Markets do very weird things because it reacts to how people behave, and sometimes people are a little screwy.
I do weird things, and people watch.
I don't really have any gimmicks. I don't actually do anything that's strange. I don't even wear weird things.
One of the weird things about Hollywood is we're all imposters; we're all just glammed up.
I definitely do weird things every show.
I find that I'm quite experimental. I'm drawn to the brighter and weirder things.
When I was 20, I used to go around telling stories, and I knew where I was comfortable - onstage, talking, making 'em laugh and listen to the weirdest things. I liked being the center of attention.
The weirdest thing about a mind is that you can have the most intense things going on in there, but no one else can see them.
There are lots of things I'm acquainting myself with now to be a more well-rounded person.
Health and wellness does mean different things to different people.
I would say 'American Werewolf in London' is like an unconventional buddy movie: even if the buddy dies 20 minutes in, he still remains throughout the picture, and their partnership is one of the best things in the movie.
One of the things that seems absolutely clear to me about werewolves - with their canine makeup - is that they would be dogs, as it were.
The habit of collecting, of attachment to things, is an essential human trait. But Western civilization put collecting on a pedestal by inventing museums. Museums are about representing power. It could be the king's power or, later, people's power.
Whatsoever things common to man, that man has done, man can do.
Many things, for aught I know, may exist, whereof neither I nor any other man hath or can have any idea or notion whatsoever.
I get egotistical about things where I can do something well - for example, my singing. Most other things, I don't have the wherewithal to back it up.
Planning bores me. I like to go with the flow. Being whimsical is nice, occasionally. It keeps things fresh; there's no expectation.
Passing into practical life, illustrations of this fact are found everywhere; the distant, or the unseen, steadies and strengthens us against the rapid whirl of things around us.
Ever since Mike Tyson was champ, twenty-something dudes have microwaved nachos, popped opened Natty Lights, watched sharks do unspeakable things on TV, and whispered a billion 'Whoa, dudes.'
One of the best things to come out of the home computer revolution could be the general and widespread understanding of how severely limited logic really is.