My friends call me Clark Kent: I'm known to change in phone booths.
I listen to the phone-ins on the way home and I know how the fans feel.
I literally change my phone number 10 times a year and I don't ever save my contacts.
If I leave my phone in the car and go to dinner or something for a few hours, I'm very proud of myself.
I lost my dad way too early and it was agonisingly awful. I missed him so much and I hated knowing that I could never again pick up the phone to tell him about my day.
People say that I could sing the phone book and make it sound good.
I've certainly not got any famous people's numbers on my phone. It's just not my thing, really.
I try not to live my life on my phone or my social media pages.
I love 'Breaking Bad.' I'd watch Bryan Cranston read the phone book, for days.
I used to like doing karaoke until cell-phone cameras came along.
It's always tough for me to make a movie, and then sit on an airplane and watch somebody watch it on their phone.
When a girl finally texts me back, that ding on the phone is like an angel singing.
Dropbox is useful to anyone with a phone. That's, like, two billion people.
Don't use the phone. People are never ready to answer it. Use poetry.
Rufus T. Firefly: [on the phone] Get me headquarters. Not hindquarters, headquarters!
Marge Gunderson: [on lobby phone, asking advice about a restaurant] Is it reasonable?
Jimmy Serrano: Is this moron number one? Put moron number two on the phone.
Dr. Alice Howland: Help me find my phone.
I know most people use their phones to tell time, but there's something very romantic and beautiful about a timepiece.
Mobile phones play a really wonderful role in enabling civil society. As well as empowering people economically and socially, they are a wonderful political tool.
For me, there is no day or night for music. I often work through the night - without phone calls disturbing me.