I like a mannish man: a man who knows how to talk to and treat a woman - not just a man with muscles.
You are the most influential person you will talk to all day.
I have had bullets flying at concerts, but I don't want to talk about that.
I have to work hard to be punctual, to not lose my temper, take direction and be told what to do - and most of all listen rather than talk.
Video artists being at the low end of the totem pole economically, one of the ways we survive is to go around showing work and giving these talks.
I avoid talking about the way I work. But in avoiding it I seem only to have encouraged people to focus their fantasies about me in an ever more fantastical way.
I work late at night. I'm awake and nobody bothers me. It's quiet and things come and talk to me in the silence.
There's been a lot of talk about Jack White wanting to work with me, and I've always admired him, and of course, he lives in Nashville, too.
I met Mr. Hoover socially. I never talked to him about anything connected with his work. We just met him.
I once stayed in a roach-infested hotel in Istanbul for a work trip. I had to share my room with a male model, and pointedly all we talked about was our other halves.
Throughout my journey in basketball, I always have someone to talk to in my father. I know how hard he had to work as an athlete.
Sitting down to eat in our house is about sharing, you know, talking about the day you've had, be it in school or work or whatever, so that's very important to us.
I think it's bad to talk about one's present work, for it spoils something at the root of the creative act. It discharges the tension.
You can ask me anything you like about my work, but I'll never talk about myself.
I have absolutely no concept of work, except for university. But I like to talk to people a lot about their jobs.
I wish it was possible to do the work and not have to talk about it, but it is traditional in the theater to go into the village square and bang the drum and say, 'Come see this show, come see this show.'
I wonder if novels work for women because they give us a safe place to talk about our ish.
I feel the feminist movement has excluded black women. You cannot talk about being black and a woman within traditional feminist dialogue.
Women have to be active listeners and interrupters - but when you interrupt, you have to know what you are talking about.
A women knows how to keep quiet when she is in the right, whereas a man, when he is in the right, will keep on talking.
And what always struck me about that war period was how even Churchill had to talk socialism to keep up people's morale.