Some caregivers want to reciprocate the care they themselves received as children.
I have invariably been in love when I haven't had the same reciprocated emotion at all. I don't choose to talk about my personal life because I believe that I don't want to, and I believe my personal life is personal.
I want people to know that I'm a force to be reckoned with.
A lot of people are doing something about their weight, but by their own reckoning, it isn't enough to get the results they want.
I want to reclaim 'liberal.' I'm a liberal, and I think most Americans are liberals.
I want to reclaim who I am.
Studios, to cut through the clutter, want recognisable titles. But that does not excuse you, as a writer, from having an original story.
I want to get up and ride my horses, do what I love doing. I don't want to be recognised.
That's why success hasn't changed me: because I don't want to be famous or do TV or be a model or be recognised in a shop. I'm not interested. There's nothing worse.
I know so many acting careers that are deliberately kickstarted by a publicist placing a bit of rubbish in a newspaper. And I don't want that. If someone recognises me, I want it to be because they've seen me in something, not because they have seen me at something.
We want to renew our vows with our people. We want to reconnect with our people. We want to get our people excited again.
Mythopoeia has taken off in the Indian diaspora because there has been a change in readership from a mature audience to a younger one. This lot has a desperate yearning to reconnect. They want to consume mythology but in a well-packaged and easily digestible way.
When I signed a record deal, I was always told by execs I needed to be like everybody else, that I had to show my midriff, things that would take away from who I want to be as an artist.
I don't do this for the money, I don't do it for record sales, I don't really care about that, I just want to make beats.
The iPod has taken away the whole platinum record sales prospect. Sincerity and specificity are going to be the hot commodities in music. Everybody can have anything that they want, so now it gets into what specifically you have to give.
I worked in a record store, but I realised I didn't want that. I still wanted to pursue a career - or a life - that my songs provided for me.
What made me want to become a recording artist; I was the first artist that was repeatedly asked by a label to record with them. That label was Def Jam Records.
You don't want to try to recreate something you've already done.
I have grown up watching films in single screens where people would get up and dance in the aisles. With 'Rowdy Rathore,' I want to recreate the same magic.
If I didn't have a recruiting engagement, I was going to be here. I did everything possible to change the recruiting thing. I'm a very small part of this night, but I did want to be a part of it.