I'd say there are two kinds of theater: one you end with an answer, one you end with a question.
Often I used my gut instinct to ask the questions and get the answers I thought the audience wanted to hear. Sometimes the interviewees said things that surprised even them.
And my heart is breaking My heart is lying on the floor in a pool of tears I keep asking the same questions only to have them unanswered
Some other things I don't miss: the media and the pressure of just being asked to do, and being asked questions every day.
You mustn't always believe what I say. Questions tempt you to tell lies, particularly when there is no answer.
I question what emotion Manilow touches. People are entertained by him. But are they emotionally moved? I don't believe anything that Barry Manilow sings.
I'm not gonna name names, but sometimes when reporters are talking, it gets a little boring because I don't have any jokes to tell because the questions are so serious.
God is like a search engine — He is willing to answer your requests, but you must ask Him the right questions.
Every generation has to ask difficult questions about what does it mean to follow Jesus.
Most Tea Party activists consider Obama a big-spending liberal. Some even question his eligibility to be president.
The question is whether voters, particularly independents, believe that Obama truly values personal liberty and responsibility as much as the government-bought safety net.
I loved being asked 2,000 questions a day, storyboarding every move, knowing as though by instinct exactly where the camera had to be, because it was my story.
I got interested in the question of literacy because writers are always moaning about why more people don't read books.
If you want to be a cop, it's not for everybody, no question about it, but there's no place like New York City.
People say 'I want to be rich'. The question is, 'Are you willing to do what it takes?'
It's interesting because a lot of people that stop me on the street now, and they talk about 'The Wire,' and they all have the same question: 'How come they took that show off the air?'
Everybody has 24 hours and the question is, what do you do with your 24 hours? That's what makes everybody equal.
And the big question for the West, of course, and to the Europeans is, what other countries, which were formerly part of the Soviet bloc, should be incorporated into western institutions?
I am just a child who has never grown up. I still keep asking these 'how' and 'why' questions. Occasionally, I find an answer.
Questions of absolute good and evil are much better not opened to public debate these days, when so few people are sure of their absolutes
What you do in this world is a matter of no consequence, the question is what you can make people believe that you have done.