Keller Dover: Someone has to make him talk or they're gonna die!
Frank Serpico: How come all your friends are on their way to bein' someone else?
Marie: Someone is staring at you in "personal growth".
When you've got the money, you spend it. When you've spent it all, let someone else get going and spend theirs.
If someone paid me a million dollars to drink a glass of milk, I wouldn't do it; maybe that's because I don't need the money.
The money can be a hindrance to someone like me because the danger is that you start thinking, 'Is that a $20 million take?' That kind of thing, and being self-critical.
As a society we're always so quick and able to spend money on lawyers for someone for incarceration, but we don't make the corresponding commitment to the preventative components of it.
A white male Mormon millionaire was not gonna beat Ted Kennedy in Massachusetts, but someone deserved to go out there and give him a real run for his money.
If you could replace high-school yearbooks, that could be a lot of money. It's so clearly waiting for someone to come along.
Offer someone the opportunity to rebuild a company or reinvent an industry as the primary incentive, and it will attract those drawn to the challenge first and the money second.
The nature of honesty is that if someone has information or knows something about you that you don't want heard, then they have power over you.
I think people are isolated because of the nature of human consciousness, and they like it when they feel the connection between themselves and someone else.
When I create an image that helps someone - even just myself - find peace, then I've attained my goal.
If you want to provoke, you should provoke someone who is stronger than you, otherwise you are misusing your power.
I like it when someone gives me a new book of poetry by a poet I haven't read.
I'm a modern Muslim. I pray, and if I have a question, I ask someone who is more educated in the religion than me.
I'm an awfully loyal friend. Once I've started a relationship with someone, it's like they are syrup and I'm a pancake. Their syrup gets into my pancake, so to speak.
And they like being able to turn on the television day in and day out to see someone that they know and they feel comfortable with and trust hopefully and respect even.
Apart from the fact that your physical ability starts to decline, I also think someone in their fifties being childlike becomes a little sad. You've got to be careful.
Someone once accused me of being like Eliot Ness. I sad no sir, I'm not E.N., but I can promise you that I'm not Al Capone!
Giving back is the right thing to do, whether it's donating clothing or even just a smile to someone who needs it.