Top 571 Viewers Quotes & Sayings

Explore popular Viewers quotes.
Last updated on November 25, 2024.
I don't wanna be in a show that's salacious just for the sake of getting viewers.
To all of our viewers out there - expect the unexpected.
You can very often start a new season with a lot more viewers than you had, leaving off the season before. It's a chance to pull the show into a train station, stop the train, and let all these new viewers on, so you can tell a new story. In some ways, a second season is a chance to tell a brand new story that you can wrap up, at the end of it.
I really thank the viewers; I don't take them all for granted. — © Ainsley Earhardt
I really thank the viewers; I don't take them all for granted.
It's important to me what the viewers think.
It's a growing trend. Viewers are our customers, but so are advertisers. And advertisers want different ways to reach our viewers.
Our viewers are very educated, they can tell if I train or not.
Last night's vice presidential debate between Joe Biden and Sarah Palin drew much higher ratings than the presidential debate. Did you know that? Yeah. Yeah, Biden attracted viewers who enjoyed his previous debate appearances, and Palin attracted viewers who enjoyed the movie 'Fargo.'
One cannot take natural resources for granted just to entertain viewers.
When I meet viewers in person, it always seems to be entire family units.
Female television viewers paid attention to Catherine Gale.
I think the press has an interest in communicating to its viewers or readers, and their viewers or readers drive profit for those news organizations, so I think those news organizations have a certain bias toward their own readers. Yeah, I think they are a special interest. Of course they are.
I want to be honest about my faith, but not preachy, for my viewers and my readers.
Republican presidential debates have become contests of who can terrify viewers the most. — © David Brock
Republican presidential debates have become contests of who can terrify viewers the most.
The whole purpose of filmmaking is to entertain the viewers and when it happens, it gives you a high.
I'm always thinking about the viewers.
You can't fool television viewers with dancing girls and flashing lights.
You can't cheat the audience anymore and roles that are honest and edgy are liked by the viewers.
The viewers have the brains to decide the merits of a film and there is no point in blaming them if it flops.
I think most people who were involved with television will tell you, if given a season or given a 13-episode order and getting those episodes on the air, and if viewers don't come, I think most people will tell you they'd walk away. They feel they were given a fair shake, and if viewers didn't come, they didn't come.
I love my job and my relationship with the viewers who watch my shows.
My viewers are smart. They know I have a contract with a TV show and that I make a lot of money.
To all viewers but yourself, what matters is the product: the finished artwork. To you, and you alone, what matters is the process: the experiences of shaping that artwork. The viewers' concerns are not your concerns (although it'd dangerously easy to adopt their attitudes.) Their job is wahtever it is: to be moved by art, to be entertained by it, to make a killing off it, whatever. Your job is to learn to work on your work.
Indian cinema is no more limited to audiences in India. We have viewers all around the world, and hence, understanding the global perspective is a must. Cinema Beyond Boundaries would get the viewers and the filmmakers together and would help us in serving them with good quality cinema.
But Angela had at least 30% more viewers on the same night at the same time. I mean, she wiped everybody out. But the sponsors don't care when she had the most people. They only care about if there was only a handful of young viewers on the other one.
Networks decide who will have a chance to do shows, but it is the viewers who make the final decision of who stays and who goes. I am very fortunate, in that the television viewers of our country have decided that Bob Barker can stay.
I'm so grateful to have my viewers, and they all have been so supportive through the years.
I am obsessed with my viewers.
Evangelion is like a puzzle, you know. Any person can see it and give his/her own answer. In other words, we're offering viewers to think by themselves, so that each person can imagine his/her own world. We will never offer the answers, even in the theatrical version. As for many Evangelion viewers, they may expect us to provide the 'all-about Eva' manuals, but there is no such thing. Don't expect to get answers by someone. Don't expect to be catered to all the time. We all have to find our own answers.
We had more viewers on the broadcast network than we did on the cable channel.
There's a genuineness that I hope I offer to viewers.
Actors have to entertain viewers, be it on TV or in movies.
You can't fool television viewers with dancing girls and flashing lights
I want to entertain viewers as much as possible.
I can't concern myself with how viewers feel.
Ratings for the XFL are so low that pretty soon they'll be able to address the viewers by name.
'The Walking Dead' producers are really in touch, and appreciative, of their viewers.
I'm all about building a relationship with viewers and getting to know them.
I've always tried to be as open as possible, and I just hope that viewers can appreciate that. — © Becca Kufrin
I've always tried to be as open as possible, and I just hope that viewers can appreciate that.
I think it's important for the viewers at home to have something accessible and attainable.
Every network wants to capture new viewers, but that's up to the networks.
It's great that 'Glee' is making viewers more aware of the arts. People appreciate it.
You have to let the viewers come away with their own conclusions. If you dictate what they should think, you've lost it.
After all, what is cinema? It is an interaction, a discussion that throws up questions and provides some solutions. The solutions might look simple, impractical or too fictionalised. But one must realise that viewers empathise with certain characters because they strike a chord with the viewers' needs and frame of mind.
The fact is that viewers are fickle and it's rare that such a large group of people can be categorized in any type of way. There's enough content to go around, and if we stop focusing on numbers and start focusing on the quality of the project, then I think everybody - viewers and artists alike - is going to be a lot happier.
We wanted to hear from viewers about why they watch or participate in call-ins on C-SPAN, ... Viewers of all ages and walks of life wrote to us, including actresses, stand-up comics, parents and students. What's clear after reading the entries is the impact that call-ins have had on the political conversation on the network.
I do have some viewers who know where I live, and they'll stand outside.
The people who love my paintings, that respond to them the most, they're spectators, they're not viewers.
Obviously, SNL has a lot of viewers, but the potential for a movie is through the roof. — © Andy Samberg
Obviously, SNL has a lot of viewers, but the potential for a movie is through the roof.
Even the most loyal viewers of a show would only watch one out of three episodes. As someone who made television, I always found that hard to believe because you want to believe people who love your show are watching every episode, but statistically it was true that people who considered themselves the most loyal viewers were only watching one out of three.
One has to have the right spirit, attitude and make a place for themselves in the viewers' hearts.
Not a day goes by when we're not grateful to see that viewers seem to be responding.
With the 'Watchdog Army' we're putting viewers at the heart of the programme.
Shootouts are spectacular for the viewers and they are interesting for the players.
'Prison Break' on Netflix has generated a whole new generation of viewers.
Network television has been attempting to lure viewers for years with its low-interest programming only to have those viewers discover later that their brains are bankrupt.
The New York Times and PBS are gatekeepers of a sort. And they perform that role of gatekeeping with a set of rules and aspirations about where they want to lead their viewers and their readers. They value objective facts, and they attempt to transmit a comprehensive view of the world. And they do have values. And they do lead their viewers and their readers to certain conclusions. But it's different than such monopolies as Apple or Google which are dissecting information into these bits and pieces, which they're then transmitting to people. And it's about clicks.
It was easy for viewers to identify with our show. The characters were believable.
I feel that it is a privilege to make viewers laugh.
If reality shows are so popular, that means their viewers are screaming for more realness.
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