A Quote by Alfred Kahn

If you can't explain what you're doing in simple English, you are probably doing something wrong. — © Alfred Kahn
If you can't explain what you're doing in simple English, you are probably doing something wrong.
If something feels right, I do it. If it feels wrong, I don't. It's really very, very simple, but you've got to be willing to take your chances doing stuff that may look crazy to other people - or not doing something that looks right to others but just feels wrong to you.
You know when you're doing something right and when you're doing something wrong. As long as you feel like you're doing something right, and you're getting rewarded, then you're successful. But, if you're judging it on, Well, if I had that, I'd be successful - that doesn't work. I think doing what you love is success. Pretty cheesy. But it's true.
I write drama in the English language. If I wasn't working in London I'd be doing something wrong.
If you're doing something the same way you have been doing it for ten years, the chances are you are doing it wrong.
If your neighbor is doing something wrong, let's call it. Let's say this person is doing wrong, and let's notify our law enforcement so we can actually vet that individual.
The minute you become a parent, you're always going to wonder if you're doing something wrong, and I certainly experience that on a daily basis. It's a big challenge, and you can't help wondering if you're doing anything wrong. You have to trust your instincts and do what feels right for you.
Modelling isn't something I'm doing to prove people wrong. It's something I'm doing because it's what I want to do.
Modelling isn't something I'm doing to prove people wrong. It's something I'm doing because it's what I want to do
Sometimes you meet people that try to explain to you your work, and how to write a song and how to sing it, and they explain that you are doing it the wrong way. And yeah, it's always super frustrating.
I always tell people I romanticize about doing something simple, like doing radio in northern California.
You do stand-up because you have to do it. If you're doing it to become 'famous,' you're wrong. If you're doing it to become a millionaire, you're doing it for the wrong reasons. In 2003, I was flat broke. I'd been doing stand-up for 14 years at that point. I loved it and just kept at it.
The first theme that every audience can get easily everywhere in the world is the theme of judgment. You are constantly judging if this character is doing something wrong or right, or the other character is doing something right or wrong.
If it seems like you're doing work when you're acting, then you're doing something wrong.
Much of the fear of doing something wrong vanishes when we are knowledgeable about what we are doing.
In my religion it's actually better to know you're doing wrong and try to improve that wrong than to think philosophically that what you're doing is right and in fact it is wrong.
There's nothing wrong in doing a mindless masala; it's just something I don't see myself doing.
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