A Quote by Butch Hartman

I want adults to be the last ones to switch off a cartoon on TV. — © Butch Hartman
I want adults to be the last ones to switch off a cartoon on TV.

Quote Author

From morning when I wake up until I go to sleep, I am working. I go to bed and I want to switch off, but the brain doesn't switch off.
Maths is like learning a language: you need to learn the basics to get going, but a lot of adults go into blind panic about numbers and switch off.
They say, 'TV is not a captive audience,' but it definitely is. You can easily switch off the bloody television.
Switch off reality TV! I've only ever been able watch about 30 seconds of it.
When I was playing Dracula I had to switch off from the reality and fall into this fantasy world. Otherwise I just couldn't cope with what I was doing. It's about switching off. It is about trying to flick a switch, which you have to do.
I can't look at TV without seeing something that's been influenced by rap. Even commercials for cereal. When I was small, I was a fan of cartoon characters - now the cartoon characters are rapping!
If I stop working and publishing, and TV, and film and all that, I would be dead within a couple of weeks. I don't really have that kind of off-switch.
It's the warm-up in the changing room when I switch on. I don't even think about the fight until then. Some fighters are bouncing about the walls, but I switch off. Then it's like someone flicks a switch in me.
I turn a switch on to socialise on the red carpet, and then switch it off once I'm done.
There is nothing called 'switch on-switch-off' in an actor. We are not machines.
You have a Happiness Switch in you that you can switch on at any time. All you have to do is stop switching it off in order to blackmail yourself or others.
I think the last thing I want to do is switch doctors.
When we go out to train, we work hard, but when we're back in the hotel, you want to chill out. People want to switch off from football because you spend so much time doing it. For me, switching off means playing jokes.
Don't want to end up a cartoon in a cartoon grave yard.
As a child, all you see is that adults are not playing. Adults are not talking too much. Adults don't want to relate to each other.
My dream was to draw for 'The Beano.' When I was 10 years old, I started drawing cartoon strips with 'The Beano' in mind. I lived in that world. You own a comic, it's yours and adults don't understand it. You could pile them up under the bed, and if you were off school ill, you'd go through them all.
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