Television Quotes
Most Famous Television Quotes of All Time!
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Because when you watch U.S. television, all the presenters and reporters, they're all out of central casting.
I've been lucky enough to do theatre, film, and television for a career. Unless I get offered a job as an astronaut, I won't stray too far from it.
Hollywood is a perpetual summerland, a temperate, godless yaw where the very word 'season' has been co-opted by television executives. There are few harbingers of winter here.
Television moves fast, and you don't have the indulgences you have when you're shooting movies of so many takes because there are tight deadlines.
I went to a theater arts school, so I'm interested in many different projects, whether it be film, television or even live theater. I'm a performer. That's what I do. That's what I want to do.
We know television should educate and inform, and I believe it should entertain.
I've been involved in some movies that I really thought were going to take off that didn't. And then I've thought, 'This movie's not going anywhere,' and it worked. The same thing with television shows.
Pena Nieto is a product of the two television networks that groomed him for power and then propelled him to the presidency.
The fact is that daytime television is less valued than nighttime, and it's partly because of the product that we produce. We do a one-hour show in 12 hours. Nighttime produces a one-hour show in seven to nine days.
Dragons' Den' is about as close to real business as you can get on television.
My job as a television anchor or television reporter is not to proselytize.
There was no studio involved when we made 'Stargate.' It was financed through Le Studio Canal+ in France and, after the film was finished, it was sold to MGM. When the film was a success, MGM decided to do a television series based on the movie.
We are cannibalizing our audience by only giving them regurgitated material. Every movie is either a remake, a sequel, based on something else. Based on a former television series. Based on a successful videogame.
The movie, if I recall, didn't have to do with the television show because there were concerns from everyone that they didn't want it to be like the TV show.
'Meet the Press' is the oldest and most treasured public affairs show on television.
A spontaneous interview feels differently than anything else you see on television.
You know, I grew up watching all kinds of films. So, as an adult, I wanted to be involved in all kinds of plays and television and film.
In television you go in with this operating system that it is a crapshoot.
I've been an actor for 14 years now and a lot of that time was spent in theatre and television. Then I moved to L.A. to try and build upon that and it's starting to pay off!
When I was youn,g I always saw Brazil winning games on television with fantastic players and a fantastic team.
Motion pictures are a director's medium. Broadway is a writer's medium. Television is a producer's medium. I picked a medium I could control.
When television began, it modeled itself after radio. Many early television programs were radio programs first. 'My Favorite Wife,' 'The Jack Benny Show,' 'Burns and Allen,' 'Alfred Hitchcock Presents.'
I have been inundated with offers to move into a career in television or film, and these, too, are tempting.
Television sounded really different than the Ramones sounded really different than us sounded really different than Blondie sounded really different than the Sex Pistols.
The television and film business has never really been kind or compassionate, in general.
Television of course actually started in Britain in 1936, and it was a monopoly, and there was only one broadcaster and it operated on a license which is not the same as a government grant.
If I didn't have the wrestling name that I have, I wouldn't have gotten the financial contract that I got with Strikeforce or the long-term contract or the television contract. That's all because of wrestling.
I think that our civilisation is very much a visual civilisation - television and videos and all this.
I had no television when I was little, just a stack of old, beat-up comics from the 1950s and 1960s.
I've been approached in the past to option my stories for television, but prior to Evergreen, there were no assurances the production would be filmed in Alaska.
After years of begging, I got my parents to get me a little Craig tape recorder, a reel to reel. Then I started recording voices, or recording Jonathan Winters off television and stuff like that.
I did a lot of ridiculous television. Between 1980 and '85 I had no confidence, so I did everything I was told to do.
I think that casting is probably the most important thing in television production.
I'm interested in visual vocabulary, like Warhol was interested in that vocabulary of advertisements and television and pop culture.
I realised that a television show on political lampoon was one genre that was missing.
I've been a live performer longer than I've been a television performer. For me, live is where it's at.
I prefer theater and film. I did a little television, and obviously I'm not knocking it. It can be great, and it does pay the bills. But it's a little bit more disjointed.
Theater is a lot more interactive, more of a cohesive unit. With television, it can be a different director every episode.
If I ever had any vanity, then I definitely lost it by being on television.
All those glorious years for Danish television and I spent them going, 'Hello! I'm over here!'
The thing about 'Aquarius' is it's incredibly original, and it's really different than anything on network television. The story is so compelling, and it's something people are fascinated by.
Conservatives sense a link between television and drugs, but they do not grasp the nature of this connection.
I think film and television are really a director's medium, whereas theatre is the actor's medium.
Television, although It's in steep decline, still occasionally gives voices to people who don't have voices.
With television, you rarely get a response. You don't have an audience that you're in front of.
I love television, and I get so spoiled because I'm coming from such an amazing ensemble in 'Hamilton' to such an amazing ensemble on 'Bull.'
Television really does offer still great parts for women, cable in particular.
What kids are exposed to on television is more frightening and horrifying than what they see in my books.
Mostly, I was only interested in television as a kid, and the majority of reading material I collected was an adjunct to that central concern, comic books and magazines included.
When I wrote 'We Can Be Heroes,' I was just so excited about the concept of playing loads of characters, and a television series allows you to do that.
A lot of times, people are simply interested in seeing me because I was on television.
I'm the star of stage, screen, and television now, but I'm also available for children's parties and bar mitzvahs.
Somehow, by just continually pestering the general public by appearing on television, they accepted me and wanted more.
The range of 'Doctor Who' is, I would argue, bigger than the range of any other television program or movie franchise.
Television doesn't make stars. It's the written media, the press, that makes stars.
I did comedy and parody television in the '70s. I was a liberal Democrat, and it was a very heady year.
The reason I keep making so many musical metaphors with 'Luke Cage' is that I don't view it as much a television show as I do a concept album with dialogue.
I grew up in a very political household. My mum used to shout at the television. At Mrs. Thatcher.
We need Hollywood to make movies and television shows about sexy female engineers.
I went on television and I wouldn't say a word; I feel so stupid when I watch them again.
They say that theater is the actor's medium, television is the writer's medium and film is the director's medium, and it's really true.
I loved working on 'Boardwalk.' I had a very limited run on it, but I did love it and that was quality television.
In film and television we are oftentimes so pampered that the truths are withheld.
I don't miss acting. I don't even see movies. I don't see plays. I don't watch television.
We have to take risks in British television. It has to stop playing to the lowest common denominator and patronising people.
I might have had trouble saving France in 1946 - I didn't have television then.
At the end of the day, broadcast television has many opportunities to inform the audience, to enlighten the audience, and to entertain them.
I probably would be continuing to do voice-overs, continuing to do cartoon shows, and at the same time I'd probably be on a sitcom or a dramatic television show.
Tom Hooper had done 'John Adams,' and David Lynch did 'Twin Peaks.' I figured I could do eight hours of television, and I wanted to.
I watch a lot of television. I love doing it, obviously, but I really love watching it.
I definitely acknowledge that 'The Matrix' and Trinity had an influence on female action-oriented characters in television and in film. I think it's awesome.
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