I have been ‘absorbing’ people – their voices, their mannerisms – all my life, to the point where I am a sort of Frankenstein of different people. My own speaking voice is, in fact, a mixture of how my two best mates speak, because they are cool, and I am not.
You can get jaded in the music business, but I have so much passion, and I try to do music with different people to ‘reset.’
Different people talk different ways.
When I’m in the city, I like to go to different events and get introduced to different people. That’s what New York is all about. There is great diversity, and there are people from all over the world who have done amazing things. That’s my favorite thing to do: meet new people.
It’s all about the music, and I work as hard as I do strictly because of the music. It’s not a money thing; it’s not a career thing. It’s simply to do with me being a music fan with a broad taste, wanting to do different styles and wanting to work with lots of different people.
I enjoy hearing from different people who have turned their personal struggles into something that can inspire others and encourage people to push past hard times.
If you come to my shows, there’s all kinds of different races, all kinds of different people.
I went out with Robbie Williams and Liam Gallagher. I was accused of going out with many different people but that wasn’t my fault.
Different people, in good faith, can look at the same fact and interpret it differently. But that’s where an interesting conversation begins.
I photograph different people all the time. I like to shoot all kinds of people.
A lot of my solo albums were produced by different people who had their idea of what songs I should do, and they had me doing a lot of ballads.
I’m excited about Los Angeles because I believe in her. I believe in her destiny. I think that the fact that we have so many different people from so many parts of the world is a big reason why L.A. is the city of America’s promise.
God has to speak to each person in their own language, in their own idioms. Take Spanish, Chinese. You can express the same thought, but to different people you have to use a different language. It’s the same in religion.
One of the things I love about this job is meeting different people.
To me, the flag represents the greatest ideals of the United States of America, not the worst, but different people look at different things and have different feelings about it. That’s what freedom of expression is all about.
I think that, for so long, there was only one type of actor, and now you see these different colors, different people, different shapes and different sizes. It just makes it more interesting.
Because of work, I travel a lot, and because of that, I can experience different cultures and see and talk to a lot of different people, so I get inspired by that a lot.
A different world cannot be built by indifferent people.
I’ve been compared to, like, five different people. Suga Free, Silkk The Shocker – I get that one a lot. Somebody named Freeway. I don’t know who Freeway is.
I’m happy to do voice-overs. I always have a good time doing them. I like to explore vocal nuance and accents and different people, different personalities. In a way, it is a lot more freeing than having your face up there.
In hockey, you get to meet a lot of different people and become friends with them. It is definitely a special sport. I love that part of it.
Tony and I had a good on and off screen relationship, we are two very different people, but we did share a sense of humor, we now live in different parts of the world but when we find ourselves in the same place it is more or less as if there had been no years in between.
You know, a lot of those angry sort of Southern man characters that I’ve been doing are based on different people I might’ve had as, like, a soccer coach or as a teacher.
All of my characters tend to be montages of different people I’ve met: little bits and pieces of their personalities put together.
I want to work with different people, and I would like to work in different places.
Various different people have inspired me throughout my career. From Francis Bacon to Vassareli, Coco Chanel to Christian Dior, Cecil Beaton, musicians, architects… the list is endless.
I just never want to repeat myself. I also don’t want to be bored in life. The great luxury of being an actor is you get to be different people, and I would hate to be repetitive.
When I wasn’t working I didn’t know what to do with myself and sort of didn’t exist, in a way, when I wasn’t working, so I was like two different people. I am not like that anymore.
Feedback for leaders is often nuanced and difficult to deliver. That said, hearing you are passive-aggressive from 10 different people described 10 different ways becomes hard to ignore.
Women can be two different people – one person at home, another at work.
In Korea, the director is on top, and the power flows down vertically. On the set, I love to come up with ideas on the spot. But in Hollywood, if I were to come up with a certain idea on set, the idea had to be taken to all these different people who had to agree.
In this century of hyper-postmodern ideals, with the digital future, we’re segmented into different people, places, and things in a constant state of change.
I love when I go on set every day, because the camera people teach me camera terms and grip terms – I learn all these new terms from different people on the set and leave feeling all cool about myself when I go out places.
In many films, as many different characters, I’ve killed many different people.
When I was 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, I had so many people I looked up to and was so inspired by all these different people. It’s cool to be in that position.
I think hitting is more a mentality than a philosophy. A philosophy is somebody telling you the way they think it should be. Well, different people believe in different things. My thing is this: Be ready to hit.
I think the biggest thing I’ve learned from my international experience is that it’s our systems that are different. People are the same everywhere. The system puts restraints on people. But they’re good and bad, generous and selfish everywhere.
I started producing in California, and they called it mob music. When I moved to Atlanta, the sound was different. People in Atlanta didn’t like to rap over West Coast beats. So I had to make adjustments to what was going on in the South.
It’s always performing for me. I write and I record so I can perform. It all ties to that. I’ve done it since I was a little kid. That’s my absolute rush, is playing for different people every night, bringing something else to the table they’ve never seen.
I have been training under Melvin Louis and Dimple Kotecha. They’re very different people and their styles and training procedures are also different. Melvin is more into the improvised version, he mixes hip-hop, street style, Bollywood etc. He is more into the madness and gives me the freedom to try my own thing.
In my time, I’ve gotten the chance to play a few different people who are younger and have been rejected by their parents, and I think a lot of times that results in them really seeking help, even subconsciously doing so.
I think corporations and people are very different. People make corporations whatever it is that they’re going to be.
Different people need different things.
I know Rudy Giuliani. I like Rudy Giuliani. I worked with him during his administration. But we’re completely different people.
I like being different people.
There isn’t a right or wrong way to be depressed, anxious, or struggle with PTSD. Mental health challenges manifest differently for different people, and it’s important that people see that on-screen.
I wanted to become a better entertainer, and I learned from my brother James Andrews. And I’ve been studying some tape of James Brown and different people.
I’ve been very lucky that I’ve interviewed so many different people.
As an actor, there are so many different people to hide behind.
In my 20s and 30s, I vociferously wanted to be single. I rarely got into long-term relationships and enjoyed going out with different people.
Music is very subjective. You may or may not like a song, but folk and regional language have a connectivity that binds different people together, who slowly begin to relate to it.
Success is measured differently by different people.
I have spent a very long time in Cate’s shadow – she casts a pretty big one. I have always had the support of my family and coach, and they have always stressed we are completely different people and will achieve things in our own time. They stressed I would get my moment. I just had to be patient.
My gut is my No. 1 asset. I also like to draw from a lot of people, and I ask a lot of questions. I’ll literally show my ideas to 500 different people and get their opinions, and, in the end, after digesting all their opinions, I just trust my gut.
I think acting is a fun thing because you get to have so many lifetimes in one lifetime, being all these different people.
It’s quite difficult to figure out a common thread among us all as we’re five very different people who love different types of music.