have ideas like combining The Red Desert with an armored car heist movie.
There are a lot of Grinches out there that would like nothing better than to take any references to religion out of the holiday season.
My dad was an engineer, and he became the CEO of Chevron. His was an engineer's mind-set: Everything's kind of a problem; how do you approach the problem?
My dad always said, 'Champ, the measure of a man is not how often he is knocked down, but how quickly he gets up.'
From 1965 to 1967, my dad, Jack Gilligan, served in Congress and helped pass landmark laws like the Voting Rights Act.
You know my father as governor, as president, but I knew him as dad. I was so proud to have the Reagan name and to be Ronald Reagan's son.
I thought people would think I only wanted to be an actor because my dad was, rather than because I had an innate calling.
My dad was a big runner. Growing up, I watched him do half marathons, and he was always running six or seven miles.
It is difficult to accept death in this society because it is unfamiliar. In spite of the fact that it happens all the time, we never see it.