A Quote by Dylan O'Brien

You have to latch onto somebody while you're working. — © Dylan O'Brien
You have to latch onto somebody while you're working.
Limitations are something that I latch onto - like working in genre, or if you're writing TV, there are act breaks, there's a length of time it's supposed to be. The restrictions of budget and sets can be really useful. When you can have everything, it's very hard to make things feel real and lived in.
It's important for us to latch onto the people that we love.
I treat the act of making a record very much like working in a laboratory, experimenting with sounds and ideas. Whoever chooses to latch onto it, great; whoever doesn't, that's fine, too. The reaction always pales in comparison to the weight of the act of production.
I guess, there are always people that you latch onto that really inspire you.
I sort of latch onto roles that have something to fight against.
People who are bipolar, they kind of latch onto things that are fanatical sometimes.
When you find a guy who is powerful, a big father figure, you latch onto him immediately.
You might not have the biggest budget or resources or cast, but if you have a great story, people will latch onto it.
I was Gator in Jungle Fever, and Chris Rock played Pookie, and those showed two very different dynamics of what crackheads were. Mine was more about the family relationships. So when people sat there and got that, they can sit there and say, "Oh, man, that's my friend." Or "That's my brother." Or cousin or somebody. They empathize, or they had something that they could latch onto, in that particular movie, of my story, and go with it.
The goal of almost every comic is to find a comedy voice - a specific point of view that an audience can latch onto.
I am a huge fan of 'Batman'. As a kid watching it, there are certain things that I'm not going to latch onto as much as when I've gotten older.
Trends come and go, and if you try to latch onto a trend it will likely be passé by the time you have completed your manuscript.
You can latch onto theological ideas that are, in fact, not accurate, and refuse to let them go. I think we've seen this a few times in church history.
All people have religions. It's like we have religion receptors built into our brain cells, or something, and we'll latch onto anything that'll fill that niche for us.
I try to give'em a reason, you see. It helps folks if they can latch onto a reason.
Anyone who knows the marketing world knows that ideas come and go, and people latch onto things and think of them as a kind of solution.
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