Bylines Quotes & Sayings
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Top Bylines Quotes

After all, it wasn't science that had transformed the world, but the marriage of technology and capitalism. The ignorant might blame science for the ills and evils of the modern era, but that was a case of mistaken identity - no research scientist had ever polluted a water table with a PCB, or performed a third-trimester abortion, or denied someone insurance based on a genetic screening, or turned the Internet into a covert way of peering into private lives. Real scientists were invisible outside their own circle of peers. Even Nobel Prize recipients barely registered on the public consciousness, as Brohier well knew. A Heisman Trophy or an Oscar counted for far more - there was no market for Heroes of Science trading cards. Status was still measured in arcane units: bylines, citations, appointments, grants. — Arthur C. Clarke

If I quake, what matters it what I quake at? Our proper vice takes form in one or another shape, according to the sex, age, or temperament of the person, and, if we are capable of fear, will readily find terrors. — Ralph Waldo Emerson

When everyone is famous, no one will be famous. — Michael P. Naughton

Pumps on and them little mini skirts is up. I see some good girls, Imma turn em out. — Nicki Minaj

The road to success is often paid with so many sacrifices. — Abdulazeez Henry Musa

In this world, you only get what you grab for. — Giovanni Boccaccio

You cannot prove your worth by bylines and busyness. — Katelyn S. Bolds

Reality is to be found in lightness and darkness. — Pablo Picasso

It's a big gift to be recognizable as part of something that matters to people, but that's not the same as being responsible for something. — Gloria Steinem

He has a wonderful beauty and stillness and you do not. Your poems are unpleasant. — Len Jenkin

Existence itself is nothing if not an amazement. Good poems restore amazement. — Jane Hirshfield

The byline is a replacement for many other things, not the least of them money. If someone ever does a great psychological profile of journalism as a profession, what will be apparent will be the need for gratification - if not instant, then certainly relatively immediate. Reporters take sustenance from their bylines; they are a reflection of who you are, what you do, and why, to an uncommon degree, you exist ... A journalist always wonders: If my byline disappears, have I disappeared as well? — David Halberstam

Trust me, there is no formula for most things that are not math. — Daniel Pinkwater