I don't want to be a celebrity designer. I want to keep my personal life out of it.
Celebrity culture is an aspirational culture regardless of how much you don't want it to be.
I've tried everything but celibacy, and I really want to know what it feels like to be touched by someone with a mental touch and not a physical touch.
And so um, I knew that I really didn't want to be a priest and didn't want to be a celibate, though I could probably manage it. Um, and um, ultimately I left.
I don't want a door bell. I don't want anyone ringing my door bell... seems to be intrusive. They can call me on their cell phones.
I'm single. I don't have a family. I certainly don't have to work. I don't want to be the richest man in the cemetery.
I have given my life and all I am to it, and now I want my last act to be to give it all I have, to the last cent.
I want you to be everything that's you, deep at the center of your being.
At the center of your being you have the answer; you know who you are and you know what you want.
At the core of the products we build, I want to think about productivity centered around people.
I just want to go through Central Park and watch folks passing by. Spend the whole day watching people. I miss that.
I believe in constructive cooperation from the central government for any development and welfare schemes for Odisha. I want to work in cooperation with them for the development of the state.
I don't want to be overly dramatic, but Iraq and Syria are gone, and they aren't coming back, at least not as centralized states.
I'm more cerebral than I want to be.
I select a very small number of things to be sceptical about, such as markets, and on these I am hypersceptic. But I want to be fooled by randomness in art. I want the ceremonial of religion; we are made for it.
I want to photograph the considerable ceremonies of our present. I want to gather them, like somebody's grandmother putting up preserves, because they will have been so beautiful.
Lucasfilm looks out for 'Star Wars.' What are the values inherent in 'Star Wars' that we want to protect? It's fragile to a certain extent in that it's a single IP.
I had come to the point when I realized it was unlikely that my film career was going to move beyond a certain level of role. And I was - because I had graphic instances of it - handicapped by the success of Star Trek. A director would say, 'I don't want Jean-Luc Picard in my movie' - and this was compounded by X-Men as well.
I used to watch those rock videos where they would chainsaw the piano. And I thought, 'That's what I want to do.' I thought classical music was corny.
I want to be perceived as a guy who played his best in all facets, not just scoring. A guy who loved challenges.