When I was a kid I never knew the difference between a sitcom and a drama. I just knew what my parents were watching and what was making them happy.
I used to have terrible tantrums. I was temperamental when I was younger. Actually, what I needed was a swift kick in the pants. What a brat!
Watch what people do before they say something. Then watch what they do before they say something else. That's where the Truth Lies.
So your emotional state really has a lot to do with what you're thinking about and what you're paying attention to.
Because that's what intimacy is: It's a willingness to be vulnerable, a willingness to bite my tongue and a willingness to set an example of what I believe in.
Keep an eye on what your kids are seeing online. Parents need to stay involved in what their children are being exposed to. It's so important.
You don't just have a story - you're a story in the making, and you never know what the next chapter's going to be. That's what makes it exciting.
It's a waste of energy to think about what somebody else is doing and how they doing it. I'ma just do what I do.
Find what is beautiful in a person and appreciate it. Ignore what is wrong. Everyone has divine beauty but underneath can be a hidden diabolical ego.
If you are doing what you love to do and on the way helping the humanity, then you are a success.
Become major, Paul. Live like a hero. That's what the classics teach us. Be a main character. Otherwise what is life for?
They're pretty particular about what they show. They certainly edit the scripts and have conversations with the writers about what they are and aren't willing to portray. But the writers and the network are pretty much on the same page.
I've never been a depressive, but I felt quite close to the edge at times. But you never know what's around the corner. Mercifully, what's around the corner is joy.
That adage about 'Write what you know' is basically the opposite of the way I function. I write about what I'm curious to find out.
For me, being a woman suits what I want to talk about and what my audience wants to hear. Maybe I'm a dying breed.
What I feel I am doing now is giving to the people exactly what they paid for but never actually heard before.
Most marriages recognize this paradox: Passion destroys passion; we want what puts an end to wanting what we want.
What you do is more important than how much you make, and how you feel about it is more important than what you do.
Political conflicts distort and disturb a people's sense of distinction between matters of importance and matters of urgency. What is vital is disguised by what is merely a matter of well being.
What you do makes a difference, and you have to decide what kind of difference you want to make.
No man can be a politician, except he be first a historian or a traveller; for except he can see what must be, or what may be, he is no politician.