Words matter. These are the best Clicks Quotes from famous people such as Sistine Stallone, Chris Evans, Austin Aries, Ravish Kumar, Om Malik, and they’re great for sharing with your friends.
I’m hoping to dive into the producing aspect of this industry. I don’t want to limit myself to just one thing, so I kind of want to dip my toe in every field and see what clicks with me.
Just the life of doing what I do, being in the public eye, it’s a stressful environment… You feel strange, self-aware, very foolish. Your third eye clicks on, just to try to maintain a healthy sense of perspective, and you think, ‘What am I doing here? I’m just making a movie, and people want all these things from me.’
I figure no matter what interview I do, the real good ‘journalists’ are going to find the completely irrelevant quotes that will drum up some controversy and stick it on their page to get some clicks and completely miss the real context of what the interview is about. That’s what we do nowadays and call it ‘journalism.’
I live surrounded by threats. I must stay alert. I am a law-abiding citizen; have never broken any rule while driving. But if someone clicks a photo or shoots a video, I have to be suspicious of their intentions.
Ideally, Facebook would take all our clicks and information and would magically give us everything we want, without us even knowing we want it.
We live in the Internet age. Everyone wants clicks. Clicks are what sells.
The most joyful part of writing, for me, is when I am 90% there, and suddenly the story clicks into place, and things finally start to make sense.
Just as TurboTax simplified much of the tax process, so has the colossally scary legal process been reduced to a kinder, gentler series of mouse clicks and ‘Continue’ buttons by LegalZoom, the online leader that has become so prominent in its market that it’s practically a generic.
You see something, then it clicks with something else, and it will make a story. But you never know when it’s going to happen.
When you go into a film, you read it, and something clicks for you, and you like it, and you sign on for it; you go for it. You know that this is going to be a good film, and that is your best hope. Past that, it’s a crap shoot – you roll the dice.
Then if your movie clicks with real audiences, you’ll be sucked into some sort of Hollywood orbit. It’s a devil of a place where the only religion that really counts is box office.
We can’t say whether a film will be a hit or flop. There’s something which just clicks with people.
ESPN puts out anything for clicks now, it kind of seems like.
I think every single girl has something different and special about her. You find one who clicks with your vibe.
I’ve got a few things on YouTube and the most I’ve ever had is about 8,000 clicks over five years.
I believe when you meet the right person it clicks, and you both know and you start making it work, you know?
When a person has a gun, sometimes their mind clicks that this thing will win arguments and straighten people out.
For me, it’s different every year. Some years, it takes me a while to feel comfortable again, to feel like I’m ready to go. Other years, it clicks real fast. Sometimes, it just takes one game or one swing to feel like, ‘OK, I’m back.’
Negativity gets attention and gets clicks.
You never know what’s going to happen. It’s kind of nice to limit your expectations so when something clicks, you go, ‘Hey, that’s nice. Thank you.’
I can’t tell you how many times I’ve been writing and then found myself seven clicks deep into a Wikipedia entry that I don’t even care about. Self-distraction appears to be my version of sleepwalking.
It just clicks when you meet the right person.
You go out on the practice range, and something kind of clicks, and you start hitting the ball very crisply. And you’re sure that you’ve found it, the holy grail – that all you have to do is hold your hand in a certain way. Then you go out on the golf course, and it’s completely disappeared.
Trying to get the sentences right and the structure of the narration right is about as big a job as I can handle. But I also know that if you handle that job properly, everything else just clicks into place.
I think as an actor, you’re constantly putting yourself out there, and a lot of times failing – and failing in front of a bunch of people – and sometimes you have a good moment and something clicks.
I’m quite a reserved person, but when it comes to being on stage, something just clicks, and I sort of run around like a mad man. I find myself jumping in the crowd, climbing up on things, and dancing absolutely atrociously. I like to see the whites of everybody’s eyes, jump around with everybody.
Backstage, I get sleepy, and want to curl up and snooze. I never get nervous, whatever the event. I feel quite detached until I walk on stage, and then some gear inside me clicks and off I go like a wind up doll.
I find an apple before singing really, really helps… It’s like there’s something in the pectin in the apple that helps get rid of vocal clicks.
I’m not a clicks man, I wasn’t born in the clicks era. I’m a bricks man, I believe in bricks.
You never know what clicks at the box office. It’s very unpredictable.
Costume is integral, but it clicks into place last.
When I first joined with Murphy, I had to make a character change. I wasn’t confident in myself about that at all, but I remember my mom telling me that once something clicks with me… I had to… come in and kick the door down and let everyone know who I am.
I don’t have any dream role. I give my 100% to every character I play, and when the film clicks, it automatically becomes a dream role.