My wife Neelam is a North Indian, so she will make North Indian food, while my mother will make Bengali food.
We're all in trouble, and we all need to sort of pick up the pieces and start to exercise more and really be careful with the food.
Neither does man have gills for living in a water environment; yet it is not sinful to explore the depths of the oceans in search of food or other blessings.
It's always been something I've been searching for - freedom. It's a very relative thing. It means different things to different people.
There's a hell of a lot of freedom in this rock and roll circus... it's where all the freaks go - it's the environment for me.
As an artist you actually do have to make a choice to be an outsider. If you're an outsider you have the freedom to say what people on the inside don't dare to say.
European films were what it was about for me - the sensations I needed, the depth, the storytelling, the characters, the directors, and the freedom that you can't really find in American films.
I've returned to being an amateur without any ties or strings attached, which gives me a freedom I never had before.
They say that structure is freedom, and in a sense it is. When you're dealing with multiple constraints, you have to figure out what you can get out of that.
I'm a multidimensional person and that's the freedom of fashion: that you're able to reinvent yourself through how you dress and how you cut your hair or whatever.
I wasn't a woman who stayed tiny like I thought I would. I definitely gave myself the freedom to eat what I wanted.
I'd read up on the history of our country and I'd become fascinated with the story of the Alamo. To me it represented the fight for freedom, not just in America, but in all countries.
In spirituals, the talk of heaven and deliverance was code for a better life. 'Crossing the River Jordan' was code, of course, for escaping to freedom.
I believe that freedom of speech and freedom of religion go hand-in-hand in America.
Under my contract with Capitol, I have complete freedom to do just about anything I want in my own way.
I'm not really afraid of somebody who's very politically vocal. My mother is very strong, and I really believe in freedom of speech.
Georgian England was very radical; there were all these new revolutionary ideas, and I think women had more freedom than they did later on.
Our founding fathers could not have foreseen that freedom of the press might eventually be threatened just as much by media consolidation as by government.
The idea of working with Steven Spielberg was very attractive. He's such a master. He knows the language of the camera and of filmmaking, which gives him a great freedom.
The whole 'bad girl' thing allows me to mess up sometimes. And I have freedom to say more of what I want to.
At the heart of the failure of most plays is the inability to carry on a thoughtful conversation about your work with yourself.