Putting a little time aside for clean fun and good humor is very necessary to relieve the tensions of our time.
Now, I have a kid, I have businesses to take care of, I have to travel. I have to sit down... and find a little time for me.
So little time and so little to do.
Every player needs a little time to adjust to new teammates and the mentality of the coach when you change clubs.
The thing with movies is, because you have so little time, I always feel like there are more things we could've done with the character. If we'd done a sequel to 'The Thomas Crown Affair,' what would that have been like? But for the most part, you try not to think of that, because it's just going to break your heart.
Got so much to say, such little time.
It's a lot of a workload doing an hour dramatic show. It's just incredible what little time off you get.
I am going to hold serve the majority of the time. It is nice to have a little time to return serve.
My crazy training-and-competition schedule leaves very little time to focus on my hair.
It's a marathon, not a sprint. I actually feel like I come to work stronger when I've had a little time on the weekend to step away from it and enjoy my family and other things. I come back energized. If people think they're going to work 24/7, week in and week out, they're not bringing their full strength to the table.
We use the Heidelberg Catechism in our worship. Sometimes we read it responsively. Other times I'll work it into my communion liturgy. I'll quote it in my sermons from time to time. I've seen the Catechism used effectively as Sunday school material.
I deal with creativity all the time. What I have fun with is trying to transform creativity into business reality all over the world. To do this, you have to be connected to innovators and designers but also make their ideas livable and concrete.
The first time I played in front of a live audience, I realised I wanted to be a musician. I was about four years old and had always liked music.
Pretty much every time I try something different or do something in front of a live audience, I truly think they might throw peanuts at me.
When you have live music in the background, people are usually talking over it. You don't actually get to listen to live music in your space all the time.
The real test of a musician is live performance. It's one thing to spend a long time learning how to play well in the studio, but to do it in front of people is what keeps me coming back to touring.
I mean, there's definitely a difference between film and live performances or live television. But at the same time, it's just performing. No matter what, it's performing.
Some players don't like to speak to the media or prefer to talk on live television so people can hear for themselves what is said, in real time.
Live theater is just an incredibly powerful medium, and I think anyone who goes, whether they know about it or not, if they see something that sort of fits with them, it's kind of hard to deny that they had a good time.
I didn't really start going to see a lot of musicals and live theater probably until I was in seventh or eighth grade, maybe my first year of high school, and by that time I'd probably seen 'Grease' twice a year every year of my life.