Top 32 Quotes & Sayings by Clive Anderson

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an English entertainer Clive Anderson.
Last updated on December 3, 2024.
Clive Anderson

Clive Stuart Anderson is an English television and radio presenter, comedy writer, and former barrister. Winner of a British Comedy Award in 1991, Anderson began experimenting with comedy and writing comedic scripts during his 15-year legal career, before starring in Whose Line Is It Anyway? on BBC Radio 4, then later Channel 4. He has also hosted many radio programmes, and made guest appearances on Have I Got News for You, Mock the Week and QI.

Tree roots hold river banks together and stop the wind blowing soil away, there are many creatures that live in woods and they provide a sense of well-being and look nice.
Schoolchildren and older people like the idea of planting trees. For children, it's interesting that an acorn will grow into an oak, and for older people it's a legacy. And the act of planting a tree is not that difficult.
On the environmental front there's concern about global warming and high levels of carbon dioxide, and trees take in CO2 and store carbon. — © Clive Anderson
On the environmental front there's concern about global warming and high levels of carbon dioxide, and trees take in CO2 and store carbon.
Research gathered over recent years has highlighted the countless benefits to people, wildlife and the environment that come from planting trees and creating new woodland habitat. It's obvious trees are good things.
Well, I was very lucky. I was brought up west southwest coast of Scotland and my mother and father had a music shop, and so I was surrounded by pianos and drums and guitars, and music, of course.
I'm a trained lawyer, after all, so I don't have to admit to anything.
I am going to have to stick to the script. If I muck around with the words it will defeat the object.
I like to think of myself as a natural gardener.
I've always liked trees. And then, growing up, I took an interest in ecology, hedges being destroyed, the landscape being turned into prairies.
You can be a famous poisoner or a successful poisoner, but not both, and the same seems to apply to Great Train Robbers.
Well, I'm happier talking about other people than me.
I do find myself surprised by the comedy shows that seem to have the same joke week in week out.
If I ever had any vanity, then I definitely lost it by being on television.
My favourite plant is the foxglove. I think they are a perfect balance between being a garden plant and a wild plant, as at home in woodland as they are in a city.
I like being forced to think about things in a different way.
I have done well out of TV, but not well enough to buy football clubs. I'm not sure it's ever a way to make money.
I am attached to the west coast of Scotland - it's gorgeous to look at and challenging. You have to contend with the possibility of being blown away or rained on. And in the summer months you can be eaten alive by midges.
Gardening has just sort of grown on me. I find it therapeutic. And I like smelly things.
I'm pale-skinned so I don't feel at my best on a beach.
I remember being in China and realising how irrelevant not even Britain is, but also Europe. We're just another remote country that hardly impinges on some places at all.
I think political correctness is a moving line.
If you are a rich person straining every sinew to keep every last pound in your pocket, there comes a point when you realize you are not just escaping the clutches of the Chancellor of the Exchequer. You are passing a greater burden on to people poorer than yourself, and depriving even poorer people of your support.
If I ever had any vanity, then I definitely lost it by being on television. It doesn't do you any favours in terms of showing you what you look like and what your emotions are.
I don't think I'm really a rude person, but now I see myself on television, I think, 'Oh, God, that is a bit strong.' And I wonder if I've always been like that and I haven't been aware of it.
The labour Party has lost the last four elections. If they lose another, they get to keep the liberal party. — © Clive Anderson
The labour Party has lost the last four elections. If they lose another, they get to keep the liberal party.
If you look at it ecologically, deforestation is high on the list of things which bring devastation. You cut down trees to build homes, for fuel, and you end up with no trees left, and you have to move on. If you take the earth as a whole, eventually there's nowhere to move on to.
I try to make myself walk around a bit, but I probably think about it more than I actually do it. Years ago, I did think about joining a gym.
It's true, people don't imagine I'd be particularly woody.
It is a bit frustrating. Things come and go in television. At the moment they've gone.
I like New York. There are similarities with London that make it feel rather like home, but at the same time it's slightly fictional.
This is me, Clive Anderson, saying good night. Good night.
I'm not bald. I'm just taller than my hair.
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