In Japan, I focus mostly on sending messages through Twitter, trying to spread my minority way of thinking.
'St. Trinian's' is probably taking it to the extreme, but in essence it's saying, 'If you be yourself, you can do whatever you want,' and it's sort of a fun message.
Everything I do is going to contain the message that men who are going to be comfortable with powerful women are going to be more powerful men
My message to Washington is very simple. Face reality. Be leaders. Demonstrate accountability. Engage in principle compromise. And understand your job is to find solutions.
I think if a story has a message it should be incidental and accidental, otherwise it leans too close to indoctrination.
My message isn't perfectly defined. I have, as a human being, fallen to peer pressure.
So many of my books, I don't want to say they have messages, but they have important things to say.
I think pop culture underestimates people. The message is, 'Being yourself is the worst thing you could possibly be.' But people are still attracted to it.
In-N-Out Burger has a well-known and long standing reputation as a corporation that is operated with a Christian message and philosophy.
The message from national security experts and citizens around the world is clear: The only way to eliminate the global nuclear danger is to eliminate all nuclear weapons.
Understand your audience and you will understand the impact of your message on each follower in your social media networks.
An artist is someone who should raise questions rather than give answers. I have no message.
The gospel is entirely a message about what someone else has done not only for me but also for the renewal of the whole creation.
Everybody is living for a purpose, you might turn out to be significant or insignificant depending on the kind of message you are feeding the world with.
And I have a message for the liberals and the defenders of the status quo: we're just getting started.
I've got a presence on all the social networks, in fact, but I've never once sent a message. I'm there because otherwise, someone's going to pretend to be me.
If you see the sunset, does it have to mean something? If you hear the birds singing does it have to have a message?
There were two and only two messages that could have been comprehended by what he said. But neither of them was soothing; neither of them was a lie.
You want to be understood by the sophisticated few but you also have to be more loud somehow, otherwise your message doesn't go through.
Sometimes a picture could not deliver the substance of why it is captured, but a picture with a friend can easily present different messages, but it depends on facial expression.
Sometimes I just rely on technique on stage, but it's not about technique. It's about how much you want to deliver the message to the audience. That's all.