I'm a CEO of a public company. You have to show decorum.
I have no deep desire to hit the pavement and audition for TV projects or raise money to produce a show.
If the experiments which I urge be defective, it cannot be difficult to show the defects; but if valid, then by proving the theory, they must render all objections invalid.
What resonates with me whenever I watch a great movie or TV show is the balance of inevitability and unpredictability. And it's a very delicate balance.
Every religious group, while perhaps a majority somewhere, is also inevitably a minority somewhere else. Thus, religious organizations should and do show tolerance toward members of other religious denominations.
It's one thing to answer to constituents. It's another thing to have professional disruptors show up at an event with the intent to derail so that you can't connect with your constituents.
To show resentment at a reproach is to acknowledge that one may have deserved it.
Those who insist on the dignity of their office show they have not deserved it.
There is tragic evidence to show that the paintings at the French prehistoric art sites are deteriorating.
Ultimately, going into the consumer market, we really need outstanding content. That was the goal: if we can get the developer kit out at a low enough cost point, then hopefully a lot of developers would show up and start creating content.
My position as the best-selling author at E! is secure - unless Salman Rushdie develops a show with them.
'Dexter' is a very well-oiled machine; it's just a great show and great to be part of.
I was trying to be Mary Tyler Moore. I loved her in 'The Dick Van Dyke Show.'
When I was growing up, there was a character on TV; there was a character stereotype: it was personified by Mel on 'The Dick Van Dyke Show.'
I actually grew up in the 'burbs - New Rochelle, specifically, most famously home to Rob and Laura Petrie of 'The Dick Van Dyke Show.'
As a musician I'm kind of nomadic, Waldo-like. I show up in different places, and I'm witness to unbelievable things.
I've had tremendous opportunities in film and continue to have them, but it's such a different thing to do a television show, and I'm very lucky to be able to do them both.
Difficulties are things that show a person what they are.
Lisa Vanderpump is a manipulative person and when I was on the show I did a lot of her dirty work for her.
Disneyland is a show.