A Quote by Dr. Disrespect

I don't want to be a sellout. — © Dr. Disrespect
I don't want to be a sellout.
A sellout is putting your name on any piece of crap and then expecting people to buy it because it's got your name on it. That's what a sellout is to me.
My biggest thing is that I never want to sell out. Or be a sellout.
Whether it's an $11 flip-flop or a $2 key ring or a $2,000 dress, they're all done with integrity. They're all done with a design sense. As long as the creativity exists, then I don't think it's a sellout. A sellout is putting your name on any piece of crap and then expecting people to buy it because it's got your name on it.
I would never be a sellout, but you can never be a sellout to kids. Kids is kids!
There's always going to be people that say you're a sellout - anyone who knew you back when or who wants to begrudge you for having success. That's OK. Their opinion of me, and the box they want to put me in, is just simply none of my business.
As badly as everybody feels like I'm a sellout for one thing or another, I guess, ultimately, when it came to wrestling, I just wanted to wrestle where I want to wrestle. And something had to be bigger and more important than the money, and for me, it was the time inside that ring.
The Sellout is about friends and relatives who have touched me in real ways.
When you get fat and lose your hunger. That is when you know the sellout has happened.
Since I became part of the zeitgeist, I've been called a sellout many times.
Fame hurt. People thought I was a sellout chef and stopped coming to my restaurant.
You never have to choose between being the pure artist or the craven, sellout entertainer. You can be both.
I have tremendous respect for Christopher Darden, and I recognize him as an individual of integrity, who did his job to the best of his ability, and I want to tell him thank you. Thank you for enduring hatred from his own community, for being ostracized and called an Uncle Tom and a sellout.
Most of the people who call me a sellout were 7 when I was down face-first in the punk trenches.
I've had some dark nights of the soul, of course, but giving in to depression would be a sellout, a defeat.
I think no matter what you do, a certain amount of people are going to call you a sellout, somehow, you know. If I ever start trying to make a living on it.
It's like being in the position of - in half of the industry's mind, you're kind of a cult-following, independent rocker. And on the other hand, you're a sellout. But neither one of them are right.
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