Comedy clubs were something that came to pass in the '80s, but toward the end of that, in the early '90s, people started doing comedy again in alternative spaces.
When you take away the phone and e-mail and you don't have a million things to run around to, it allows your mind the space to think more expansively about the things that matter.
Any thought that goes against your happiness or progress surely doesn't deserve a space in your mind.
If there is enough space on radio for Busted and McFly, who are basically the same band, or for 50,000 versions of Stereophonics and Coldplay, there must be enough room for all of us.
Many people in this world are still so identified with every thought that arises in their head. There is not the slightest space of awareness there.
Disneyland is supposed to be the happiest place on Earth and I have to say when I'm riding around in that crazy Space Mountain ride I'm happy.
Preserving parks and open spaces is a winner because it doesn't need to be explained to everyday Americans.
And always embrace things, people earth sky stars, as I do, freely and with the appropriate sense of space.
I feel like there's a lot of noise in the social space. The Vines and Instagrams of the world are gaining traction, and their solutions are perfect for their communities.
The Twilight Zone' wasn't around with the kids. They think going up in space is neat. Within their lifetime, there will be paying passengers on the shuttle.
If there's a criticism of 'Cassadaga' that I agreed with, it's that we left things in the oven too long, that songs were overstuffed, with too many ideas competing for space.
Profound subject matter can be encompassed in small space - for proof, look at any sonnet by Shakespeare!
“There is a space between man's [sic] imagination and man's [sic] attainment that may only be traversed by his longing.” ― Khalil Gibran [sick]
Absolute space, that is to say, the mark to which it would be necessary to refer the earth to know whether it really moves, has no objective existence.
The launch of a space shuttle can still make you weep with amazement and wonder, if you happen to be watching it.
After being boxed in by man and his constructions in Europe and the East, the release into space is exhilarating. The horizon is a huge remote circle, and no hills intervene.
I firmly believe in what Stephen Hawking says - that if we don't get off this planet, we're going to go berserk. We have to have more space.
I do strive to find projects that are trying to carve out some new space. I enjoy projects that leap away from the crowd a little bit.
In the army you feel violated - there's no private space. Writing was a life-saver, a way of recovering private territory.
What you lose in blindness is the space around you, the place where you are, and without that you might not exist. You could be nowhere at all.
Simply by living in this particular time and space, you're doing something nearly 100% of all other humans ever never could. Don't waste it.