Quotes & Sayings About Friends Crossing Paths
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Top Friends Crossing Paths Quotes

Whatever makes you laugh is fine, and all we can do as comedy professionals is try to steer you towards something that we think is a little better - but not put you down or just perplex you in the process. — Paul Feig

I think the greatest records we've ever heard, from Zeppelin to Purple to Sabbath to The Who, were all recorded in the studio live. — Glenn Hughes

Grace? Are you tipsy? (Selena)
Maybe just comfortably toasty. Pop tart toasty. (Grace) — Sherrilyn Kenyon

I think that film is still an artform and it doesn't really matter if you're using a digital camera or a film camera. — Vilmos Zsigmond

The new always carries with it the sense of violation, of sacrilege. What is dead is sacred; what is new, that is different, is evil, dangerous, or subversive. — Henry Miller

Star Wars, the original movie, was all the various old genre of pictures: the swashbucklers, the war movies, all those things were put n there in a different look. — Bruce Boxleitner

But why should I run for office and lose what little influence I have? — Ron Silver

You can only push the truth down for so long, and then it bubbles back up. — Cassandra Clare

And okay, fair enough, but there is this unwritten contract between author and reader and I think not ending your book kind of violates that contract. — John Green

I've been good about keeping my nose to the grindstone. — Andy Roddick

Patriotism is racism for the modern era. — Michelle Templet

I find it fascinating that sport has such a strong connection to success in business. Arguably, C-suite women are some of the most successful women, and more than half of them played at a more advanced level than just the general population of women in business that had sport in their background. — Beth Brooke

Mathematics is principally a tool to meditate, rather than to compute. — Nassim Nicholas Taleb

As long as one believes in philosophy, one is healthy; sickness begins when one starts to think. — Emil Cioran

All fear of 'offensive' speech is bourgeois and reactionary. Historically, profane or bawdy language was common in both the upper and the lower classes, who lived together in rural areas amid the untidy facts of nature. Notions of propriety and decorum come to the fore in urbanized periods ruled by an expanding middle class, which is obsessed with cleanliness, respectability, and conformism. — Camille Paglia