We have today a fairly thorough knowledge of the early Greco-Roman period because our motivations are the same.
I often say my naivete early on in my career worked in my favor.
A lot of my early career, I wrote story songs that had narratives, that had plots.
Early on, New York already had a national and even international identity.
I like a little movie I did in the early nineties called 'Mortal Thoughts.' The part was hardly written, but I learned a lot making it. No one remembers it.
Aside from my modelling, by the early Nineties I was also starting to work as a photographer, which I loved.
My first job in NYC was playing a gig in the early nineties at CBGBs.
In my neighborhood in Springfield, Ohio, there were a lot of young kids. We all played tackle football after school, but I knew very early on that I was not an athlete.
Peggy Atwood, Alice Munro, Hugh Hood, Michael Ondaatje - these are all old friends from my early 20s.
But I did go to music really early on, even when I was 4 or 5, I was responding to music probably in ways other kids were not.
'The Outlaw Josey Wales' is one I watched again and again and again in the early days of VHS.
I was one of the early folks at eBay, and by 1999, it was completely overrun by consultants from McKinsey, Bain, and BCG. It went from being a cool, fun startup to an MBA factory.
I loved early Paul Newman films. He just had this effortless charm.
The rock n' roll lifestyle did have its perks, but it wasn't all limos and parties in the early days.
One very important aspect of string theory is definitely testable. That was the prediction of supersymmetry, which emerged from string theory in the early '70s.
My early prose style - this is so embarrassing - was sort of a suburban, Presbyterian knockoff of Woody Allen.
I like the idea of an enlightened principality. In the early eighteen-hundreds, in Germany, there were princes who built schools, streets, homes. I like that.
What the United States wanted in Guatemala - and in Iran, where the C.I.A. also deposed a government in the early 1950s - was pro-American stability.
We are the product of quantum fluctuations in the very early universe.
From the early days of European migration to America, in the 17th Century, the prototype of buildings was based on English precedent, even if mostly translated into the locally available material in abundance: timber.