Booksellers are the most valuable destination for the lonely, given the numbers of books that were written because authors couldn't find anyone to talk to.
In my screenplays - from the very beginning I've always used tape. I talk my screenplays. And then have somebody transcribe them.
The more I like a book, the more slowly I read. this spontaneous talking back to a book is one of the things that makes reading so valuable.
A bad liver is to a Frenchman what a nervous breakdown is to an American. Everyone has had one and everyone wants to talk about it.
The General Strike has taught the working class more in four days than years of talking could have done.
...stories want to be told. Stories have a power of their own ... you can't write a story until you've felt it. Breathed it in. Walked with your characters. Talked with them.
Real optimism is not the pep talk you give yourself. It is earned through the labor involved in emotional housekeeping.
You're absolutely right: Bob Grant is a racist, Bob Grant is a bigot, he's a despicable talk show host and I agree with that.
It's really not fun to have seen a movie that you want to talk about, and you can't find anyone else who's seen it.
You can talk about Holocaust denial, but it's really marginal for the most part. What is compelling about the Armenian genocide, is how it has been forgotten.
Every boy needs a role model that he can be proud of and talk about to the other kids in the playground.
If nobody said anything unless he knew what he was talking about, a ghastly hush would descend upon the earth.
There's nothing worse than having everybody thinking alike, talking alike and having the same direction in mind. It gets stale that way.
It's important to talk about loving yourself and looking at your tragedies and the stuff that makes you grow.
We all sing about the things we're thinking; musicals are about expressing those emotions that you can't talk about. It works a real treat.
Gee, I'm sorry I didn't hear you in all this rain. Go ahead in, please." Anthony Perkin's Norman Bates Talking To Janet Leigh's Marion Crane.
When you lose, there is a whole bunch of room for negativity and I don't feed into this stuff and I do not do any talking. I don't run my mouth.
When we make the show, we are always talking about how the show is really in between what we make and what the viewer thinks of it.
We'll have these people hang out with us while we're doing our touring, and talk to them and let them speak their piece to the world.
The best thing to learn from any government is that it does not get affacted by what other people talk or think about it.
People want to talk about whether I have rock cred, whether I'm selling out, the theatricality, the gay stuff... Chill out! And just enjoy yourself.