A Quote by Alexandre de Betak

I always loved bulbs, and I use light a lot in my shows. In my office in Paris, I have 300 bulbs. — © Alexandre de Betak
I always loved bulbs, and I use light a lot in my shows. In my office in Paris, I have 300 bulbs.
You can't blame things for being dark if the light bulbs aren't working. So we're complaining about the darkness when the bulbs aren't working, and the Bible says that we are the light of the world.
I remember my mother and father arguing about light bulbs because my father thought he could save money by putting 25-watt bulbs instead of 60-watt bulbs and my mother was trying to explain to him that her children needed to learn to read so that they could go to college. He couldn't see that.
I long for the bulbs to arrive, for the early autumn chores are melancholy, but the planting of bulbs is the work of hope and is always thrilling.
One action society needs to take is to use energy much more efficiently. Instead of incandescent light bulbs, you could switch to LEDs that consume a lot less electricity, for example.
We've already seen the federal government stretch their regulatory tentacles into our homes and determine what kind of light bulbs we have to use.
Even though it's important for all of us to change our light bulbs and the vehicles we drive, it's much more important to change our laws and policies. I drive a hybrid and we've changed our light bulbs and windows and installed solar panels and geothermal ground source heat pumps and most everything else. But putting the burden on individuals to solve this global crisis is ultimately not going to be the most effective way to solve it.
I hope that energy-efficient LED light bulbs will help reduce energy use and lower the cost of lighting worldwide.
My latest works are these things with light bulbs.
Sometimes it's more important to change politicians than light bulbs.
I'm pretty much your average, energy-saving-light-bulbs-recycling citizen.
Everything in Russia is made of cement - phone booths, fence posts and light bulbs.
I might not be the brightest bulb in the chandelier, but I'm pretty good at getting most of the other bulbs to light up.
When I was 16, at night I went to my high school and chucked rocks at the billboard sign and broke the light bulbs. That was fun.
What a relief. I didn't have to check the toilet for anything or the light bulbs or the phone. It was just good old-fashioned friendship.
Of the 200 light bulbs that didn't work, every failure told me something that I was able to incorporate into the next attempt.
I said, suppose you take a light - I was thinking of just light bulbs because, in those days, lasers were not yet really there - and sent a light pulse between two masses. Then you do the same when there's a gravitational wave. Lo and behold, you see that the time it takes light to go from one mass to the other changes because of the wave.
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