Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American lawyer John F. Kennedy Jr..
Last updated on December 21, 2024.
John Fitzgerald Kennedy Jr., often referred to as John-John or JFK Jr., was an American lawyer, journalist, and magazine publisher. He was a son of 35th U.S. president John F. Kennedy and First Lady Jacqueline Kennedy, and a younger brother of Caroline Kennedy. Three days before his third birthday, his father was assassinated.
My mother obviously was in the publishing business.
I'm not a big planner. Things always sort of surprise me.
There are nuts in this country.
Listen, in the same way that politics and government allow people to engage in large issues, media does the same.
My family is used to all manner of controversy.
I have a pretty normal life, surprisingly.
People have an interest in the controversial.
I think everyone needs to feel they've created something that was their own, on their own terms.
I've done everything from research to stuffing envelopes.
My mother kept every single thing that she ever got in her life.
It's hard for me to talk about a legacy or a mystique. It's my family. The fact that there have been difficulties and hardships, or obstacles, makes us closer.
As a younger brother, you look up to your sister.
I obviously grew up with politics and have always been interested in ways in which people can get involved with it and be stimulated by it.
Sometimes the weight of expectations, of doing anything, can be a little bit heavy.
What happens is that every August photographers camp out in Hyannis Port. So anytime I go down to the beach, or go to the pier or whatever, there's no avoiding them.
Anyone who's in the magazine business thinks about advertisers when they write about something. And anyone who says they don't is a liar.
For me, the marriage of publishing and politics simply weaves together the two family businesses.
My mother knew something about politics.
I have a slight contrarian impulse I can't seem to shake.
We want to make politics sort of entertaining. If it is entertaining, people are going to be interested in it, and if they are interested in it, they might think more about it and maybe involve themselves in some way down the line.
I don't really go out a lot.
I'm clearly not a major legal genius.
In the same way that some magazines have made financial markets accessible to people who don't want that much sophisticated information, we would like to make information about public issues accessible in a way that makes people feel included.
I would wear one of those plastic pocket protectors, but they make you look like a Republican.
It would be disingenuous to say I don't have some sensitivity to the seamy side of issues.
We grew up in my family thinking that politics was a really fascinating way to spend one's career and a way to be involved in the issues of the day. And certainly, my father and my relatives really loved all that.
If you're trying to talk about public issues and politics and showcase it in a positive, different way, I think people like the idea.
The only person I've been able to get to go up with me, who looks forward to it as much as I do, is my wife. Whenever we want to get away, we can just get in a plane and fly off.
Once you run for office, you're in it - sort of like going into the military. You'd better be damned sure it is what you want to do and that the rest of your life is set up to accommodate that. It takes a certain toll on your personality and on your family life. I've seen it personally.
People often tell me I could be a great man. I'd rather be a good man.
I can remember playing under the big wooden desk in his office. My mother didn't like us to chew gum, so we'd go into his office, and he'd feed us gum under the desk.