Words matter. These are the best Master Plan Quotes from famous people such as Atul Gawande, Erykah Badu, Ben Stiller, Nat Wolff, Billy Tauzin, and they’re great for sharing with your friends.
The history of American agriculture suggests that you can have transformation without a master plan, without knowing all the answers up front.
I have a master plan as an artist. I’ve always said I’m not going to be punching nobody’s clock. I will work as an artist to survive in this world.
I don’t have a burning desire to be taken seriously as an actor. I don’t have a master plan in that way.
There’s no master plan; I’m just going with what I’m inspired to do and what I get asked to do, and luckily the things I’ve been the most passionate about, I’ve gotten to do. And a lot of times I’ve gone up for movies that I didn’t really care that much about, and I never got that.
New Orleans has to learn to live with water rather than in fear of water, and we need a master plan that shows us how to do this. It’s so critical that we send a signal to everyone in the country that we’re serious about rebuilding New Orleans.
I’m so sleepy most of the time, but I guess it’s ’cause I’m constantly doing things and trying to move forward and set up for the master plan. The master plan is to be, like, little baby Oprah, with my own production company, maybe my own channel, inspire millions.
When I first joined the Irvine Company, I realized that less than 11,000 acres were designated as open space in the original master plan, and that just didn’t seem adequate to me. So, I began the lengthy process working with public and community organizations to add more open space.
People think that the people in Hollywood have some master plan. They just make the movies that people go to see. I think it’s that simple. I promise you if people were lining up around the block to see a Bible movie, they’d make Bible movies from now to the end of time.
I don’t have a grand master plan, but I try to be thoughtful when I can and also silly. It’s part of the fun.
I went to art school in Chicago for a year at Columbia College. I had this whole master plan of getting into sustainable development and green architecture and construction, so I wanted to go to business school and then get my masters in construction and development.
I think that’s what I love about my life. There’s no maniacal master plan. It’s just unfolding before me.
Every show is unique; some shows have the master plan and have everything figured out and that’s just the way they do things. It’s like high school. Some people write their papers the second they get their assignments, and some people write it the day after it’s due.
All I have to do to continue to make things work is make great records, and that’s more important than having a crazy master plan.
I wish I could say I had this master plan for a career, but I always thought acting was something I’d just do until I had a hit record.
It’s not a master plan to do every remake and every recreation of icons. It’s just what I’ve been hired to do.
It’s not like I have a master plan or anything.
The master plan does not have a master plan. Television ultimately finds itself, and after it finds itself, it finds itself changing.
Every show is unique, some shows have the master plan and have everything figured out and that’s just the way they do things. It’s like high school. Some people write their papers the second they get their assignments, and some people write it the day after it’s due. I am the latter.
Some people in Hollywood think of me as a model for dramatic midlife transitions: suburban housewife to Emmy-winning actress. But I never plotted a master plan for following my dreams.
There’s not a business or a master plan as far as I’m concerned. I take it week by week, and I don’t think you ever expect to be able to do the next thing.