The writer's greed is appalling. He wants, or seems to want, everything and practically everybody, in another sense, and at the same time, he needs no one at all.
Hildy Johnson: [to Walter] Listen to me, you great big bubble-headed baboon!
Bill Johnson: It's just... where am I going to see colors like that?
Alan Johnson: I was stuck in Charlie world, I couldn't leave.
If you're not out front defining your vision, your opponent will spend gobs of money to define it for you.
For me, you've got to play football first. We're not trying to be accountants. The money takes care of itself. That's kind of how I think anyway.
Offer someone the opportunity to rebuild a company or reinvent an industry as the primary incentive, and it will attract those drawn to the challenge first and the money second.
When I create an image that helps someone - even just myself - find peace, then I've attained my goal.
I believe the old boys' network is a powerful one. No one gives up power and privilege willingly, do they?
I just want the same thing Joe Montana got when he was MVP. He got respect. He got commercials. He got everything.
I have a lot of respect for countries where the practice of democracy is highly developed. I think, however, that each country has to have its own specific features of democracy.
You should be able to voice your opinion and respect the voice of the other side. You should be willing to educate yourself and know what it is you're dealing with.
I think I have a certain respect for people, you know. And I guess a lot of times I expect that respect to go both ways.
If the IAAF feel that is the right way to go for TV rights and everything, the rule will stay. As much as I want to be on the podium, tonight is a sad night for athletics.
Of course, in our grade school, in those days, there were no organized sports at all. We just went out and ran around the school yard for recess.
If I weren't earning $3 million a year to dunk a basketball, most people on the street would run in the other direction if they saw me coming.
When I came to America in 1978, I was a huge sports fan - the problem was, my sport was cricket. Shockingly enough, no one wanted to talk cricket with me!
When did I know I had talent? I think it started when I first started playing sports, organized sports.
I have strong interests in supporting sport, primarily football, and also in developing cultural relationships within national communities and their diasporas, with special reference to Ethiopia.
Sport allows us to engage in dialogue and to build bridges, and it may even have the capacity to reshape international relations. The Olympic Games embody perfectly this universal mission.
As a result of Title IX, and a new generation of parents who want their daughters to have the opportunities they never had, women's sports have arrived.