The Customer: Are you as bored of that crowd as I am? The Salesman: I didn't come here for the party... I came here for you.
Marv: [Narrating] I've been having so much fun I forgot to take my medicine.
[from trailer] Jack Rafferty: Come on get in the car baby, we'll just talk it'd be nice. [pulls gun]
Cardinal Roark: [holding Kevin's head before Marv kills him] We're going home, Kevin.
John Hartigan: I'm looking for Nancy Callahan. Shellie: Eyes to the stage, pilgrim. She's just warming up.
Sean Parker: We lived on farms, then we lived in cities, and now we're going to live on the internet!
Travis Bickle: I think someone should just take this city and just... just flush it down the fuckin' toilet.
Cochise: When you're president of the biggest gang in the city, you don't have to take any shit. Ajax: Ah, fuck him!
I know the Federal Reserve Bank can continue to print more and more money... but city and state governments cannot.
People in cities may forget the soil for as long as a hundred years, but Mother Nature's memory is long and she will not let them forget indefinitely.
I'd quite like to have one place where I stay put. And I don't like living in cities all the time. In order to have ideas, you have to have some peace and quiet.
You can't have a relationship when you're shooting a 14-hour day and your husband is shooting a 14-hour day in the same city. It's a time thing and it's a together thing.
When I was 23, I founded an organization called Dress for Success, which is now in more than 100 cities in 8 countries and has helped a million women transition from welfare to work.
When I was 14 or 15, our teacher introduced us to Dickens' 'A Tale of Two Cities.' It was just for entertainment - we read it aloud - and all of a sudden it became a treasure.
All of the books in the world contain no more information than is broadcast as video in a single large American city in a single year. Not all bits have equal value.
I love seeing what people wear out to dinner in different cities. I know how differently I dress in New York than I do in Los Angeles.
I liked Berkeley tremendously, Berkeley was a very leftist campus. I came to love that city as much as I love Paris or the south of France or New York.
I'm not a DJ - I don't know how to scratch or mix records, but I know how to party, and I know music. I grew up in Philly; it's a very musical city. My house was full of music.
I admire Tom Ades: he's a brilliant conductor, and he gets just the right hard, brilliant sound from the City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra for Russian music.
That would be awesome, to be totally making records whenever I want and to play a show and have a few hundred thousand people there at any city you go to because people know you and your music.
When I'm on tour, I'm in a new city every single night, and the energy and the crowds and the kids and the screaming and them knowing every single word of my music and being onstage is such an energetic feeling with a big payoff.