I like Dave Davies from the Kinks, before he could play slick.
I also use women as a sex object; maybe I'm kinky. However, I like to talk to them as well.
Allthough that doesn't happen often lately, I like to read exciting thrillers and those kinky magazines.
When I was in 'Kinky Boots,' nobody really cared what shape I was in, and so I remember, like, fans would send me cookies to the theater, and I would be like, 'Okay, I guess I'll have another cookie!'
Books are like movies of the mind and it's better to leave Kinsey where she is.
I think like my dad, but I have a huge kinship with my mom.
I like festivals of all kinds: in 1969, I made a film about the first Pan-African festival in Algiers, which celebrated the countries that had been liberated 10 years earlier. There was a tremendous feeling of kinship.
I like working with people I know and feel a kinship to.
Women are a key part of the sound of the groups that accompany male singers like Kirk Franklin, Israel Houghton, and myself.
I like kissable lips. A woman's lips must say, 'Come here and kiss me, Pops.'
Women like being kissed.
Idleness, like kisses, to be sweet must be stolen.
I like kisses that aren't too fast or rushed - that's what makes a good kiss.
I'll die young, but it's like kissing God.
I don't like being told what to do and kissing you-know-what to get up the corporate ladder.
I'd like President Bush to think maybe there's another way to think, that maybe Kissinger was wrong when he says we had to go in there because he was wrong about Vietnam.
I made 'True Detective' like it was going to be the only thing I ever made for television. So put in everything and the kitchen sink. Everything.
I started writing at the kitchen table after midnight. It took ten months to finish that first book; I sent it to a publisher and I got some kind of prize, so it was like a dream - I was surprised to find it happening.
I think we have challenges, but we have so many opportunities to get it right. I like it when we have a little bit of a headwind. The kite actually lifts when you have a headwind and doesn't when there is lift from the back.
True courage is like a kite; a contrary wind raises it higher.