Top 18 Quotes & Sayings by Robin Day

Explore popular quotes and sayings by a British journalist Robin Day.
Last updated on September 18, 2024.
Robin Day

Sir Robin Day was an English political journalist and television and radio broadcaster.

But I think it's important that things endure.
I'm not against vodka - they just asked us. They put out some story about us entertaining international celebrities with vodka, which of course wasn't true.
I can't climb very seriously now but I was a bit of a freak. — © Robin Day
I can't climb very seriously now but I was a bit of a freak.
There's this very vulnerable planet of ours with finite resources. Architects and designers have, I think, a fair responsibility for conserving energy and materials, and making things durable.
I've always walked and climbed; spent a lot of time in the arctic and places.
Well, I'd probably go for any work I could get.
I think it's really important to use your hands and get close to materials. To be up close to real things like rain and mud; to have contact with nature.
Commerce is against morality. Morality is going to lose every time.
Well the most successful of course was this Polypropylene chair.
I think and hope there are far more people aware of the need to look after our future.
We used to get published a lot. And there was this vodka advertisement... it embarrassed me a lot afterwards.
No one ever contributed anything to my designs.
I would think twice about designing stuff for which there was no need and which didn't endure.
Magazines and advertising are flogging the idea that you have to keep changing things and get something new. I think that's balls - evil. But obviously that's your livelihood.
I think the first things that are relevant are that things should work well; they should function.
I think there's a tendency for modern man to become dominated by gadgets and machines, taking us further and further away from the things I've been talking about.
You've got to build a career and a practice. — © Robin Day
You've got to build a career and a practice.
Television thrives on unreason, and unreason thrives on television. It strikes at the emotions rather than the intellect.
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