My day job is making TV shows.
The time to look for a new job is when you don't need one. The time to switch jobs is before it feels comfortable.
Marketing yourself to a new person often involves being charismatic, clever and quick-but most jobs and most relationships are about being consistent, persistent and brave.
More and more people now have jobs that require them to confront the risk of appearing stupid on a regular basis.
If you do a job where someone tells you exactly what to do, they will find someone cheaper than you to do it. And yet our schools are churning out kids who are stuck looking for jobs where the boss tells them exactly what to do.
Turn strangers into friends. Turn friends into donors. And then do the most important job: Turn your donors into fundraisers.
Our job as marketers and leaders, is to create vibrant pockets, not to hunt for mass.
Are you doing work worth doing, or are you just doing your job?
If you can raise money, you're never going to have trouble getting a job.
A good job is largely anonymous and forgotten (but still important). A personal job, on the other hand, is humanized. It brings us closer together. It might not be remarkable, but it stands out as memorable because (however briefly) the recipient of the work was touched by someone else. Often, remarkable work is personal too, but personal might just be enough for today.
I have always loved horror very much. I used to write stories for DC's House of Mystery. It was one of my first jobs writing for comics, and I loved it.
Many of the American cartoonists that want to have a job and go so much for the total right without thinking, sometimes they get a slap on the face when their politician lets them down. So it goes on and on. The thing is staying in the middle and not getting committed, trying to get the best of both and do that with a sense of humor.
Fortunately, cartooning is not a job. It's something like eating or sleeping.
Tennis is my job, but it's not my life.
Winning tends to heal uneasiness and promote job security.
She was really strong around me. Having me at 16 had to have been a big responsibility. My mom gave up everything for me, had three jobs, supported me, sacrificed her life for me.
I think regular school is harder than my job. You have to deal with kids picking on you, and you wanting to look good and all this stuff. It was way too much pressure.
I have nothing bad to say about my job. I love the public, I love to talk, get to know people, everything.
I don't really plan on working a 9-to-5 job. I want to own my own business.
I'm disciplined about writing. I get up every day knowing I have to produce work. I'm less concerned about other aspects of the job, such as the prizes and promotions. Promoting my work can be awkward, unless I feel sociable enough. Prizes encourage me to work harder on my next project.
It's just fantastic to feel the speed and the braking. It was a hard work - to hold an f1 car on the circuit is a job in itself. To drive quickly is another thing. I enjoyed it.
I can't drink. I have too much to lose. I can't lose my job over something I can stop.
Most actors feel only one way. We're just grateful to have a job.
I think I would do a much better job if I had a chance to do things that were edgier than I get to do in comedies.
I did this TV show, which was my first job ever. It wasn't a real acting part. It was like this promo for this sitcom and the main actress was meeting three different real people and then she was going to decide who was going to be on the episode.