I liked the challenge of writing in a very concise structure in which both meaning and form are important.
‐‐ Jeffery Deaver
I liked the clear morality of 1941, when you had no doubt about good and evil. There was a lot of idealism, people fighting for a cause. People are searching for morality today.
‐‐ David L. Wolper
I liked the energy of cooking, the action, the camaraderie. I often compare the kitchen to sports and compare the chef to a coach. There are a lot of similarities to it.
‐‐ Todd English
I liked the fact that I was forced to get inside of my emotions and to really try to figure out a lot of what I was going through.
‐‐ Geddy Lee
I liked the fact that Lois was one person with Clark and another with Superman. I think that, as women, we do that a lot when we fall in love.
‐‐ Margot Kidder
I liked the fact that my father had a lot of expectations from my brother. I probably wanted to be that person who he could be proud of.
‐‐ Kangana Ranaut
I liked the fact that 'My Week With Marilyn' wasn't a biopic.
‐‐ Kenneth Branagh
I liked the fact that there were so many different representations of black women and black men in the movie. It wasn't like we all had the same agenda.
‐‐ Sanaa Lathan
I liked the game, I enjoyed the game, and the game fed me enough, and gave me enough rewards to reinforce that this is something that I should spend time doing, and that I could possibly make a priority in my life, versus other sports.
‐‐ Julius Erving
I liked the girly cartoons. I was very much a girly-girl.
‐‐ Kirsten Dunst
I liked the give-and-take of a policy discussion in the community, with citizens. I didn't know that even took place, frankly, but I never dreamed it would be an enjoyable thing to do.
‐‐ Tom Price
I liked 'The Help,' and I love Viola Davis. But I didn't think that film was a great film; I thought that was a very uneven film. I thought the Southern women were so caricatured that it was kind of like 'Harper Valley PTA' or something like that.
‐‐ Robert Osborne
I liked the humor of it, I've always enjoyed a sense of humor in God and in religion and in spirituality.
‐‐ Amber Tamblyn
I liked the idea of all of humanity fitting inside a sugar cube because more than 99.9% of matter is space.
‐‐ Alan Davies
I liked the idea of being a photographer, just that you take this one picture of this one thing that'll never happen again - it's a bit weird when you think about it.
‐‐ Courtney Barnett
I liked the idea of being a writer and letting somebody else do the graft.
‐‐ Siouxsie Sioux
I liked the idea of being a writer more than I liked the idea of writing.
‐‐ Alexi Zentner
I liked the idea of creating a new pop-culture, folkloric hero character that I created with 'Django' that I think's gonna last for a long time. And I think as the generations go on and everything, you know, my hope is it can be a rite of passage for black fathers and their sons. Like, when are they old enough to watch 'Django Unchained'?
‐‐ Quentin Tarantino
I liked the idea of having actual magic performed as stage magic, so you could assume that it was just a trick, that something is all smoke and mirrors, but there's that, like, feeling at the back of your mind: What if it's not?
‐‐ Erin Morgenstern
I liked the kid who wrote me that he had to do a term paper on a modern poet and he was doing me because, though they say you have to read poems twice, he found he could handle mine in one try.
‐‐ Howard Nemerov
I liked the koala, wallaby, and I chilled with a kangaroo a bit. There was a wombat that I quite enjoyed also.
‐‐ Todd Barry
I liked the military life. They teach you self-sufficiency early on. I always say that I learned most of what I know about leadership in the Marine Corps. Certain basic principles stay with you - sometimes consciously, mostly unconsciously.
‐‐ Raymond Kelly
I liked the more sophisticated urban style of blues like Ray Charles and B. B. King, Bobby Blue Bland, Lou Rawls; people like that with more of a tendency toward jazz.
‐‐ Edgar Winter
I liked the name Frederick Bickel and I wish now I had left it as it was. After all, Theodore Bikel, whose name was similar though spelled differently, didn't change his, and he did all right.
‐‐ Fredric March
I liked the name Frog Brigade because it lent itself to a lot of cool imagery with the whole frog thing.
‐‐ Les Claypool
I liked the name of the amendment. I couldn't help feeling uneasy that the church was opposing something with a name as beautiful as the Equal Rights Amendment.
‐‐ Sonia Johnson
I liked the name Saadiq and didn't want to be known as an artist as Raphael Wiggins.
‐‐ Raphael Saadiq
I liked the people at Brown, while I really disliked most of the fellow students I had met at Northwestern.
‐‐ Ira Glass
I liked the piano. I always liked playing. I just hated homework.
‐‐ Mike Shinoda
I liked the premise of this material. I love the marriage relationship. They kind of keep each other honest, and they enjoy each other's sense of humor. Kind of a sexy but boring relationship.
‐‐ Patricia Arquette
I liked The Slipper and the Rose, as I have already mentioned, because it was such a lovely film to do.
‐‐ Julie Harris
I liked the theater. I liked the people. I liked the time that we worked.
‐‐ Jeremy Irons
I liked the way they treated the first, second, and third place finishers equally. It was an amazing year. I only entered two song contests this year; I won one and placed second in the other. And I entered each of them a day or two before the deadline.
‐‐ Arthur Godfrey
I liked the whole process of creating on set. It's almost like creating magic. The work that the camera guys are doing at the same time, the lighting... all of the people working in their departments to make one thing.
‐‐ Stephanie Sigman
I liked things better when I didn't understand them.
‐‐ Bill Watterson
I liked to act in plays when I was a kid, and then in college. But that's the last time I really acted. I always loved it. But my interests were more in looking at the whole, rather than getting completely swallowed up in a single part of the whole.
‐‐ Todd Haynes
I liked to be in my own company, so when I came home from school, I'd just go up to my room and hang out by myself. I wouldn't really have friends over or go to see friends much.
‐‐ Tuppence Middleton
I liked to drive around, just playing music for everyone.
‐‐ Gia Coppola
I liked to dye my hair as a teenager. I dyed it a lot of different colours: blue, red, pink.
‐‐ Lorelei Linklater
I liked to explore different arts. But when I started acting, I knew this was the medium I want to be in for the rest of my life. Stories onscreen affect me the most.
‐‐ Moran Atias
I liked to play dress-up.
‐‐ Vanessa Paradis
I liked to read but, being a dancer, I didn't have a lot of time to read.
‐‐ Suzanne Farrell
I liked to scrapbook and collage a whole lot in high school. I'm always ripping things out of magazines, and always collecting quotes from the Internet. When I was 17, I loved AIM. I was obsessed with my buddy list!
‐‐ Jenna Ushkowitz
I liked to screw around in the kitchen when I was a kid. But I started cooking when I was 15.
‐‐ Michael Mina
I liked to think I had written 'scripts' when I was in high school, but looking back at them, they were about thirty pages of wannabe-Mamet dialogue with a staple through them.
‐‐ Lorene Scafaria
I liked to watch the expression in the fighter's face change when you connected with him. You know when you connect in the right spot. It's like a tunnel vision.
‐‐ Gerry Cooney
I liked to work in a shop down in the basement and invent things and build gadgets.
‐‐ Francis Ford Coppola
I liked to write from the time I was about 12 or 13. I loved to read. And since I only spoke to my brother, I would write down my thoughts. And I think I wrote some of the worst poetry west of the Rockies. But by the time I was in my 20s, I found myself writing little essays and more poetry - writing at writing.
‐‐ Maya Angelou
I liked Truman very much. He was precise and businesslike. After a while, it was his turn.
‐‐ Lord Mountbatten