In L.A., though, people get off busses calling themselves actors, so many are really not professionals.
‐‐ John Ratzenberger
In L.A., unless you've just won an Oscar or you're Mr. Studio Head, no one talks to you. Even at parties.
‐‐ Rachel Weisz
In L.A., we had a game room with a new sensation called Pac-Man.
‐‐ Mary Lou Retton
In L.A., we have a saying - 'What do you do?' It's less of a question and more of a self-defense mechanism for wayward screenwriters looking to slip you a first draft, or the occasional actor looking to get in on the latest shoot. But I hate the question because of my own answer - I write about games.
‐‐ Rob Manuel
In L.A., wives can fly on the plane; with the Yankees, they can't. With other teams, the wives always have functions to bring them together. Not here. You don't know what half the wives look like.
‐‐ Gary Sheffield
In L.A., you can put out a craft-service table anywhere, and it's no big deal. But in New York, people who walk by it on the street get really angry about it.
‐‐ Bruce Eric Kaplan
In L.A., you constantly go on auditions, and you're usually not what they're looking for - you get used to going back and back to the same show, and nothing happens.
‐‐ Nathan Parsons
In L.A. you hear all these stories of people being filmed in their own homes through their windows. I think that is so scary.
‐‐ Freida Pinto
In L.A., you just kind of come and have a nice hiking-yoga-gym life.
‐‐ Darren Star
In L.A., you seem to meet only one sort of person.
‐‐ Amanda Eliasch
In L.A., you tend to see a lot of people do very bizarre things. I love it.
‐‐ Natasha Leggero
In L.A., you work like hell because there is nothing else to do, unless you're cheating on your wife.
‐‐ Howard Fast
In LA, I live on sushi or salad.
‐‐ Denise Van Outen
In LA, I mean, here's this place full of desperate and sad people who take their only pleasure from destroying others for the purposes of their own self-aggrandizement.
‐‐ Heather Donahue
In LA I was watching At the Movies with Ebert and Roper, it was, nice to see them differentiate between the subject matter and the art form of making the film, and they both gave it thumbs up, and I was kind of pleased at their honesty as far as reviewers go.
‐‐ Michael Berryman
In LA, too many people want to go the quickest route from A to B. Method acting offers them that.
‐‐ Corin Nemec
In LA, where I live, it's all about perfectionism. Beauty is now defined by your bones sticking out of your decolletage. For that to be the standard is really perilous for women.
‐‐ Alanis Morissette
In large commercial cities, the money power is, I fear irresistible. It is not by open corruption that it always, or even most generally, operates.
‐‐ Roger B. Taney
In large families, it seems it is hardest to be either the first or the last child. That was certainly true in ours.
‐‐ Katharine Graham
In large organizations there are discrete functions. I do this; you do that. I swim in my lane; you swim in your lane. That can be very effective for certain processes and in certain stable conditions. But it doesn't work in unstable conditions.
‐‐ Daniel H. Pink
In large part, thanks to widespread immunization, the number of young children dying each year has declined significantly, from approximately 14 million in 1979 to slightly less than eight million in 2010.
‐‐ Seth Berkley
In large states public education will always be mediocre, for the same reason that in large kitchens the cooking is usually bad.
‐‐ Friedrich Nietzsche
In larger things we are convivial; what causes trouble is the trivial.
‐‐ Richard Armour
In Las Vegas, the magnitude is impressive, but the humanity is gone. It feels like you're being intimidated out of your money instead of inviting you to come have this experience.
‐‐ Eric Whitacre
In 'Last to Die,' three children living in different cities are the only survivors when their families are slaughtered. Two years later, their foster families are murdered, and these three orphans are once again the only survivors.
‐‐ Tess Gerritsen
In last year's local elections in Manchester a third of those who voted did so by post. It's not just that people are choosing to get postal votes, but having one makes it much more likely that they'll vote.
‐‐ Lucy Powell
In late 2001, I contributed a short story called 'Castaways' to an anthology called 'In Laymon's Terms,' which was a tribute to Richard Laymon, who had passed away earlier that year.
‐‐ Brian Keene
In late 2003, the Bush administration reversed a long-standing policy requiring agents to destroy their files on innocent American citizens, companies and residents when investigations closed.
‐‐ Barton Gellman
In late 2009, I returned to Baghdad after a lengthy absence. I was living alone, in the Hamra Hotel, the twice bombed-out de facto international news bureau.
‐‐ Michael Hastings
In later life, we don't easily talk of fears, but instead we discuss our 'concerns.' Fear seems too primal and hysterical, but concern is polite and intellectual and nicely under control.
‐‐ Michael Leunig
In later years, I craved foods that were almost always fattening.
‐‐ Gene Tierney
In Latin America, even atheists are Catholics.
‐‐ Carlos Fuentes
In Latin America in general, it's very important that Christianity not be simply a thing of reason, but also of the heart.
‐‐ Pope Benedict XVI
In Latin America, specialists and polling organisations have, for some time, observed that the extension of formal democracy was accompanied by an increasing disillusionment about democracy and a lack of faith in democratic institutions.
‐‐ Noam Chomsky
In Latin America, women are supposed to be voluptuous. They don't believe that you have to be skinny to be attractive.
‐‐ Sofia Vergara
In Latin America, you don't do things for the money because there is no money.
‐‐ Gael Garcia Bernal
In Latino culture, the quinceanera's a big thing - it's when a girl becomes a woman. But I think age is just a number - you become a woman with the responsibilities you take on and the decisions you make. I started realizing that every day is a gift - you have every day to be thankful you're alive.
‐‐ Emily Rios
In laughter we always find an unavowed intention to humiliate and consequently to correct our neighbour.
‐‐ Henri Bergson
In 'Laurence Anyways,' Nathalie Baye is Laurence's mother, and she is quite an awful mother. Still, she is the only one in the end who truly accepts her daughter.
‐‐ Xavier Dolan
In law a man is guilty when he violates the rights of others. In ethics he is guilty if he only thinks of doing so.
‐‐ Immanuel Kant
In law, as in every other branch of knowledge, the truths given by induction tend to form the premises for new deductions. The lawyers and the judges of successive generations do not repeat for themselves the process of verification any more than most of us repeat the demonstrations of the truths of astronomy or physics.
‐‐ Benjamin N. Cardozo
In law, nothing is certain but the expense.
‐‐ Samuel Butler
In law, one's sense of calling or vocation will lead one to be interested in certain dimensions of Constitutional law.
‐‐ Ken Starr
In 'Law & Order,' your main job is to stay out of the way of the plot. On another show you'd receive your script and see stuff that seems challenging and feel excited that the writers thought highly enough of you to write it for you.
‐‐ Jeremy Sisto
In law school, I earned the respect of professors and served on the editorial board of 'The Yale Law Journal.'
‐‐ Randall Kennedy
In lean times, you get plenty of sleep, and you're not flying around everywhere.
‐‐ J. K. Simmons
In learning to utilize antibiotics for the control of human and animal diseases, the medical and veterinary professions have acquired powerful tools for combating infections and epidemics.
‐‐ Selman Waksman
In leaving New York in 1957, I did leave without regret the literary demimonde of agents and would-be's and with-it nonparticipants; this world seemed unnutritious and interfering.
‐‐ John Updike
In Lebanon, it's never over for anyone. You cannot write off anyone or anything in this country.
‐‐ Saad Hariri