No period of my life has been one of such unmixed happiness as the four years which have been spent within college walls.
I've been through a lot. I've thought a lot about life, and I've spent a lot of time studying history and science.
A trillion dollars spent, 2,000 American lives lost - Afghanistan is the longest war in American history. But you don't hear a word about it.
When I was nine I spent a lot of my time reading books about the history of comedy, or listening to the Goons or Hancock, humour from previous generations.
It seems to me I spent my life in car pools, but you know, that's how I kept track of what was going on.
I spent my entire first pay cheque from 'Cracker,' a TV show on ABC, on an Audi because my other car broke down and I needed to get to work.
I spent years working in low-budget horror films. When you've done 'Cannibal Women in the Avocado Jungle of Death,' you can handle anything!
'Sweet Dreams' is such a dark-sounding song, but it's about not taking anything for granted; share yourself with others after you have first spent some time with yourself.
If I had spent as much time in the weight room as I did designing football uniforms, I probably would have had a free college education.
I spent six years in Bible study because I needed to get grounded. People really need to spend time in the Bible getting to know the God they claim to love.
I certainly have a sliver of me, which is definitely American, and feels a great pull towards where I spent time when I was very young, which is in California.
I spent most of high school working on the debate team, probably at some expense to my grades. Being a member of the team was great training in critical analysis, organization, and logic.
It's great to have something to dress up for. You know, I spent three years in slacks at drama school, so now I like putting a dress on.
Life doesn't offer you promises whatsoever so it's very easy to become, 'Whatever happened to... ?' It's great to be wanted. I spent a few years not being wanted and this is better.
The years I spent paying my dues are in the background, and so are my concerns about whether my performance is good or bad.
John Baldessari, the 79-year-old conceptualist, has spent more than four decades making laconic, ironic conceptual art-about-art, both good and bad.
If your government had given me a thousandth of the sum it spent to depose me, I could have won that war.
We need more transparency and accountability in government so that people know how their money is being spent. That means putting budgets online, putting legislation online.
I've spent a lot of time researching the subject and government deception. So to be involved in Star Trek is perfect for me. I enjoy meeting the fans and discussing my interests with them.
I was raised by a single psychologist mother and we spent every evening sitting at the kitchen table and dissecting our emotions and speculating about the inner life of everyone we knew.
I'm passionate about people. I've spent my life in advocacy. People matter - whether or not we agree on the issue, people matter.