I suffer from the delusion that every product of my imagination is not only possible, but always on the cusp of becoming real.
And I hate to see artists who are real safe. I love to see artists swing for the fences sometimes.
I don't like games. You're robbing the precious time of children to be children. They need to be in touch with the real world more.
People want to see musicians sing things that come from their own mind and own heart in real time, responding to the moment for them.
I've always had a tomboy quality to me that I embrace and don't run away from. At the same time I'm a real girlie-girl.
There's a real moral imperative in being an organization that takes the time to sit and listen to the customers and the people they're serving.
Sometimes it is hard to sing and dance at the same time, but I would rather be off and be real and genuine about it to my fans.
Real luxury is having the time to read endless stories in bed with my children. And I get that all the time. I'm so blessed.
Now it's time to focus on basics for people in our neighborhoods... and real ethics reform at City Hall.
Real people move, they bear with them the element of time. It is this fourth dimension of people that I try to capture in a photograph.
Leaders understand that the real fight is the fight against time. There's so much to achieve in such less time.
I spend shockingly little time thinking about real-world stuff.
I had a wonderful time playing Dr. Kaufman in Tomorrow Never Dies. It was a real Bond villain, over the top, almost laughable but dangerous.
All I'm ever looking for in my work in general is honesty and truth and people being real to themselves.
I write about real people in disguise. If anything, my characters are toned down-the truth is much more bizarre.
Donnie: I made a new friend. Dr. Lilian Thurman: Real or imaginary? Donnie: Imaginary.
Alan Garner: He seemed like a real straight shooter.
Ice: [singing] Play it cool boy, real cool.
Paul Avery: Well, it looks like the real Zodiac Killer... was friendship
You can always tell you're in deep trouble when people start thinking money's real.
It doesn't take money to turn off the television and cultivate real bonding time.