Words matter. These are the best Print Quotes from famous people such as Mike May, Catherine Opie, Michael Jackson, Ilkay Gundogan, Paula Danziger, and they’re great for sharing with your friends.
I’ve not chosen to learn to read print. I can read simple words but it’s so tedious.
I always give a print to everybody I photograph, and some of my subjects have told me they have a hard time hanging them up at home.
Just because it’s in print doesn’t mean it’s the gospel.
That’s why I don’t want to know the questions before, when I give interviews whether TV or print. I don’t want to prepare myself for what I will answer.
I’m very lucky. I’m very fortunate that my books have never gone out of print – none of them.
I got my first leopard print coat when I was 15. I nearly got beat up, but I was happy with it.
The PGA Championship, last of the majors each year, might well be accustomed to having fun poked at it by the print press for being mired in August, but this isn’t fair.
If you sign a big contract, everybody knows. They’re going to print it in the paper. It’s on ESPN. You can go online and check player salaries and all that. You’re a target.
What one has not experienced, one will never understand in print.
Print science fiction writers often do consulting for government bodies.
New York is the place where they bind books and write blurbs and arrange the publicity and print the galleys… But Chicago is the place where the book is lived out before it is bound and the song is sung before it is recorded.
We’ve got to lift our game tremendously. We’ll sell our business news and information in print, we’ll sell it to anyone who’s got a cable system, and we’ll sell it on the Web.
I feel like the Earth is a re-print of a re-print of a print of a re-print.
You already feel unsure of yourself, and then you see your worst fears in print. It really knocked me – which is why, I think, I was working, working, working, because I was trying to run away from the fact that I thought I couldn’t do it.
Television broadcasts have, in the main, been more suggestive, less specific, more distant in their images than the print press: often you knew that lump was a dead body only because a chattering reporter told you it was.
Police blog or entertainment news, it’s just good to see your name in print.
I know the Federal Reserve Bank can continue to print more and more money… but city and state governments cannot.
If you take a print magazine with a million person circulation, and a blog with a devout readership of 1 million, for the purpose of selling anything that can be sold online, the blog is infinitely more powerful, because it’s only a click away.
I don’t think tablets are where we should be focused. But I do think they could end up being an efficient way of delivering textbooks. They’re just not really that, yet. There’s all sorts of poisons and mined minerals and carnage that goes on to make a tablet. Way more than to print a book. Or a bunch of books.
The mainstream media has its own agenda. They do not want to print the facts. They have an agenda, they have a slant, they have a bias. It is outrageous to me.
Seeing yourself in print is such an amazing concept: you can get so much attention without having to actually show up somewhere… You don’t have to dress up, for instance, and you can’t hear them boo you right away.
I won’t do any print interviews anymore. No matter what I say, it gets distorted.
If someone tells you something is off the record, I don’t print it. If they don’t tell me something is off the record, then it’s fair game.
Ideally my goal is, before I die, to have some information about every word that’s ever been used in print.
People set newspapers on fire; they use them for wrapping fish. The Internet does not have that property. What I don’t think we’ve gotten is that you can make things last longer than in print.
Bond investors want growth much like equity investors, and to the extent that too much austerity leads to recession or stagnation then credit spreads widen out – even if a country can print its own currency and write its own cheques.
I look back upon those days in the Crockett/Turner era of The Four Horsemen and often wonder how I made it out alive. Perhaps my contract had some fine print on it that said, ‘Associating with The Four Horsemen can be hazardous to one’s health.’
A visit to a bookshop will be a difficult one if you’re looking for any picture book in print that is more than 50 years old.
Newspaper editors are men who separate the wheat from the chaff, and then print the chaff.
I’m basically a songwriter, man. Songwriters are down in the fine print, you know? And I really enjoy that.
You know what they say? They say, ‘The print media is dying’ – who says that? Well, the media.
Print is the sharpest and the strongest weapon of our party.
I read hugely as a child, but I slowed up when the print got smaller. I am a very slow reader. I don’t know why. Maybe it is like some people chewing their food for ages and some wolfing it down.
A Boosh fan bought me an original copy of ‘The Jungle Book’ – like, the first print from 1894 – so I’ve just started re-reading that and am really enjoying it. But the last book I read in its entirety was ‘Willard and his Bowling Trophies,’ by Richard Brautigan, which is amazing.
I am concerned about the erraticness of the dollar. The dollar is up, the dollar is down. We print a lot of dollars. The dollar gets devalued. That is really the concern. If people think the gold price up and down is a reflection of something wrong with gold, no – I say it is something wrong with the dollar.
The fact that there are still mainstream print media outlets willing to devote precious pages to book coverage at all is a triumph we should all be celebrating.
Novelists want to be published and need a publisher to decide to print 20,000 copies. So you need to entertain on some level. I want to reach out and connect.
I think there’s always satisfaction that comes from digging in and telling a story and being on the front line and writing about it. I think there’s a venue available if you look. Even print journalism is in good shape in areas.
People often think that reporters write their own headlines. In fact, they almost never do. The people who do write headlines are the copy editors who are the front and last lines of quality-checking in a newspaper before it goes to print.
The government, of course, will print money to bail out the banks’ uncovered casino bets, but not to bail out the elderly from the theft of their funds.
There are hundreds of thousands of words that aren’t in any print dictionary today… because there’s no space for all of them.
Of the modern critics, although I disagree with almost everything she says, I admire Mary McCarthy’s eloquence and social observation in ‘Sights and Spectacles’; she thinks in print, but she doesn’t have a real feel for the stage.
Which, of course, isn’t the point of writing – but it would be nice if, along with the creative satisfaction of writing and seeing my work in print, I could do more than merely scrape a living. Okay, moaning over.
You have to understand the separation between what exists in the print media and what exists in reality. It’s important to never lose track of reality.
Thanks to the Jolabokaflod, books still matter in Iceland; they get read and talked about. Excitement fills the air. Every reading is crowded; every print run is sold.
The first thing I did was a print ad for Century Plaza. I was five.
In our time, the curse is monetary illiteracy, just as inability to read plain print was the curse of earlier centuries.
I highlight everything I find interesting, and then type out everything I’ve highlighted, and then print out everything I’ve typed, and reread these printed notes as often as possible.
Just as fighters you have to be smart, you have to read the fine print in your contract and you have to do what’s best for your family.
Though an angel should write, still ’tis devils must print.
I recently found out that the print of my first film ‘Utrada Rathri,’ released in 1978, is damaged beyond repair. So the only way to relive earlier films is through books based on the screenplay.
To me, the print business model is so simple, where readers pay a dollar for all the content within, and that supports the enterprise.
Kindle Singles is publishing on skates. It prints like lightning; our book meets readers in hours. I’ve spent so many years waiting for publishers to consider whether they wanted to print a book of mine, making contracts, taking months to fit it into the Fall list or the Spring list, fitting it into an advertising plan.
In print, people can do anything to you. Everything you do is picked apart. People love it; they’re waiting for you to make a mistake.
It’s tough when take 1 is technically okay and take 2 has better acting. Out here (Hollywood) they print the first one. That’s the one where we all hit the mark on the floor and who cares about the acting.
I have that huge print from Pollock by the piano because the influence is reciprocal. He was into hearing music while he created, and I sometimes do the opposite. I’m influenced by everything from an ant to a dream.
I don’t want to see the end of popular print journalism.