I don't tan on my upper thighs, so when I first wore those [ cut-off jean short shorts] I look like I was walking on two cans of milk.
If you read a label and just look up the ingredients, you'll be able to figure out really easily what's good for you and what's bad.
People ask me questions like, "Oh, you look so theatrical in your photographs. Is that what you're like when you walk down the street?" It's like, "Of course not." It's such a silly question - it's like being theatrical is a crime.
My town's quite small and you kinda recognize everyone when you see them, so I definitely get funny looks from people.
When I look at great works of art or listen to inspired music, I sense intimate portraits of the specific times in which they were created.
Did you ever reach a point in your life, where you say to yourself, 'This is the best I'm ever going to look, the best I'm ever going to feel, the best I'm ever going to do,' and it ain't that great?
I want to be able to look back and think that as long as I was going this, I did the best that I could.
I look at other members of my generation who have basically done one thing, and one thing well, and have been handsomely rewarded for it.
I think the ears are a strange look for me. Quite big. But I loved the hair down to my shoulders. It felt right. I'm thinking of letting my hair go.
The thing about a motion picture is that look of film on a big screen takes you into a magical.
Of course, REAL zombies never get the giggles when they look at each other.
[Calvin and Hobbes are playing Scrabble] Calvin: Ha! I've got a great word and it's on a "Double word score" box! Hobbes: "ZQFMGB" isn't a word! It doesn't even have a vowel! Calvin: It is so a word! It's a worm found in New Guinea! Everyone knows that! Hobbes: I'm looking it up. Calvin: You do, and I'll look up that 12-letter word you played with all the Xs and Js! Hobbes: What's your score for ZQFMGB? Calvin: 957.
Even when you look for it, you're never prepared for it.
Like Godfather, you look at a movie like that, or something that James Gray has directed, a film with minimal or pin lighting as opposed to everything being lit bright and flat, where everything is evident
So I look at a lot of stuff now that I did and some of it looks tame to me, but my interest in terms of what I want to say with it is a little different
Look, I debate for a living so I don't need to learn any lessons from amateurs.
I am a fan of rehearsal. I like doing it [scene] over and over and over and over until it looks like you never did it before.
I love imaginative representations of a possible near-future, where you look at the technology and you think, "Well, yeah, that could really nearly be true." I like those kinds of backgrounds.
If I'm going to appear in front of people I like to look my best.
Look - every time is the wrong time and the perfect time to have a kid, and you just do it when you can.
The truth can be hard to take, but we have an obligation to look and see what's going on, and, if we don't like it, a chance to stop going along with it. This important film provides precisely that insight and that opportunity.
If you can look at a crime where everything points to one answer and not see it, you're a dumb-ass. And if you can look at the deficit and not see that the problem is that the rich stopped paying taxes, you're a Republican.
Rick Santorum said this week that his 12-year-old could out-reason me about God. Look, I am not about to debate a home-schooled 12-year-old. I have enough trouble with Sarah Palin.
Republicans look to find the future and they find radio.
If it looks good, it will fly good.